Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Mandy Kahn & William Archila for Poetry Month April 28th

We are proud to welcome poets Mandy Kahn & William Archila for National Poetry Month at Village Poets on Sunday, April 28th at 4:30 pm. These two brilliant writers are well known in the Los Angeles area and beyond.

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, 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91040. Bolton Hall is a Los Angeles Historical Landmark built in 1913.


Mandy Kahn is the author of three poetry collections: Holy Doors (2023),  Glenn Gould’s Chair (2017) and Math, Heaven, Time (2014). Her poems have been included in the Best American Poetry anthology series, have been read on BBC Radio, and have been featured in the national newspaper column American Life in Poetry. She has given readings at Cambridge University, the Getty Museum, MOCA, and the Barrick Museum, has been profiled in the magazines Flaunt, Issue and Malibu, and has been interviewed by The Los Angeles Review of Books. She’s also the subject of Courtney Sell’s feature-length documentary Peace Piece: The Immersive Poems of Mandy Kahn.  Kahn holds a degree in English from UC Berkeley. She lives in Los Angeles, where she serves as writer-in-residence at the Philosophical Research Society.

Three Poems from Holy Doors (Hat & Beard Editions, 2023)

The Everyday

 Old friends, old loves, I celebrate

the day-to-day you’ve found: the favored cup,

the dog, the child, the husband, wife—

 

the hat rack by the door, the bowl of keys,

the chair in sun,

weekends with your omelets made

just right.

 

You graduated into

the encyclopedic pleasures of the everyday,

that brighter vision—

 

the sharp phantasmagoria you enter

when you watch your child through sprinkler water:

that moving prism.

 

Didn’t I always tell you, lover, roommate,

there were portals by the dishtowels?

               

You think you left your dreams.

 

You’ve entered

the Basilica of the Present

by its common causeway.

 

This, your striving earned.

  I Do Not Fear Death, Yet Go on Living 

 I do not fear death, yet go on living.

I know choirs wait for me to finish,

wait to paint this clear air with their singing,

wait in gauzy figures, just past seeing.

I know what will greet me is more vibrant

than a field of poppies in the morning

widening their petals for the daylight.

I know what is waiting, past my seeing.

Know its luster. Still, I go on living,

chopping, boiling, eating, scrubbing, sweeping,

writing sonnets seen by just my ceiling,

stacking up old bills—paying, not paying,

then a bath, a walk, and it is evening.

Choirs wait to stir the air with feeling.

Angels wait to steer me towards a drawbridge

made of lighted crystal. I keep living.

 All You Have to Do

 What happens is, you survive,

and then,

the next moment.

 

Impossible, it seems,

to careen

to the future

 

without finishing tasks

from the present,

 

but it happens,

a new hour,

 

and you’re there.

 

And soon

a time arrives

with altered bylaws.

 

Look:

chairs float

here,

 you can ride them,

 and there are no banks.

 The knots

that had tangled your hairdo

cradle a gosling,

 which takes to the air—

 downtown

you see choirs

roaming the alleys,

 and ballplayers

knit.

 Someone hands out

pineapple

on skewers,

 and someone

paints flags,

 a message arrives on letterhead

saying

You’re free now,

 and cars run on thought.

 Wait. Survive this.

The old rules

die faster

than you do.

 Breathe

as the ship of the new way

sails into focus,

 blowing its

festival horns.



William Archila is the winner of the 2023 Philip Levine Prize for Poetry for his collection S is For. He is the author of The Art of Exile which was awarded the International Latino Book Award, and The Gravedigger’s Archaeology which received the Letras Latinas/Red Hen Poetry Prize. He was also awarded the 2023 Jack Hazard fellowship. He has been published in Poetry Magazine, The American Poetry Review, AGNl, Copper Nickle, Colorado Review, Kenyon Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Missouri Review, Pleiades, Prairie Schooner, Southern Indiana Review and the anthologies The BreakBeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext, Theatre Under My Skin: Contemporary Salvadoran Poetry, and The Wandering Song: Central American Writing in the United States. In 2010, he was named a Debut poet by Poets & Writers. He is a PEN Center USA West Emerging Voices fellow. He lives in Los Angeles, on Tongva land. He has work forthcoming in Indiana Review, The Georgia Review, Poetry Northwest and Salamander.

Las Tías 

They get together in the evenings

for coffee & pan dulce

when the weather is cool

 

and the white handkerchief out

for a sniff is a sign of colonial

elegance. They talk 

 

in a tone of hamacas 

in a hospice, medieval cathedral 

in the form of a son 

 

who can no longer reinvent 

the sign of the cross. Eyeglasses 

rimmed for the metal frame

 

of their lives in a small town. Belt 

with a metal buckle to mark

the equator line around the barrel

 

of a gut. They come with flapping arms

around children saying, vengan,

sientense, vengan a comer. 

 

Plaza pigeons are their lonely 

apprentices, demanding a court case

for the death of their children.

 

Where are they going 

in their proper sadness. Lament

happens so gradually 

 

no one ever notices the dust 

settling on the lemon trees.

Once home, nap of pears 

 

& baby’s hair. Las tías 

in their lavender & moth scent

in the blue flame of their stove

 

who boil water & oils

who board a plane every night 

& never make it back.

 Published in Atlanta Review

Childhood

When it comes, my father's presence 

stands behind the weight of a country 

I've lost, like I've lost him, on his way out 

over the hill, flooring his decrepit wagon, 

exhaust pipe exhausted, which brings me 

to bed, to the sleep of a sunken log 

at the river's bottom, and my father in it, 

like some huge bear wavering through 

the thickest depths, all the while, I keep 

my eye on the shimmering surface of light , 

wishing to come up for air, but I don't 

want to forsake this absent god

tired in the pale grass.

   He's been leaving for so long

it almost seems natural, his aimless driving,

aimless thinking. Outside, a helicopter 

that may or may not allow me to continue 

keeps announcing its presence,

clambering out of the rain clouds.

It's so frustrating, knowing all I have to do 

is turn off the light to occupy the dark.

Published in Tin House

Three Sad Steps to Heaven 

 After Philip Larkin

After installing the shelves 

in the pantry, mid-December 

descending for a smoke,

I go out for a steaming shout 

of fresh air on the patch  

of dead grass. Which is to say

something must be done

about the loneliness it takes 

to imagine the dead, which is 

a word with a lot of deadweight 

for the pallbearer, for dusk light 

coming on like a tint of blue

nicked, with no attention 

to Mack trucks cussing 

like the B-side of a 45. 

Something tells me to climb 

the plastic tree house, something 

tells me I am so near, so far.

Don’t confuse your pros and cons.

Here a plane, here a crow locked 

on a telephone wire, 7-11 corner

with more scrapyard cars spatting

than the long crawl of ants

I can see from my three sad steps 

over the ivy’s fence. I, too, shiver 

knowing it’s in the shaky rooftops 

of the Christmas trees, out of

dark mountain throats where the sky

fades like a staircase, but I am 

no wolf howling at the moon’s pallor.

Inside me is a casket where I prefer

the dead to this cold, muted moon,

this fleck of foam puffing itself wide 

like a stare. There’s as much darkness

around the Os of the moon as there is

much dirt in a grave. I’d love to hear 

you tell me what it’s like to see me 

propped, what it’s like to see me 

drift in and out of clouds. Tell me

at least how my absence grounds 

you with the pin of a needle. No one 

walking the streets is here to see it.

 

Published in Colorado Review