Wednesday, November 30, 2022

THE WOMAN WITH NEWSPAPER SHOES by Penny Perry


My friend, Penny Perry, has a new book! 


The Woman with Newspaper Shoes is an exceptional book of poems by Penny Perry, an eight-time Pushcart nominee.  Set in Southern California, her second collection of poems is at once memoir, cultural and period snapshot and a volume of compelling and grace-filled poems. The 104 poems, all previously published, form a chronicle of struggle, desire, loss and acceptance.


ISBN-13: 978-1-7350556-5-7                        Publisher: Garden Oak Press
LCCN: 2022937588

$15

156 pages
paperback

Valerie Hastings, winner of the 2020 Steve Kowit Poetry Prize, said this about The Woman with Newspaper Shoes: "These poems are pure gold. They sing of loss and love, of the dead we carry with us and the living we work to keep alive, of survival, memory, family and, most importantly, the joy of being in the here."


Here is one of the poems from Penny Perry's new book;

THE ORDER OF THINGS

Home from college, she climbs
in the car, squints at my hair.
Her father wants me to look
glamorous like his actress friends.
I wound my hair in sponge rollers
and combed it into a stiff helmet.

I wait for her to tell me
I look stupid. She has always
been my critic-in-residence.
Daughters denigrate their mothers
so they will have the courage
to leave. The order of things.
"I love your hair, Mom," she says.

The car reeks of too sweet hair spray.
Airport palms look like movie trees
on this bright December day.
I streak onto the wrong freeway.
Cars in the next lane zip past.

She sits forward. "We're lost."
Her words anxious puffs of air.
"I want to kill myself. Let's do it together."
She smiles in conspiracy.
"You're not that happy."
Like dove-gray kindling, my fear ignites.
I glance at myself in the car mirror,
a timid woman under a foreign helmet.

She leans against me,
the sweet small weight of her
an arrow in my bow.
I will become a warrior.
I don't know it yet.

Sunglasses hide my wet eyes.
I tell my first lie.
"I know the way home."

    by Penny Perry




Wednesday, November 16, 2022

IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR

 IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR


When the temperatures cool down and the leaves have fallen, there's a mania that grips many people. Pumpkin spice this and pumpkin spice that. Some folks just can't get enough pumpkin spice.

Myself, I prefer it, as most likely it originally was meant to be, as a spice in pumpkin pie.


Here's a poem for this season:

Pumpkin Spice

As the summer heat abates, maturing into Autumn's chill,
Leaves of green change into gold and red and orange and brown.
Groves of apple trees create a crisp aroma that instills
A sense of changing and of cold, of closing, winding down.

I love the fragrances of Fall, the colors of this time of year,
The flavors and the way it feels, the quiet fading ebb.
The world decreases, woes grow small, the air itself becomes more clear,
And everything appears more real, from stars to spiderwebs.

A whiff of cinnamon and cloves, a breath of ginger and nutmeg:
The taste of Fall is in this spice, warm and rich and sweet,
Mulling wine upon the stove, in the oven baking bread;
Pile whipped cream upon a slice of pumpkin pie and eat.

    by Ester Spurrill-Jones


Ester Spurill-Jones is the author of several books of poems and a manual on how to write poems (available on Amazon). She describes herself as Poet, lover, thinker, human and says of herself: 

"I am not an open book although I wish I could be. A part of me is all you see--the rest is hidden deep inside. 

Words have always been my art. They dance for me and sing for me. They laugh for me and cry for me. That are my paint and brushes. They are my clay."


To see more of Ester's work go to:
https://sites.google.com/view/thewordartist/home








Thursday, November 3, 2022

November and the waning of the year

November Night

   by Adelaide Crapsey (1878 - 1914)


Listen...
With faint dry sound,
Like steps of passing ghosts,
The leaves, frost-crisp'd, break from the trees
And fall.



The poem's central image is formed by two elements: the falling leaves and the steps of the ghosts. As in many of Crapsey's poems, she juxtaposes something small and ordinary (such as the leaves) with something large and timeless (here, death). The leaves become a momento mori and the simile that connects them to ghostly footsteps intensifies this.


November Night is in the chinquapin form invented by Adelaide Crapsey.  A cinquain is a five-line poem in which the first line has two syllables; the second, four syllables; the third, six syllables; the fourth, eight syllables and the fifth, and final, line goes back to two syllables.

Adelaide Crapsey's poems (her entire poetic output, less than one hundred poem) often speak of death and dying. Diagnosed with fatal tuberculosis of the lining of the brain in 1911, she began writing cinquains in the same year. These poems reflect her knowledge of her own impending death. The form itself (the gradual increase of syllables from lines one to four, followed by the short final line) is a metaphor for the life of this young woman -- a brief life, cut short.

Crapsey was born and raised in New York. A graduate of Vassar,  she taught briefly until tuberculosis left her bedridden. In addition to her poems, she produced a study of metrics, praised for its clarity. She was 36 when she died.


Here's one more poem by Crapsey:


Release

     by Adelaide Crapsey


With swift
Great sweep of her
Magnificent arm my pain
Clanged back the doors that shut my soul
From life.




And lastly, another November cinquain by Adelaide Craipsey:


Niagara

     Seen on a Night in November


How frail, 
Above the bulk
Of crashing water hangs,
Autumnal, evanescent, wan,
The moon.






A poem by Charles Wright

  AFTER READING TU FU, I GO OUTSIDE TO THE DWARF GARDEN                         by Charles Wright East of me, west of me, full summer. How d...