April 20, 2016

Denise Duhamel & Maureen Seaton

STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN SONNET

Florida’s state bird is the crane, by which we mean
green, orange, and yellow construction cranes that hang
a mile or more above us on the beach and swing their pointy
arms all around like slow-mo highwire ballerinas.
They stand while they sleep and each weekday morning
call out their metal duets then begin their pointe work.
I ask my love: do you think that crane would crush
us in our bed like palmetto bugs if it fell north?
Of course it would, my amour says and that night
wakes up screaming, flapping very human arms.
Sometimes we feel watched over as we grab our
water wings and float like the dead on top of the sea.
Sometimes our necks ache from craning at the cranes
that sway to Led Zeppelin at dawn, all flute and wonder.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

__________

Denise Duhamel & Maureen Seaton: “We’ve been writing collaborative poetry since 1991, two women’s voices blended together to create what many readers experience as a totally third voice—as well as an invigorating, humorous feminism. When we first started writing together we were often dismissed. Now, as the ‘Fairy Godmothers’ (Campbell McGrath) of contemporary collaboration, our work of the last 25 years has been honored and published by Sibling Rivalry Press, and we’re thrilled. We still write and have always written for women and the allies of women. Viva the power of collaboration!” (website)

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April 18, 2016

Barbara Crooker

WOMEN

after Dorianne Laux’s “Men”

It’s tough being a woman, feeling you’re an object to be bought,
an elusive quarry, something to be chased and caught,
when you know you’re more than that. So pull me a draught,
Charlie, give me something dark and frothy. Wars have been fought
for less—I came in wondering what a girl’s got
to do to get herself noticed? I mean, I’m so hot,
I could melt neon. You want my number? Well, jot
it down, big boy. I won’t call you. I have a karaoke slot
at nine p.m.; I’m thinking a Madonna medley will do. Lots
of water under this dam. I want to be a player, not a mascot.
I want something bathed in dark chocolate, with a nougat
center. I want a lobster in my steaming pot,
champagne on ice, and two chairs by a wrought
iron table on a terrace in France. Whoever sought
the fountain of youth can forget it. The lies the movies taught?
They’re a crock, a foolish dream, a vicious plot.
Life isn’t fair, you’ve got to play your cards, no matter what.
I could have been Dean of Women, a cover girl. An exot-
ic dancer at a go-go bar. Or married to a guy with a yacht.
But I’m not. So pour me another shot of Jack, O Great Zot.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

[download audio]

__________

Barbara Crooker: “I’ve never understood women who preface remarks with ‘I’m not a feminist, but …’ If you’re a woman, then wanting equal pay for equal work, control over your own body and your own reproductive rights, etc., ought to be part of your birthright. As humans on this fragile planet, we all ought to be working for equality in all areas, from the marketplace to the voting booth, every day.” (website)

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April 15, 2016

Ann Clark

MY MOTHER COMES HOME CRYING FROM GE

My father, who works swing shift
and makes Campbell’s Tomato Soup
and grilled cheese for me every day
when I get home from kindergarten,
asks what’s wrong hon, what’s wrong,
why are you back early, are you sick,
but she is still going oh, oh, oh, out
loud like me or my brother when we cry,
as if she has skinned her knees,
and I sit at the white and silver
kitchen table and swing my legs
and wait for soup, and she says
he took my idea, he took it and said
it was his after he promised to present
it to engineering, he didn’t give me credit;
they gave him a thousand shares
in the company and when I told him
he stole my idea, he just smiled
and said sure I did, how are you
going to prove it you little, oh, oh,
and her knees are hurt again so
she can’t say the words, and smoke
is choking the kitchen because
my grilled cheese is burned
so I know my soup will have
a thick, dark skin like a scab.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

__________

Ann Clark: “At 52, I’m astonished that many young women assume the battle for equal rights is over and has been won. The disinterest in the erosion of women’s right to choose angers and terrifies me, and as an English professor, I see young people persisting in anti-feminist attitudes not because of ill-will but because of socialization through mass media. Bright men and women will claim, ‘Everyone knows that women are naturally more nurturing’ (more emotional, less logical, worse at math, bad drivers, indecisive, less intelligent), and as long as these myths deprive women socially and economically, I will be a feminist and a feminist poet. I write about women’s lives, their work, their losses, their victories. Because I was born and raised in the working class and in an extremely rural area, my writing reflects women’s ties to the land. I value history and artifact and try to hear and see those women who worked and died here as people, not victims.” (website)

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April 13, 2016

Leila Chatti

MORNING

I take the last grapefruit from the bowl and hold it
to know its weight. The doctor told me
the tumor has grown, is now this size. In my hands,
it feels conquerable, rind giving in to the press
of my thumb, pliable and sweet. A miniature
dimpled sun. I cleave it open and begin
plucking out its seeds. Beside me, a waiting
cup, an empty bowl. I watch as they fill slowly,
cradle morning’s flush of light.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

[download audio]

__________

Leila Chatti: “As a Tunisian-American, I am a member of two very different cultures, but between them there is one significant commonality: in both I am ‘less-than,’ because I am a woman. My body is legislated and objectified, taboo and covered. When I write poems about my body, it is a feminist act; I am declaring this body both important and mine.” (website)

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April 11, 2016

Claire Blotter

ROCKING

I was married, and I was divorced.
I had three babies. I never had kids.
I never had sex. I had sex.
It seemed I never had sex,
that I was never divorced
nor even married.
It seemed that the three babies
who grew to adults
were never really mine.
I never “had” them, and
the sex it seemed someone else
had, when I remember it now.

I was never married nor divorced
nor did I have any children.
I never thought to have them or
simply never had them.
I had plenty of sex though
and sometimes, sometimes
simultaneously, I had love, too,
that frightened me, that I pushed
away as if it were a dark alley
rather than a garden of light.
But sometimes I allowed a few
white gold strands to pierce
the dark burnt blotches
of my heart, replace dried
branches of pale pink geraniums
with life. Yes, love restored me,
and coupled with sex, made me laugh
till my whole body shook.

Looking back, I was a man once, then
a woman, then a man, and a woman again.
I came simultaneously as myself, laughing.
Was this tantric, shape-shifting—
or shifting gender identification?
No, I was the darkness of my heart once,
then great rocking laughter of light.
I was the baby and the mother
at the same time.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

__________

Claire Blotter: “I have considered myself a feminist poet since teaching Feminist Journal Writing in the Women Studies Department at San Francisco State University in the mid-’80s. I experiment with non-hierarchical forms and adapt Gertrude Stein’s non-linear use of repetition and the continuous present. Rhythm, sound and a deep connection to the earth are all important elements of my work. Finally, I use the dash as Dickinson did perhaps to show the possibility of many diverse realities at any given moment, a less fixed and certain punctuation than the standard period.”

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April 8, 2016

Heather Bell

WHILE TRYING TO WRITE A NOVEL

I take a bath. I fill the bathtub with a face and
a voice. I fill the bathtub with a man on a bicycle.
The man on a bicycle is you and I allow November
to kill him. Or, a dog runs after the man, biting at
his brown shoes until I fall out of the bathtub.

While trying to write a novel, I ache as I smoke
a cigar. I smoke cigars to forget you. I load the
dishwasher. I load the dishwasher with a global
village, let you walk through the village right before

it is bombed. I sit on the countertop and say
nothing. Your body and skin looks like what is
always taken away. It is only a body. It is only
a body. My therapist tells me to meditate on
sentences, which will help release them from me

like raw birds. It is only a body. It is only a body.
There is a body of water past the meatpacking plant
on 23rd Street. There, you are sitting and crying
by a curb. Your father walks by and he is always

hungry. I pack my suitcases like brittle bones.
Underwear, wool coat, hat with the foliage in it
that vibrates like the wind. I admire the goose in

the refrigerator. There are quite a few things
we can choke on in this world, be careful is the
note I leave on the kitchen table. Leaving this note
makes me feel like a genius. I admire the
glasswork vases, bought in a little shop in Nogales.

God made everything and then God turned
away. It is only a body. I get my hair stuck in
a paper shredder, bending down. I light
my hair on fire from a candle, bending down.
It is only a body. Three pairs of socks, a Chrysler,
the dust turning human. All this baby fat, this

round slice of fontanel. All the ways you
know not to kill a person. You are walking
straight into our bedroom and you do not pause

when you see me. Your dog is wearing a muzzle.
Or, is that your face? You are translated from rough
Spanish—your hair is either a blurred star or it is
waiting for me around the corner. It may be the
old cannon we dug up in the garden last Thursday,

pointed toward our house. You are wearing my t-shirt,
it is too tight and sad. You are wearing
a little girl’s fox over your shoulders. I wonder when
it is going to open its animal-mouth and say oh

ragged things be still. The most beautiful moment
of your life has already happened. It is when
I caught you writing a novel. It is when you said
I should fill the bathtub and then I was, netbag

of salt in my hands. You are pacing at the window.
You say I am filling the bathtub with human heads
and cut-out tongues. I am filling the bathtub with
hearts, race and throb. Race and throb. Race and
throb. It is only a body, you say, get in.

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

__________

Heather Bell: “Once upon a time there was a six-foot-tall woman with blue hair and a sense of smallness. In her house was a teacup saying ‘girl, you got this!’ and on her wall was a kitten hanging from a clothesline. The kitten’s word balloon said something like, ‘Hang in there!’ or ‘Don’t let go!’ Always something with an exclamation mark. Isn’t that the moral of the story, always? There is always a small woman, hiding her grandness, trying to fill up on uplifting wordplay. But today, this small woman sits down and writes a poem in which she details her smallness and why she came to be that way. Another small woman reads it, and from the tip of her hair a fire starts, but just as quickly dies. Isn’t that why we are here? To write another poem for a small woman to read, and then another. Until the amount of sparks are too much for the quick extinguishing, and she is a woman on fire, exploding into the world.”

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April 6, 2016

Roberta Beary

FIVE HAIKU

super moon
mother goes quietly
back inside

 

 

 

funeral lilacs
my sister undoes
dad’s watch

 

 

 

worry stone
the shape of grief
worn smooth

 

 

 

after the cartwheel cumulus and i

 

 

 

carousel moving through my childhood

from Rattle #51, Spring 2016
Tribute to Feminist Poets

__________

Roberta Beary: “As a poet I write about my experiences as a woman in a male-dominated world. Therefore I am a feminist poet. Side note: several male poet friends have told me (some even to my face) that I’m a bossy bitch. I take this as a compliment.” (website)

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