Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Tuesday, October 25, 2022: Marieta Maglas' "The Echo"

She has been in the burning frost of the highest peak

to unlock the deepest secret and to release the bittersweet

sorrow. In her upward fall, she told the downright evilness,

'I want nothing more and never again. ' She hung those words

 

in that eloquent quietness and the quietness oscillated in

the air. She found its own sense and the opposite. The words

and the memory blackouts were like the stars and the holes. In

a spiritual freezer burning, she reached the insomniac

 

dreams of her destiny and the deceptiveness of her distorted

fate. A new time made them grow into dormant feelings and

vice versa much more than certain old lyrics could turn into

pure music sounds to be lyric songs again. Her silent scream

 

slipped into a cosmic echo through the gate of that magic

realism. Became deafening stillness forever. Fairly obviously,

the down climbing evilness replied, 'I want nothing

more and never again, nothing more and never again.'

 

© 2022 Marieta Maglas







The Oddville Press, Sybaritic Press, Prolific Press, Silver Birch Press, Ardus Publications, and some others published the poems of Marieta Maglas in anthologies like Near Kin: A Collection of Words and Art Inspired by Octavia Estelle Butler, The Oddville Press Summer 2018, Nancy Drew Anthology: Writing&Art Featuring Everybody's Favorite Female Sleuth, Three Line Poetry, Tanka Journal, The Aquillrelle Wall of Poetry, edited by Yossi Faybish, who edited, also, her poetry book, Cubic Words. She is a co-author for A Divine Madness: An Anthology of Modern Love Poetry, for Enchanted- Love Poems and Abstract Art, and some other anthologies.

Friday, October 14, 2022

Friday, October 14, 2022: Ann Huang's "We are all earth's children"

 


We are all earth’s children






all we need is air &
                                spring
ocean is hectic possessing land
brazenly open to a long haul

being a human is to be remembered
by,
            hostess of breadth
reborn in nature

we are here beyond
                   this earthly life
waving at our ancestors
needing them not to waver

& who will we greet
                     without our past
to stand still in arms reach
of a period so marvelous that it rejoices


© 2022 Ann Huang






Ann Huang is a multilingual Chinese American film director, poet, visual artist, writer, and producer. Huang's poem-film series Ann Huang Presents echoes metaphysical and multiverse themes such as life and death as well as social ills of the man’s world perceived by the female gaze. They are marked by broad philosophical and spiritual overtures such as the collective unconscious by Carl Jung. Her films have received numerous accolades in the film festival circuits and museum showcases.


Friday, October 7, 2022

Friday, October 7, 2022: Annette Marie Smith's "Of Bells and Not Quite Death"

 

I heard that in Savannah

Georgia during the time

of the yellow fever

many victims would slip

sussurating breaths rattling like leaves

into a coma when ill.

They appeared dead and gone

and so they were carted off

to the graveyard's manicured lawn

and interred living to the hill of the dead.


Subsequently, being buried alive

became a common fear.

To allay this sensible antipathy

bodies would be laid to rest with a bell

on their grave

and that bell was connected

to their fingers with a string.

A string to ring their finger

an Ariadne gift to suss

the maze of after-seeming-death.


If the person woke from their coma

and found themselves buried alive

they could move their finger

and ring the bell

restlessly ringing their fact of non-decease.


We are bell ringers, my friends.

We are not dead yet

and the strings attached

to our fingers

thrum

with fear but also hope.

We ring our bells

from the grave

that America has become.

We have hope.

We have been interred and comatose.

But we pull the string.

We ring, we ring.

My friends,

we are not dead yet.


© 2022 Annette Marie Smith









Annette Marie Smith is an American author and poet, writing beauty in a sometime wilderness. Her books of poetry and short stories have been featured in the reading room of Shakespeare and Company bookstore, Paris, France. She's been nominated for the Pushcart prize and her work has ridden the trains and buses of Minnesota as broadsides through a Mcknight Foundation grant. Published internationally, her work has been translated into Italian, Spanish, German, Cherokee script, and included in The Irish Poetry Reading Archive at UCD Library. She is currently working on her first literary novel. Find out more at annettemariesmith.com

Friday, October 28, 2022: Three Works of Art by Annette Marie Smith


                                             "Leaves of a Feather"



                                           
                                                "The Woodcutter's Small Leaf Shadows"




"It's Nothing Personal"



© 2022 Annette Marie Smith





Annette Marie Smith is an American author and poet, writing beauty in a sometime wilderness. Her books of poetry and short stories have been featured in the reading room of Shakespeare and Company bookstore, Paris, France. She's been nominated for the Pushcart prize and her work has ridden the trains and buses of Minnesota as broadsides through a Mcknight Foundation grant. Published internationally, her work has been translated into Italian, Spanish, German, Cherokee script, and included in The Irish Poetry Reading Archive at UCD Library. She is currently working on her first literary novel. Find out more at annettemariesmith.com

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Tuesday, October 4, 2022: Review of Peggy Dobreer's "Forbidden Plums: Poems in Quarantine"

 



Nothing as it was is how it now goes - Peggy Dobreer/Forbidden Plums



It’s an almost accepted global truth that our lives have been divided into “the before times,” and who we are all now, which, due to the global covid 19 pandemic, have been radically altered, in many cases, to the point where we don’t recognise ourselves.

The process is called alchemy, though that’s not widely discussed (it needs to be). Quite a few poets of note took advantage of this period of seeming inactivity to explore the radical change, within, and outside of themselves, as did Peggy Dobreer, author In the Lake of Your Bones, (© 2012 Moon Tide Press), and Drop and Dazzle ( © 2018 Moon Tide Press). However, Dobreer did it better, and during 40 days of lockdown, created her chapbook Forbidden Plums: Poems in Quarantine (© 2021, Glass Lyre Press).

  Forbidden Poems  is divided into three parts: Chapter 1: The Shock of Exception, Entries: Untoward Symmetry, and Chapter 2: Oscillant Entrainment. The opening poem “Tine & “Promise”, describes the process of an artisan casting a shape, in this case, a metal ring, as it goes into the crucible, and is formed by fire. This sets the tone for Forbidden Plums, as the reader is brought into the shocking change that takes place in the poet’s conscience:


When the kiln is fired and

flask set dead center. When 

heat rounds the silken core


and in those first few hours

the mold does ooze and 

grimace, roasting away from


the unforgiving glare, we sneak

a look and waves peel across

the studio. Green folds into


carbon black on steel, armature,

burst and sizzle, bites of time,

hiss and song of industry.

 

Chapter 1 contains more poems that delve deep into the inner world we all inhabit, though Dobreer’s is more colorful, and elegantly juxtaposed than most, with the the language of covid infused into her poetry: 


Com-uppance is now required for

compliance, mandatory testing is reliance.

No one left standing will be left standing. (“Crossings”)


And,


This is a virus I won’t survive one more time.

But I wonder why I don’t just play my last hand

and let myself go out like that… with all my

missed marks bundled into one last straw. (“Phantom in Sight'').


   The second section, Entries: Untoward Symmetry, captures a process most creatives don’t talk about, except recently, in social media; the process of memories being used as a distractive focus while transitioning through a deep and fundamental artistic change. In this case, it’s the poet examining herself in relation to others, or her different selves, through the long lens of memory, to rediscover those things lost along the way:


I don’t know where I lost the way of

extending invitations. I stopped 

fixing curried lamb, lighting wicks. 

No longer selected sparkling wines,

taking time and pomp to pour at the

table (“Inquisition”)


Or a discovery of new facets within the poet’s self:


I love bubbles and

bargains, and the color of apricots. I’m not

fancy and don’t even mention children.

Some things go simple and long as you

knit. (“Simulation”)


   The final section, Oscillant Entrainment, chronicles how the poet works toward aligning exterior circumstance to the journey within herself. This is where Dobreer shines best, employing her years of expertise in the fields of dance, body movement, and performance, to distill a beautifully crafted series of poems that examine, in the way that Peter Abelard’s Sic et Non did centuries ago, the final values of Yes and No, Why and Why Not, and where that will take her next, as in the poem “Fool’s Gold in the Eyes of Love”:


This is my body, invisible acre, moon lander,

cold star of stars coming out of this dark

Corona, thing black depth of coal shaft, kettle

bottom thunker, one leaf hewn and shade

provoking, provider, now boom lowered,

calling our courage back. Flesh and chant,

rutilated breath, delicate provider, insider

and long left out.


   When looking back at the last three years of what’s been a rude awakening for every person on the planet, it’s reassuring to know that someone as wise, and courageous as Dobreer, took it upon herself to provide not just a chronicle of surviving the early days of the pandemic, but a personal hero’s journey that can be used as a framework by others who have yet to do so. I’ll definitely keep this volume with me, as a touchstone and reminder we all have the gifts within us to change, to accept that change, and to become better for it.



Forbidden Plums, © 2021 Glass Lyre Press, Peggy Dobreer, ISBN 978-1-941783-76-4, $16 (US).


© 2022 marie c lecrivain