December 25, 2023

Chris Anderson

LIVING THE CHEMICAL LIFE

I have to admit that I don’t care about the historical Jesus.
One way or the other.
I’ve always thought there were larger forces at work.
The sun and the wind. The sadness that comes in the afternoon.
Did you know that our bones are only 10 years old?
No matter how old we are, it’s always the same.
Something to do with cells, I guess. With regeneration.
There are miracles like this all over the place,
in everybody’s bloodstream, and that’s alright with me.
Doris Day was once marooned on an island with another man.
Years went by and her husband, James Garner,
was about to marry another woman. Polly Bergen.
But then Doris came back and sang a lullaby to her kids,
then tucked them into bed. And they didn’t even know who she was.
I think that life is just like this.
Sometimes we are the stone and the Spirit is the river.
Sometimes we are the mountain and the Spirit is the rain.

from Rattle #28, Winter 2007
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

Chris Anderson: “I am an English Professor at Oregon State University, but I am also a Catholic deacon, and my poetry is one result of the free association and spontaneity of lectio divina, the kind of prayer I practice every morning. In lectio you leap, and in leaping poetry, of course, you leap, and what I love about that is how there’s this mystery, this other story you don’t really understand, bigger than your own, that somehow gets implied in the gaps and jumps. Maybe a poem like ‘Living the Chemical Life’ would seem irreverent to a believer, but for me it’s not at all. It’s joyous. It’s one way of letting the Spirit move.” (web)

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August 3, 2023

Wendy Videlock

OF YOU

You’ve been the wolf, you’ve been the bear,
you were the grass when I was air,
the hush of the lake, eyes and lips,
a shyness at my fingertips,

a motion that knew when to slow,
the forest where I always go;

and now you are the windowsill
I rest my elbows on until
the night grows dark and I can’t see
these silhouettes of you and me.

from Rattle #42, Winter 2013
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

Wendy Videlock: “I know nothing about poetry except that it is good medicine for what ails us, gives meaning to what shadows us, and adds weight to what assails us. I am grateful it is persistent.” (web)

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April 25, 2023

Alison Townsend

SPIN

I don’t remember if the bottle was a Coke or a Fresca,
just that the glass was cool against our hands
in the warm, empty tool shed. Where we’d gathered
after swimming all afternoon at Debbie Worthman’s
eighth grade pool party, everyone’s skin damp
and blue in the shadows, the boys’ chests bare,
the other girls wearing cute, peek-a-boo cover-ups
that matched their demure suits. And me with a frayed

blue shirt of my father’s, its tails tied fetchingly
around my first bikini, a homemade job I’d stitched
up in pink and red paisley from a Simplicity pattern,
the bottom half barely on because I’d run out of elastic.
I don’t know what Debbie’s parents thought when we slipped
away, leaving the pool. Or whose idea it was as we trudged
up the hill between her father’s prize-winning roses,

their scent filling the air like primitive attar,
their metal name tags chinking in the breeze. That seemed
to have come up from nowhere, pushing at us with invisible
hands as we locked ourselves inside the half dark
that smelled of wood chips and compost, our eyes dilating
like cats’, faces suddenly pale beneath Coppertone tans.
I wasn’t sure why I’d been invited to this party
or why I’d come, except that he was here, the boy
who’d pushed me into the pool more times than any other girl,

and who, when the guys “rated” the girls during a lull
in Mr. Tallerico’s “Classical Music Experience,”
had given me a “9,” Beethoven’s booming, making me feel
almost good enough, almost deserving of his attention.
Which, when it fell on me, when our eyes caught
and locked, threw out a tensile, silk line that hooked
my breath and heart as easily as he made jump-shots at games,
the ball teetering on the orange rim—then bingo, in.

While the sweaty mascot pranced in the moth-eaten tiger
suit, and cheerleaders scissored their perfect legs,
and I’d held my breath, hoping he’d look my way, his hand
dribbling the ball as if he was touching my body.
All that, pressurized and pushed down inside as someone
twirled the bottle and it spun, blurring as we held
our breath like fourteen-year-old yogis and (thank God)
it pointed at someone else. From whom I had to look away

as their lips met, my stepmother’s injunctions—Don’t
stare; cross your legs at the ankles—loud in my head.
Though I would have liked pointers, one dry, chaste peck
the year before from Bruce Colley all I had to go on.
But I gazed down until the bottle whirled toward me,
its opening like the little “oh” of surprise that undid
a slipknot inside my body, something not quite desire,
but what I’d soon call anticipation, singing along

with Carley Simon’s song, a fist in my solar plexus
opening and closing like a Luna moth’s wings.
As he moved across the circle and tilted my face up,
his palm cupped beneath the curve of my cheek,
then fastened his silky, Doublemint-scented mouth
over mine, everything in the room disappearing
in the plush wriggle of his tongue, the slight
thrust of his cock stirring beneath cut-off jeans.

And my tongue moving back. As if I had been born
knowing this, as if we were back in the pool,
his hand water on my skin, the rest of the kids gone,
the inside of my eyelids spangled with paisley swirls.
As I leaned further and further into this kiss that would
sustain me all summer, practicing for the next one
with my pillow or the fleshy part of my palm, enlisting
for life to the lure of the male’s hard, angular body,

the taste of mint everywhere like clean, green rain.

–from Rattle #28, Winter 2007
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

Alison Townsend: “I write poetry to make discoveries, to articulate what feels (at least initially) beyond words, to find out what I don’t know I know.”

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March 6, 2023

L. Renée

SHOES

Bluefield, West Virginia, 1961

First time I watch my sister set a fire
she’s twelve & I’se eight. Mama & Daddy leave
fa a card party, which mean Rosie & Billy
flee fa they secret flames, which mean
the middle kids—Harold & Velma & Lois—
ain’t too far behind em spyin. Foot knowledge can learn
ya faster than books. Dirt & rock & branch & bush
be as kindred as kin. Then, the house empty
of all our beloveds, and it’s just my sister
& me, my sister & her school saddle shoes,
which she did not love. They ain’t had no scuffs,
but brown specs caked em like dirty powdered sugar,
tintin white leather pee yella lye could neva
make clean. My sister say her shoes too ugly to be redeemed.
She say reee-deeemed like it cost five whole dollas,
slow & careful like Mama puttin milk & butter
& bacon & bread on account at the comp’ny store,
hopin Daddy tagged enuf coal cars,
haulin loads large enuf to break
even. Bein that she had reached fa that word & found
she could afford it, my sister tried to free herself
from three years of ugly ducklin livin, three years
of wearin the same shoes to school, since our folks
would not replace what they could repair.
 
She seized what she sized up as her only chance
to waste leftovers. First I thought she was kindlin
the stove’s coal & wood chips to warm up pintos
from last night’s supper, but when heat hovered
hot as a pissed spirit a horseshoed doorway couldn’t
keep away, when a hankerin fa new shoes flickered
in her peepers like a just-struck match, by the time I
noticed her knowin strike a-ha lightnin fast, it was
too late to redeem her. The stink of meltin skin
& rubber blew threw our kitchen. A groan
slid slow & careful like it was calculatin
a bill that ain’t add up: burner plate lid lifted,
lard slathered leather, the fiery tongue tested
and still clutched in her blistered
fingertips, my sister’s disbelievin.
 

from Rattle #78, Winter 2022
Rattle Poetry Prize Winner

__________

L. Renée: “I am a collector of my family’s stories. Sometimes, we gather for oral history interviews and I am prepared with an audio recorder and a listening ear. Other times, we’re just having conversations around the dinner table or on the phone and somebody says, ‘Well don’t you remember when …’ and my hand reaches for a pen. On this occasion, my aunt was telling me and Mom about the time she tried to burn her school shoes on an old coal stove in West Virginia, where my granddaddy labored as a coal miner for 43 years before ultimately dying of black lung disease. After she shared this story, I kept hearing a little girl’s voice. She was a witness to my aunt’s attempted destruction of those shoes and I wrote down what she told me exactly the way I heard her tell it—dialect, diction, and all. This was a challenge—to honor this character’s authentic voice and allow her to tell her version of the narrative, but to take care that her voice was not misunderstood as caricature by readers. I spelled some words the way I heard them to celebrate the embedded music in her speech. Here, again, I tried to emphasize the multiple meanings of the tongue: the shoe’s tongue, the sister reaching toward an ‘expensive’ word like ‘redeemed’ (which comes with an implied cost), and the speaker’s own tongue in sharing this story. I am a believer in the power of storytelling and the ways in which Black folk have passed down knowledge, experience, and wisdom through the spoken word. When I write, I know I am not writing alone. I know all my ancestors, Black Appalachians who called dirt and mountains home, are with me.” (web)

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March 3, 2023

B.A. Van Sise

BASEBALL

My mother hated it. Everything
about it: the field, the players,
the ads, the incessant America.
 
The smell of hot dogs. The dust
of peanuts. The way her son,
a good Italian made of Italian
 
ingredients by her Italian body,
would reduce himself to a blue
hat, blue jacket, blue shirt, and
 
go with that man who did all
this to her to see it with a smile.
She had an obligation, she was
 
certain, to stop this, and one day
pulled me aside and said what
were to her, surely,
 
the most necessary words
in the American language: you
should care about the

New York Mets as much as
they care about you. The New York
Mets did not care about
 
me. Still, thirty years later,
I like to see a game. Once a
year, I’ll sit in the warm sun,
 
covered in peanut dust, and
think, gently, about the
soft uncut grass of her grave.
 

from Rattle #78, Winter 2022
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

B.A. Van Sise: “I spent most of the pandemic on the road, working as a photojournalist covering a crumbling nation. I wrote this on a little blue notebook while sitting on the lawn at a Memphis Redbirds game; you pay them five bucks, you get to lie out on the lawn while little kids run around in circles around you, and bigger kids run around the bases somewhere off in the distance. Put more simply: it’s Eden before the apples.” (web)

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March 1, 2023

Kaitlin Reynolds

PATSY

After the blizzard, my husband drives
out to the cemetery to check on his mother. 
He calls it Just Driving Around to See What’s What 
and neither of us talk about the winding road 
he takes that eventually turns west, past the old 
peanut mill, to the quiet part of town made 
even quieter, knee-deep in that singular hush of snow.
 
We pass the gates as casually as two people
come for a welfare check on the dead can be.
We don’t even get out of the car, don’t even 
turn down the small beaten path that leads to her 
headstone, nestled under the old juniper.
 
I look one way while he looks the other,
because it would break the illusion of our almost-
aimless drive; because he’s committed as I am 
to our parts (Curious Townsperson 1 & 2); 
because it’s a bone-deep kind of right to give him 
this moment alone, let him feel the ache and 
bewilderment of a heart still yo-yoed by love—
so the other end of the string is a powdered stone. 
What does that matter? What has that ever mattered?
 
She was always, always cold, he tells me. 
Middle of summer, August heatwave—
didn’t matter. Her room was a sauna. 
He rolls his eyes, smiles, and the visit is over. 
We drive past the gates, take turns watching 
the juniper sink in the rearview mirror. 
He takes my hand and pretends to see a bird. 
I lace our fingers, pretend to see it too.
 

from Rattle #78, Winter 2022
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

Kaitlin Reynolds: “I feel this need to commit as much as I can to written memory—because moments are the most precious things I’ll ever possess, and because the mind is a poor steward. I want better for them than a few decades of aimless floating around in my skull, waiting to erode into oblivion. Even if I’m the only one who ever knows: they happened, and I felt them, and they mattered. And everything deserves somewhere to go.”

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February 27, 2023

Candace Moore

PROJECTION

What I took to be a man
cradling a woman in his arms and kissing her
turned out to be the gardener carrying
a pile of leaves he had gathered
 
What I took to be a billboard that said Gold Cock Motel
turned out to be a billboard that said Gold Crest Motel
 
What I took to be a sentence that said, I have an officer in my garage
turned out to be a sentence that said, I have an office in my garage
 
What I took to be a screen at the ATM machine 
that said your transformation is being processed
turned out to be a screen that said
your transaction is being processed
 
What I took to be a friend anxious to see me
turned out to be an intruder kicking in the door
 
What I took to be a Buddha sitting under the tree 
turned out to be an old lady reading
 
What I took to be an old lady reading
turned out to be me
 

from Rattle #78, Winter 2022
Rattle Poetry Prize Finalist

__________

Candace Moore: “Despite my father coaching me that ‘there is no money in poetry,’ I’ve been reading and writing poetry ever since I was a teenager and I discovered Edna St. Vincent Millay, whose entire book of collected poems I wrote out in long hand. If I was asked what three poets I would invite to a dinner party it would be Rumi, Leonard Cohen, and Emily Dickinson. I agree with Emily: ‘A word is dead when it is said, some say, I say it just begins to live that day.’”

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