This book is packed with gems by poets from all over the globe. You can click here to buy a copy.
Monday, August 30, 2021
Soul Poet Society
Sunday, July 18, 2021
In Good Company
Sunday, June 27, 2021
Woof! A Work in Progress
Here's one I'm working on:
How to Live with a New Puppy
Prepare to be unprepared
to forget to do the basics (shower, stretch, breathe)
prepare to forget the pleasure of ironing a shirt and reading beneath a tree
prepare for dainty nails to rake your shins and seventh-octave barks to shatter the champagne flutes of your inner ear
prepare to be hung upside down and shaken like dice in a cup so that keys and coins fly out of your pockets, so that the beads of your girlhood necklace finally break free from their 50-year-old string and tumble to the unswept floor to mingle with bits of dried grass and kibbledust
prepare for everything to come loose, for words like lunch and sleep to become as abstract as infinity or world peace
prepare for even your teeth to unmoor and rattle to the fir floor, leaving you to gum the puppy’s silky ears like a newborn infant seeking love as much as sustenance with its warm, blind mouth.
Tuesday, June 22, 2021
Improv
Something nice happened a few weeks ago.
A stranger who likes our poetry post slipped a book of their own poems through our mail slot. Inside the book was a handwritten note from the author, Taylor L. Ciambra:
"Hello! Thank you for sharing poems with the neighborhood! It always makes my day when I see a new poem up during a walk or jog. I want to share my poems with you as a way to show gratitude. I hope you enjoy them!"
Bowled over by this gift, I wanted to show my gratitude in turn. I took words from their poems (breadcrumbs, beard, motorcycle, heels, flannel) as well as the title of the book, Away with Words, and wove them into a freewrite/poem. Then I posted it for Ciambra alongside one of their poems to see the next time they jog by. I titled my writing "Improv" because Ciambra's bio says they're a "theatre maker and writer." The ending refers to a popular improv game that asks participants to work together, accepting each other's ideas and keeping a conversation alive. No script required.
Once again I'm reminded that writing is as much about conversation and connection as anything. May we all be joyful participants in organic exchanges with friends and strangers alike.
Improv
for Taylor L. Ciambra
Away with words
A way with words
with sentences
and similes
dressed in hiking boots,
not heels and stockings
A way
to weigh
moments
to follow breadcrumbs
to bandaids,
sleeping bags,
and beards
Your words
the salt breeze on (y)our
bare neck, whiff
of sugar and of smoke --
one shoulder cocked
inside a leather coat,
one shoulder nestled
in a flannel robe.
Away with words
A way with words
A word:
Yes
or two:
Yes, and...
Wednesday, June 2, 2021
In Their Shoes
Monday, May 31, 2021
Lone Rock, Oregon -- prose by Ron Smith
The other day my online writing class took inspiration from
the first line of Isak Dinesen's Out of Africa: "I had a farm in
Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills."
My friend Ron Smith wrote this story in response to the prompt. I love the way he skillfully captures the beauty of a place he had to leave behind. What an act of generosity to let us see Lonerock through his eyes.
Lonerock, Oregon
I had a cabin in Lonerock, Oregon, one hundred and seventy-five miles east of Portland, from 1999 until 2005, when I sold it to Boyd Harris, the realtor.
Situated in the approximate center of the Columbia River
Gorge basin in Eastern Oregon, Lonerock is located twenty-two miles southeast
of Condon, Oregon. It is customary to think of Eastern Oregon as mostly flat or
rugged wasteland, supporting little vegetation, home only to jack rabbits and
people who want to get away from it all. However, Lonerock nestles in a
gentle ravine, with surrounding clusters of low pine and cedar.
The last several miles to Lonerock are traveled on a narrow, descending gravel road, the hamlet seeming toylike and far away, huddled in the ravine in the shimmering distance. Closer, rising from the small group of dwellings and long-empty storefronts, a stiletto steeple rises above a perfectly maintained white New England style church.
As you cross a small bridge over a part-time creek and enter the small town, population twenty-six, the chief attraction of Lonerock and the source of its name appears, a huge lone rock, egglike, half the size of the church it roosts next to, deposited about seventy-five thousand years ago during the last ice age.
It is a mystery why people don't flock to this spectacle, but all the better that they don't. If a log truck isn't passing through or the sheep aren't quarrelling, there is a quiet in Lonerock that was such a revelation to this Portlander. The stars at night are so clear, numerous and bright that they seem artificial if you are not ready for them.
I had a cabin in Lonerock, Oregon for six years, no rude hut, twin sinks in the bathroom (his and hers), the pride of Madden Street, but the maintenance at that distance became too difficult so I let it go. I've never been back.
About the author:
Ron Smith has been playing drums and been in bands for as long as he can remember. His attempts at songwriting led to prose. He loves reading fiction, history and biography and specializes in writing short fiction. His favorite book is Thomas Mann's Buddenbrooks. He shares a Woodstock cottage with numerous musical instruments and hundreds of books, vinyl records, and CDs.
Wednesday, May 5, 2021
Celery Tanka -- by Deborah Lee
Isn't it wondrous how an artist can say so much with just a few lines?
A tanka is a Japanese poetic form where every word in its short five lines counts. Enjoy this one by Deborah Lee, who proves you can truly write in a meaningful way about anything...even celery.
Celery Tanka
by Deborah Lee
I remember a
Class about Waldorf Salad.
The teacher was handsome.
I think of mom when I cut
Celery; she loved the heart.
About the author: Deborah is a writer, musician, and a longtime resident of Portland, Oregon.