Showing posts with label moonrise press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moonrise press. Show all posts

Monday, August 28, 2023

Village Poets Welcomes Poet Laureate, Marlene Hitt & RG Cantalupo on Sept 24, 2023, 4:30 pm at Bolton Hall Museum

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Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga is pleased to invite poets and friends of poetry to our monthly reading held in person,on Sunday,  Sept 24 at 4:30pm. at  Bolton Hall Museum, located at 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, Los Angeles, CA 91042-2313. In September our features will be Marlene Hitt & RG Cantalupo. 

Two segments of open mic will be available and refreshments will be served. Suggested donation $5 per person for the cost of refreshments and to donate to the Little Landers Society that manages the Bolton Hall Museum, a Los Angeles Historical Landmark built in 1913.


Marlene Hitt, Sunland Tujunga’s first Poet Laureate, active member of the Sunland-Tujunga Village Poets is one who loves books, especially books of poetry. Having been included in several anthologies, she has published two books of poetry, Clocks and Water Drops and Yellow Tree Alone, (2023) both from Moonrise Press. Other published materials are recorded in the archives of many newspapers. From these articles came the nonfiction local history book Sunland-Tujunga from Village to City. Poetry has been Marlene’s private love since childhood with one elementary school poem published. When The Chupa Rosa Writers began to meet at McGroarty Art Center, 1985, she joined the group. The Chupa Rosa group which met for 20 years, introduced the Poet Laureate Program which resulted in Marlene being elected the first Poet Laureate of Sunland Tujunga, 1999-2001 on the bridge of the millennium.

As a member of the John Steven McGroarty chapter of the California State Federation of Chaparral Poets, more submissions led to awards and inclusions in anthologies. After writing cut-and-paste chapbooks, taking part in the group-published daybook, she began to send poems out to publications; Psychopoetica of University of Hull, England was the first. In the meantime, as a volunteer in the local museum, she enthusiastically wrote articles for The Foothill Leader and Glendale News Press. Several other local papers published her weekly articles about history. The enthusiasm generated by the stories of settlers in the sagebrush to citizens of the City of Los Angeles led to Sunland-Tujunga from Village to City, 2000.


With guidance from Maja Trochimczyk, Moonrise Press, she was included in Meditations  on Divine Names  and Chopin with Cherries anthologies. She also served as co-editor of  We Are Here: The Village Poets Anthology celebrating the 10th anniversary of our readings in 2010. She has been included in Poetry Corner, Colorado Blvd., Quill and Parchment, Altadena Poetry Review Quarterly, Four Feathers Press,  Quill and Parchment, Sometimes in the Open, California Poets Laureate, Sacramento, and Cowboy Lariat on line. Her poems also appeared in Coiled Serpent and When the Virus Came Calling, an award-winning anthology edited by Thelma Reyna. Now, as Poet Emeritus of the Sunland Tujunga Village Poets, she is honored to continue to be inspired, to write and to participate in open mic readings.



Purple Robe

 

I am the queen

of a world of small things

a button to sew

lost papers to find.

 

In this place

of royalty

I fold and freshen

steer and carry

suggest and correct.

 

I struggle with words

mold them and taste them

each syllable one at a time

until hundreds cover a page

in the story of my days.

 

My stage

is a vegetable patch

my throne  a stone

lizards are my footmen

a puddle my mirror.

 

By the authority vested on me

as majesty of myself

I proclaim all in my kingdom

to be happy. Be free.

Do not bow before me.

 


I Am

 

I am an open face marked with hours

a gentle smile stretched over

a bridled tongue

a cauldron stopped up with 

a melting stopper

I am ripples in a still pond

the pebbles in its bottom

the compass whose needle

points the other way

I am the hiding place 

found then lost

I am the weaver, I am the cloth

the photograph with no one in it

I am the shadow in the night 

the brilliance of dawn.

Come, walk with me to see

if I am believed.

 


Curb Appeal

 

No curb appeal is needed in prairie dog town

for the burrows deep underground

give no excuse for not having

a tiled roof, a specimen tree.

In human habitats neighbors complain

that those are shakes on dormers

 a garage door is different not allowed here.

I see beneath this window rooftop

stained by storms where inside

stories hide with secrets beneath.

In old Ireland, peat, lashed below thatch

kept out grey cold and crystals of frost.

I toast the wisdom of prairie dog town

where winter below needs no roof

slate, thatch, wood or willow, sod

or a shelter on a  draped park bench.

Under the safe places are kept secrets 

in the burrows of dark souls

inside the house with curb appeal.

There needs to be no curb appeal 

in prairie dog town.

 

RG Cantalupo is a poet, playwright, filmmaker, novelist, and director. His work has been published widely in literary journals in the United States, England, and Australia. He graduated from UC Santa Cruz where he studied under such luminaries as George Hitchcock, editor of Kayak, Gregory Bateson, and Norman O. Brown, and received his MFA in Poetry and Non-Fiction from Vermont College of the Fine Arts. His books of poetry include Involving Residence, No Thanks, Walking Water On Earth, The Art of Naming, Remembrances, The Endurance: Journey To Worlds End, (a lyric novel), Never To Die, Graces For The Wonder, Words Kill, and Private Entries. He is also the author of You Don’t Know Me, (a five book young adult series), The Light Where Shadows End, and The Shadows In Which We Rise, memoirs, American Patriot, Surviving Covid, and a number of plays and stage adaptations including the musical versions of The Giving Tree and Where The Wild Things Are. He is the Founder and Artistic Director of Stages in Santa Monica, a performing arts center, and founder of Poetry-Films.com.  His books can be purchased through New World Publishers or through the author at rgcantalupo@gmail.com. 


Courage 

               (for my mother)

 

I thought Vinny running through explosions, Vinny

firing mortars back while bits of flesh rained down,

 

took a rare courage, but lately I’ve begun to see

how you, battered in ‘58, before there were shelters,

 

before beating your wife was even a crime--one eye

red-blue-purple as a smashed plum--with money

 

borrowed from your sister only enough to escape

with your youngest son--you running away from

 

this man who you’d served for twenty-two years,

on whose plate each night you’d prepared the good 

 

meals, spooning the gravy quietly, calmly, clenching

the hurt inside like a fist--this man whose clothes

 

you’d washed clean of the vomit and beer, ironing

his shirts even on the morning after he’d suffocated 

 

Rose, your infant daughter, by drunken accident--

this war-haunted man who could fix anything, but 

 

could only break the ones he loved--you a poor,

white, Jewess without skills, without a high school 

 

diploma, running away to God knows where, as far

as the Greyhound facing the sun would take you,

 

as far as the road ahead would go--you who saved me

from becoming my father, teaching me about wounds

 

that remain purple under the skin, inside the eyes,

became, years later, in Vietnam, when I was dying

 

each day from the killing, a kind of hero, realizing how

you’d endured a lifetime of daily deaths, how my sister

 

Rose was a stone resting on the bottom of a red pool

in your heart, how my brother Eddie was a black sin

 

on your unforgiven soul--you became, as you become

now, when I see how your courage to leap bleeding

 

into the abyss, to gnaw off one leg when love held it

in a trap, was far braver than Vinny’s courage, that

 

the courage to bear life is more heroic than the courage

to kill.

  



For A Young Poet

 

Already at seven, you’re naming the garden,

writing “rose”, “lilac”, “daisy” along the walkway

 

with colored chalk. We watch you, say how

this world we live in, this green patch in Angel City,

 

will be yours soon, then we let you take our hands,

guide us through your creations, show us how

 

even the prickly weed “thorny” has a home here.

Out beyond us, where our sight ends, are predators,

 

I know. I know. They peer out from inside shadows

like frightened cats, drive by stalking behind glass.

 

And that too, you must name, write in red so those

after you know what else lurked here. Remember,

 

even leeches rise in this earth. Remember also, how

yours must be the words we long for, for without them

 

there is only this dying garden without colors or

sounds to sing. Look at your fingers, green from

 

leaves and grass. Let that be your guide. Look at how

your eyes reflect the sun’s light. Just so. Just so.

 

Light is a prism there, shoots off sparks igniting

whatever it hits. Take it in. Take it in. Let your heart

 

be the diamond that bears our light




Scene From The Promenade

 

Evening, late, the lights

of the promenade

dimming to dark.

I walk out of a movie

into the reality of

storefront windows,

stop in front of a

billboard-sized snapshot

with the name J. C. Crew.

 

Shot in some exotic,

third world country,

(Guatemala maybe,

or Paraguay), it sells

adventure: an exotic tundra,

a dirt road leading to an

endless horizon, warm,

earth tones drifting off

into matching mannequins.

 

Up close, an enormous,

furry, white dog getting out

of a sand-colored Land Rover,

a man in khakis unloading

rattan suitcases, a woman,

also dressed in khakis,

standing nearby, smiling.

They are both rugged, slim,

blond, beautiful as angels

 

looking down from two stories

above.  Below them, humans,

me, a homeless couple

vacationing in the alcove—

two writhing lumps

under a newspaper and

a gray, tattered army blanket,

grunting, then moaning

as I pass.

 

 __________________________

Text: Alice Pero, Photos: Maja Trochimczyk

 

 

Friday, May 8, 2015

Marlene Hitt and Brenda Petrakos - Featured Village Poets on May 24, 2015

The Village Poets of Sunland-Tujunga are delighted to announce that poets Marlene Hitt and Brenda Petrakos will co-feature at the upcoming Monthly Reading Series, Sunday, May 24, 2015, 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m., at Bolton Hall Museum 10110 Commerce Ave., Tujunga, CA 91042.  

Poets are welcome to sign-up for the open reading upon arrival.  Light refreshments will be served – a $3.00 donation is appreciated! 



MARLENE HITT

 Marlene Hitt is a Los Angeles poet, writer and retired educator with local history as an avocation. She has served  for many years as archivist, historian and docent at the Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga. She is a native Californian and a graduate of Occidental College in Los Angeles. She studied casually at CSUN, UCLA, USC, Glendale College and Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland. As a member of the Chupa Rosa Writers of Sunland for nearly 30 years, she has worked with this small group of poets from which has sprung readings at the local library, the Poet Laureate Program of Sunland-Tujunga, and the currently popular Village Poets.

Her poetry received several first prizes in annual competitions of the Woman's Club of San Fernanado Valley, and many awards from the John Steven McGroarty Chapter of the California Federations of Chaparral Poets. Her work appeared in Psychopoetica(U.K.), Chupa Rosa Diaries of the Chupa Rosa Writers, (2001-2003), Glendale College Eclipse  anthologies, two Moonrise Press anthologies Chopin with Cherries (2010)  Meditations on Divine Names(2012). Also, Sometimes in the Open, a collection of verse by California Poets LaureateShe published Sad With Cinnamon, Mint Leaves,and Bent Grass(all in 2001), as well as Riddle in the Rain with Dorothy Skiles, and a stack of chapbooks for friends and family. 

Her most recent book, Clocks and Water Drops appeared in May 2015 from Moonrise Press. Poet Jack Cooper commented: "Clocks and Water Drops is a book of treasured gifts packed in memories and reflections as tasty as homemade bread, fanciful as a rose petal salad and healing as warm camphor oil on a child's skin. Marlene Hitt's astute and thoughtful voice paints a world as gentle as lamb’s wool and precious as a girl’s first pony. Open this cedar chest of poems, don its knitted socks and prepare to chase the moon through love and time." Kathabela Wilson noted: "Marlene Hitt is a poet beyond measure... she holds each thing to her eye and finds inner correspondences. She finds in the mind - an empty glove, a "back alley" and wonders what words to write, as we all do, on a blank page, or "the bronze grave marker" she buys for herself. Each of her poems works on several levels, and almost always ends with a very interesting surprise or revelation. The significance of each detail is stunning and inspiring."
  
Ms. Hitt, elected Woman of Achievement for year 2001, served as Poet Laureate of Sunland-Tujunga 1999-2001, at the turn of the century. She has published books on local history, including Sunland-Tujunga from Village to City (Arcadia, 2000,2005) based on columns written for The Foothill Leader, Glendale news Press, North Valley Reporter, Sentinel, and Voicof the Village newspapers since 1998Over the years she has  taught in elementary school, preschool, worked in a pharmacy, chaired committees, tap-danced, and played English Handbells in the Pasadena Rose Parade.  She is currently in a ukulele class and has been elected to the Sunland-Tujunga Neighborhood Council. Any success she has had she dedicates to her support group: husband Lloyd, children and grandchildren, her biggest fans.

BC PETRAKOS

Brenda Petrakos is a storyteller, performance artist, award-winning playwright and Pushcart–nominated writer.  Her dynamic, tell-it-all approach has won over audiences in California, Chicago, New York, London, and Edinburgh, Berlin & Sweden.  Petrakos is a widely published poet whose work can be found in literary magazines and anthologies including Poetic Diversity, Falling Star, Voices Of New Women Writers (Duke University Press), Magna Poets, Houston Literary Review, Red Fez, Three Rooms Press, Oakland Review, and many more. She has three books published by Sybaritic Press: The Book of This, Country Fixins, and Stories from the Inside Edge, which has been adapted for both stage and screen. Stories from the Edge, an evening of Petrakos’ stories directed by E. Amato featured performances by Los Angeles poets and actors and the short film “Cop.” 

ln 2007, Petrakos took Stories from the Edge to the Festival Fringe Edinburgh, performing with John Burton, Jr. “Cop” also screened at Cinema Slam, Park City, Utah. Several stories from the collection are under option, including “Too Tall Diane,” “Violet’s Bed,” “Indiscretions,” and “The Curtain.” “STANLEY”, a feature screenplay she co-wrote with Joel Sachs is currently in development.  From 2007 – 2012, Petrakos was a host of the venerable Los Angeles reading The Rapp Saloon. With a background in stand-up and writing sketch comedy for Showtime, CBS and Fox, she volunteers her experience and time leading comedy improv workshops for at-risk youth.  She is a founding member of International Word Bank Productions and CFO of Baxter Daniels Ink Press.

Awards / Honors:
Pushcart Prize Nomination
Winner of the ACT New Writer Award

The Arvada New Work Festival
Best Original Play Award

2006 National Poetry Month Palabra Press Anthology

Selected Publications:
The Book of This – Sybaritic Press; Country Fixins – Sybaritic Press; Stories from the Edge – Sybaritic Press; How Dirty Girls Get Clean – Anthology; Magna Poets; Houston Literary Review; Red Fez; Three Rooms Press; Oakland Review; Bicycle Review; DADA Journal; Voices Of New Women Writers (Duke University Press); Poetic Diversity; 
Literary Angels (Diversity Press); Falling Star Literary Magazine; Joy In Mudville: Hollywood Anthology (Metropolis Hopper Books); Afterwords (Really Big Show Productions); Everything About You Is Beautiful (Really Big Show Productions); Little Joy Hollywood 2007 (Nilesgrille Inkhouse Press); The Cobalt Poetry Series
; Valley Contemporary Poets Anthology

Media: 
World Wide Radio Network
, The Jane Crown Show
, Kill Radio
, Edinburgh Fringe Radio, London Calling Spoken Word Works, The Greenfield Report, Literary Review Television, The Larry Winfield Show, Chicago Theatre Today, Denver Art In Review, bc petrakos


Performances
World Theatre Festival, Festival Fringe Edinburgh, Beyond Baroque, Sparring with Beatnik Ghosts, Las Vegas West Coast Physiologist Convention, The Rapp Saloon, Mary Wong – National Touring Company, Chicago’s Best
, Komic Kazi
, 
Second City, Comedy Store
, Improv, The Laugh Factory, Ice House
, Catch A Rising Star

Reviews:
“…the kind of writing one would expect from the spawn of William S. Burroughs and Virginia Woolf had the child been privy to frequent visits by favorite aunt, Nancy Spungen.”
                      ~Wenzel Jones/Hollywood Reporter

“… Petrakos clearly deserves the Nobel Prize for Literature. When I started reading Stories from the Inside Edge, I was blown away by their depth, their complexity, their exuberance and their pure genius. No one reflects and celebrates better or more poignantly, the highs and lows of life, love or loss in contemporary America. Her stories are emotional dynamite … with a psychological complexity that makes a reader feel that Dostoyevsky was a bit too shallow. Buy this book! Read this book! Keep this book close!
                     ~Dr. Edward J. Swanon

“The best of the selections … seem painfully, or beautifully, real. Nelson Algren wrote like this and I can think of absolutely no higher literary compliment or comparison to make.”
                      ~B. J. Merhol




Thursday, October 31, 2013

Ed Rosenthal's "The Desert Hat" and Susan Dobay's Visual Interpretations of Music , November 24, 2013

Two different art forms, two different experiences to be grateful for... Poet Ed Rosenthal survived an ordeal in the desert to write poetry about it. Susan Dobay turned to computer-assisted art-making and what she calls "visual interpretations of music" when she no longer could paint her monumental canvas... We will meet both incredible artists on Sunday, November 24, 2013 at 4:30 p.m. at the Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga. The Village Poets Monthly Reading will also include open mike and refreshments.

ED ROSENTHAL

Ed Rosenthal, “Poet/Broker of Downtown Los Angeles,” was known for using his verses to keep his escrows going. Taking the opposite tact of iconic modernist poets Wallace Stevens and T.S. Eliot, who kept their day jobs at a seeming distance from their poetry, “Poet/Broker” employed poetry as a tool in commercial real estate. Rosenthal’s “Poetic Request for 30 day Extension of Contingencies” was cited in the Los Angeles Times for enabling a redevelopment project. His Wall Street Journal piece admonished clients in couplets. To place poetic legitimacy on his state-issued real estate licenses, Rosenthal had some signed by world renowned writers, including Seamus Heaney and Evan Boland.

Prior to his near-death experience, he was already bored with the persona of the “Poet/Broker.” A fan of Federico Garcia Lorca, Rosenthal began to work with poems carrying lunar motifs in urban landscapes. Survival of a harrowing near-death experience in the Mojave Desert in 2010 has deepened this imagistic writer’s divorce from practicality in the direction of spiritual exploration.

THE DESERT HAT

This volume of poetry was inspired by a six-and-a-half-day ordeal of Ed Rosenthal, a Poet-Broker, who survived alone after being lost in the Mojave Desert in September 2010. An experienced hiker, he unexpectedly veered far away from his usual route and could not find his way back. While in Salvation Canyon, he was several times missed by search-and-rescue aircraft and helicopters, and finally, miraculously, was found by San Bernardino County Sheriff's Deputies. The wry, surreal, and reflective poems in The Desert Hat: Survival Poems describe the spiritual trajectory of a survivor living through a close encounter with death, starting from alienation in a corporate urban environment and ending with the post-trauma reflections about life and natural environment.

The book consists of 36 poems organized in four sections, reflecting the distinct stages in the spiritual and personal journey, from getting off track, through searching for a way back, through hallucinations in a hostile desert environment, finding shelter in the shade of Salvation Canyon, to being rescued and experiencing the world after the return from the brink of death. The title alludes to a canvas hat that Rosenthal used as a notebook and helped the lost poet control his thoughts, capture emotions, and write down his last will and a farewell to his wife and daughter. The 12 illustrations include photos of the famous hat. The Desert Hat was published in October 2013 by Moonrise Press:  www.moonrisepress.com/desert.html  The book will be available for sale and signing.  

In "The Desert Hat," Los Angeles poet/real estate broker Ed Rosenthal presents the mythopoetic journey through his real-life experience of being lost for 6 days in remote canyons of the Mojave Desert's Joshua Tree National Park in September, 2010. "The Desert Hat" delves deeply into the wildest and unpredictable heart of the Mojave into a storied landscape that Rosenthal renders as both recognizable to the reader and also deeply specific to his solitary and unanticipated experience, and in these poems, creates an empathetic and spiritually-affirming desert landscape that resonates within all of our desert hearts.

~ Ruth Nolan. Professor of English @ College of the Desert, California desert poet, writer, editor, conservationist & scholar

SUSAN DOBAY

SUSAN DOBAY is a Hungarian-born California artist and gallery owner of the Scenic Drive Gallery in Monrovia. She left Hungary after the 1956 uprising against the Soviets that left thousands dead and the country in bondage for another 40 years. She studied the arts both in Hungary and in the U.S. and has shown her work for the first time with the Alliance of Hungarian Artists. As a member of New York Artist's Equity and Los Angeles Visionaries Association, Dobay has created an impressive body of work including painting, collages, image integration using digital technologies and visual interpretations of music inspired by famous operas and other classical compositions. Dobay's works were seen at over sixty solo exhibitions in Hungary, the U.S., Canada, Germany, England, Belgium, Austria, Israel, Japan and Kenya.  www.susandobay.com


VISUAL INTERPRETATIONS OF MUSIC

Dobay's most recent project is creating music videos with artistic interpretations of scenes and characters from Italian opera (La Traviata, Madame Butterfly, Pagliacci) and Hungarian music. She calls the technique used in these visual poems "image integration" - because of their "integrated" quality, with photographs of paintings transformed into digital art and photographs of real life scenes transformed into abstract images by adding shapes and colors. Ms. Dobay will present two of her Visual Interpretations of Music. Her artistic credo may be summarized in the following statement: "Although I derive inspiration from various sources- e.g.., music, nature, the human condition- I try to find the balance between mind and spirit. My goal is to involve viewers in a creative game where both the mind and the heart are stimulated."





TOCCATA                  http://youtu.be/c08Z_ZUKVEo  
LA TRAVIATA            http://youtu.be/HGFTQBJX6XA
PAGLIACCI                 http://youtu.be/7Bck-_v0rs0
Madama BUTTERFLY  http://youtu.be/-IHDZsLzdpA
Magyar REQUIEM      http://youtu.be/XU8y7IKL5E4



Monday, October 29, 2012

Lois P. Jones at Bolton Hall on November 25, 2012

On Sunday, November 25, 2012 at 4:30 p.m. at Bolton Hall Museum in Tujunga, CA, (10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91042) Village Poets present the ellusive, inspiring and seductive poetry of Lois P. Jones.

Lois P. Jones is host of Southern California’s "Poets Café" (Pacifica Radio, KPFK 90.7 fm in Los Angeles), and co-produces Moonday West and Moonday East’s poetry readings in Pacific Palisades and La Cañada, Flintridge, California. She is the Poetry Editor of Kyoto Journal and the administrator of Penshells, an on-line poetry workshop forum.  She has published in American Poetry Journal, Qarrtsiluni, Sierra Nevada Review, Askew, Raven Chronicles and other journals in the U.S. and abroad and is a three-time Pushcart nominee.  

She considers herself a devoted but amateur photographer with photographs published in several literary journals.  Her poems have won honors under judges Kwame Dawes of Prairie Schooner, Fiona Sampson of Poetry London and others.  New Yorker staff writer, Dana Goodyear selected "Ouija" as Poem of the Year (2010) in the competition sponsored by Web Del Sol.  She is the winner of the 2012 Tiferet Poetry Prize and will be featured in The Tiferet Talk Interviews, which includes conversations with Robert Pinsky and Julia Cameron forthcoming winter 2012. 

We come to painting, to poetry, to the stage, hoping to revive the soul. And any artist whose work touches us earns our gratitude.  - Lewis Hyde, The Gift: Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World.

 

Shema!


Listen!, the Rabbi says, God is One. Listen for what comes next.
When death arrives shema is a mezuzah on the threshold
of your lives, the soul's last words before leaving a body.
But I no longer hear the hawk’s cry above the fields
where you left us. I can no longer count all the bones
that have buried themselves in me. Only the rabbi's voice,
this stranger who entered the last ten minutes of a life
when the daughters and all their hours could not give the word
to let you go. A woman who spoke past tubes and sheets,

beyond a face swollen from the fall and the eyelids sealed
past opening. She told you what a good job you’d done,
forgave all the secrets--the locked drawers finally open —
their invisible contents drifting into the clinical air. Her words,
the blood moving through us as we held hands – the road
and the river as we felt you pass, not so heavy as a song,
not even snow on the bough melting. I listened, I watched
you were so silent mother, I could not hear you leave. 
  
Published in The Tiferet Journal and the anthology,
Meditation on Divine Names (Moonrise Press, 2012)



Birthday


Who knows the birth of a firecracker?
          I hear they roasted bamboo to create a sound
loud enough to scare away ghosts.  The rods sizzled
          and blackened, then popped.  At the end
of the Song Dynasty the first manmade bursts -- gunpowder
          in a paper tube until they’d learned to string them

with hemp.  Now they could hear them all at once –
          the hundred-break crackers crackling in the night,
exciting a burn in the heart’s moist chamber. 
          I was too young for explosions.  For me,
there was only longing, a sparkler in the dark,
          a flare of fireflies built to last a moment.  My small arm

spinning a circle of light, a golden diadem I could wear
          like a fairy princess, never knowing dreams escape
as alchemy.  That time is not trapped beneath
          a crystal dome but a night of humid air, the black snake’s
smoke and hiss as it curls out of the tablet,
          flares into a pharaoh’s serpent as we watch charmed

in the alley.  My sister kneeling on cement, snapping the paper
          roll caps with a sharp rock as our noses stung with sulfur. 
We were rockets fired from a glass Coke bottle, the pyrotechnic
          possibility of flight.  A joy of a country being born
believing that beginnings are possible.   I thought  it was all

for me, born on a day when the night splinters,
            aflame in wonder, unconcerned with what occupies the dark. 

Published in Arsenic Lobster – nominated for Best New Poets.


In Full Bloom
after Peter Shefler’s
“Chinese Magnolia Branch In Full Bloom”


You have made her mostly magnolia.
As if a tree could rise from nothing

but a glance.  That’s how it goes.
Like dipping hands into a cistern,

the cold clear night has left its awakening
afloat on the ridge, petals

opening to this one sweet thought. No,
not opening, slipping from her shoulder

like a pale chemise after a night of rain.
You have made her mostly magnolia,

pressed her as sleep into a thousand pages.
Thin as a map of untraveled happiness.

Time is a skyward thing, quiver
of an Empress-veil painted into stillness.

Butterflies ask no questions.  In their short lives
they have flown their destinies

It's how you made her:  the breath
and scent of things impossible to keep.

Published in Sierra Nevada Review