Friday, December 15, 2023

Red Letter Poem #186

 The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––SteveRatiner

 

 

 

 

 

 

Red Letter Poem #186

 

 

 

 

In this season of celebration and gratitude, may I add one more item for Red Letter readers to what I hope is your very long list: thank goodness for small press poetry!  I’m throwing no shade on the handful of massive corporate publishers who still feature verse among their yearly offerings; they’ve maintained their commitment to the art form when most of the others simply discarded their poet-authors as being unprofitable.  And I imagine every poet publishing today dreams of attaining one of the few glorious spots with a major press like Knopf, Norton, or Farrar Straus––but the vast majority of the fine work being issued these days is done through very small publishing houses or even one-man or one-woman operations.  They are the ones doing the yeoman’s work of combing through floods of manuscripts; discerning what is most accomplished, innovative, or brimming with delight; making arrangements with printers; attending to the tedious task of distribution; ensuring that the artform remains vital.  Small press poetry reflects the diversity of talents writing today, the daring of imaginative voices––from both established figures and young poets just starting their creative journeys.

 

All the bookshelves in our house have long been filled, and so tottering towers of books rise up in corners or on tabletops (much to my wife’s dismay.)  These represent the recent titles I’m still working through––and while my list can only hint at the vastness of literary works being published today, here are some of the names on the thin spines adorning my rooms: there are, of course, the more prominent houses like Graywolf, Copper Canyon, City Lights, Milkweed Editions; but also marvelous presses like Hanging Loose, Four Way Books, Coffee House, The Word Works, Rattle, Tupelo, Cervena Barva, Black Lawrence, Lily Poetry Review, Beltway Editions, Cascade Books, Red Hen, MadHat, Kelsay, and unlikely appellations such as New Orleans’ Unlikely Books.  And I haven’t even tried to tally up the dozens of fine university presses who occupy whole floors in this tower beside my easy chair.  So this is my holiday wish: if your days are nourished, your vision enriched by the work of poets writing today, struggling to be heard––buy yourself a gift of some small press poetry or send presents to friends.  It was Walt Whitman who said that without great audiences, there can be no great poetry.  We are indeed a community of voices––and the hearts and minds that receive them.

 

One of the most remarkable poetry enterprises is Boston’s own Arrowsmith Press.  Askold Melnyczuk’s small team manages to consistently produce handsomely-designed editions that bring us, not only many of the most important figures publishing today, but other great talents whose names were largely unknown to American audiences before Arrowsmith trumpeted their achievement.  They have also demonstrated a steadfast commitment to the writers of Ukraine who are struggling simply to survive the next bombardment let alone captivate an audience.  So today, our Letter will be a poem from a Ukrainian talent who has been gaining a wide audience in Europe but will be, I’m sure, new to some readers here: Halyna Kruk.  Arrowsmith issued a new bilingual collection bearing the rueful title A Crash Course in Molotov Cocktails; it gathers poems dating from the first Russian invasion, but concentrates on the current calamity.  The poems have been beautifully brought over into English by Amelia M. Glaser and Yuliya Ilchuk.  Halyna is the author of five previous volumes of poetry as well as a collection of short stories and four acclaimed children’s books.  Her writing, honored by numerous awards and fellowships, has been translated into over thirty languages.  Vivid, sardonic, startling, wracked with grief, her poems also manage somehow to conjure a kind of dark joy, as the continued brutality of the Russian attacks makes every new sunrise an occasion for celebration.  But while some in our Congress hold support for this beleaguered nation hostage to their political agendas, this poet’s warnings ought to shock us awake.  In “Stus”, she composes a litany of purposes by which her countrymen can contemplate the very real possibility of their impending demise: “make your death speak/ cover your death, like a chasm, with words/ so others won’t fall in.”  Her poems are not simply literary creations; they are artifacts of this historical moment––and, however painful, I am grateful for the opportunity to enter this world she’s working hard to preserve.

 

 

 

and Jesus ascended

 

 

and Jesus ascended at the Mount of Olives

in the city of Bucha, in the city of Irpin,

in the town of Hostomel, in the village of Motyzhyn

in the town of Borodianka

in the city of Chernihiv, in the city of Kharkiv,

in the long-suffering city of Mariupol

and prayed to the Father––

let this cup stop with me,

 

crucified on a bodily cross

on an unidentified mortal’s body

2022 the year of our Lord

in a soulless world

 

heaven and earth walk on by

 

 

––Halyna Kruk

 

 

 

 

Red Letters 3.0

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Black History Month / Feb 13, 2024 Newton Free Library Poetry Series: Henry, Kersey and Collins


I asked poet Matthew E. Henry to curate the Newton Free Library Black History Month Reading at the Newton Free Library  Tues  Feb 13  at 7PM. Below is his bio, and the two poets he selected. Hope to see you there!    https://newtonfreelibrary.net/





Matthew E. Henry (MEH) is the author of six collections, including the Colored page and The Third Renunciation. He is editor-in-chief of The Weight Journal and an associate poetry editor at Pidgeonholes and Rise Up Review. The 2023 winner of the Solstice Literary Magazine Stephen Dunn Prize, MEH is an educator who received his MFA yet continued to spend money he didn’t have completing an MA in theology and a PhD in education. You can find him at www.MEHPoeting.com writing about education, race, religion, and burning oppressive systems to the ground.



Sarah Kersey (she/they) is a poet and x-ray technologist originally from New Jersey. Her debut chapbook is forthcoming from Newfound in 2024. In 2021, they were a finalist for the PEN America Emerging Voices Fellowship. They have also received support from Tin House Workshop. Sarah tweets @sk__poet.


Quintin Collins (he/him) is a writer, assistant director of the Solstice MFA in Creative Writing Program, and a poetry editor for Salamander. He is the author of The Dandelion Speaks of Survival and Claim Tickets for Stolen People, selected by Marcus Jackson as winner of The Journal's 2020 Charles B. Wheeler Prize. Quintin's other awards and accolades include a Pushcart Prize, a BCALA Literary Award honor, the 2019 Atlantis Award from the Poet's Billow, and Best of the Net nominations.

Thursday, December 07, 2023

Red Letter Poem #185

 


A holiday gift for poetry-lovers?

Help support the work of

The Red Letters

 

Announcing

 

Red Letter Editions #1

 

 

hello stranger”

 

 

A poetry broadside by Fred Marchant

 to benefit the Red Letter Project

 

We’ve just published a letterpress broadside of Fred’s wonderful poem

“hello stranger”

 

It’s a heartfelt invitation to the reader and an invocation of the soul.

 

Funds raised will support the continuing outreach of this project as well as

honorariums for poets performing at the annual Red Letter LIVE! readings

 

The broadside: 9.5”X18” on 118# Flurry white 100% cotton cover stock

Signed by the poet, in a limited edition of 50

 

A copy will be available for contributions of $30.00 or more

(please add $5.00 for flat packaging and postage)

 

Checks can be made out to SteveRatiner and mailed to:

33 Bellington Street, Arlington, MA 02476

or paid via Paypal (enso33@yahoo.com)

 

 

The Red Letters

 

 

In ancient Rome, feast days were indicated on the calendar by red letters.

To my mind, all poetry and art serves as a reminder that every day we wake together beneath the sun is a red-letter day.

 

––SteveRatiner

 

 

 

 

 

 

Red Letter Poem #185

 

 

 





Fever





My son believes messages are conveyed.

Sitting up in bed, middle of the night,

he wants me to tell him what it says,

to read the words on the framed poster

that hangs on the bedroom wall, the airplane

with the lips logo painted on the side:

Rolling Stones American Tour 1972.



In his delirium he has seen too much:

“A cow hooked up to a device. A bad guy

did it. And there was an orange, one that

just kept getting bigger and bigger.”

He gets some relief at last, remembering

a dream of a soccer game. “You don’t

have to bring the ball,” he says happily.



Talking through his hat, the expression

my mother used for conversations held

under fever’s tightening grip. She said it, too,

about bragging, or anyone making promises,

when they couldn’t follow through.



Again and again, I am called to save him.

I put my head down on his chest,

lift up when I hear his little heart

beating strong and true, see how it makes

the white sheet gently rise and fall.



His hair is soaked from sweating it out

in visions of a world all mixed up. To anyone

with ears and the strength to save him

from what had seemed so real, he yelled,

“Help! See it! It looks like The Joker.”



I put on the light and the shadow dispersed.

It was only the lampshade askew on the porcelain

night light, the beautiful pea green boat carrying

the odd couple adrift at sea. Their light’s the light

of the moon, so Dance by the light of the moon.

 

 

––Mary Bonina

 

 

Worse than any suffering that may befall us: the suffering of those we love.  Or so it’s been in my experience.  And this is acutely felt when we are, for the most part, helpless to alleviate that pain––when the only medicine we can offer is our presence, a healing touch, the love we try to radiate from our bodies like sunlight.  So it is in Mary Bonina’s memory poem depicting her young son trying to cope with a spiked fever and the flood of attendant fears that come from being small and unmoored in the all-too-large world.  I love how Mary enables us to be of two minds within the narrative: quickly, I find myself in parental mode, worrying about the boy whose body aches and whose mind is awash with terrifying images.  But somehow the more potent and surprising experience is how easily I found myself able to re-inhabit my six-year-old self, a time when most of us viewed our parents as omnipotent beings in charge of making the universe safe and comprehensible.  But, of course, the child is incapable of seeing the reality of that equally-fearful adult––which suddenly catapults me back into my parental role, shaken by the knowledge of my own frailty.

 

Did you like how Mary uses her colloquial tone to make the narrative feel intimate, close?  And how those hints of old and new pop culture make the setting wholly believable? (It’s quite a leap, though, from “If I don’t get some shelter/ ooh yeah, I’m gonna fade away” back to “Buffalo gals, won’t you come out tonight.”)  In the poem, we start to feel as if we were a member of the family––and perhaps that is precisely what poetry, in all its manifestations, attempts to achieve: we are indeed familial, even those strangers who too often pass by unnoticed.  Language helps grant us membership in this mortal household.  And so, for a few minutes, this is our little boy as well––just as we are that very child in the sweat-soaked bed, desperate for someone’s comforting lips on our forehead.  Exiting the poem, might our world-view be colored (ever so slightly) by that tenderness?

 

Mary has authored two poetry collections and a memoir (all from Cervena Barva press), and has a forthcoming chapbook entitled Lunch in Chinatown.  Her poem “Drift”, a winner of UrbanArts "Boston Contemporary Authors" prize, was engraved on a granite monolith outside Boston’s Green Street Station of the MBTA Orange Line.  She’s been honored with a number of fellowships including seven from the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts where she has been a fellow since 2002.  Her poems, appearing in numerous journals and anthologies, are savored for their emotional clarity.  Today’s piece begins: “My son believes messages are conveyed”––and, after passing through these fevered stanzas, I believe it as well: from childhood dreams, from the rooms we share, from the family we love, and from resonant poems such as this.

 

 

 

 

Red Letters 3.0

 

* If you would like to receive these poems every Friday in your own in-box – or would like to write in with comments or submissions – send correspondence to:

steven.arlingtonlaureate@gmail.com

 

 

To learn more about the origins of the Red Letter Project, check out an essay I wrote for Arrowsmith Magazine:

https://www.arrowsmithpress.com/community-of-voices

 

and the Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene

http://dougholder.blogspot.com

 

For updates and announcements about Red Letter projects and poetry readings, please follow me on Twitter          

@StevenRatiner