Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Best American Poetry 2013

    Page 9
    Prev Next


      Art as style, science as a style, and intelligence as a style too,

      Perhaps the egghead style without the smarts. It’s politics

      Where stupidity and style combine to form the perfect storm,

      As a host of stylized, earnest airheads emerge from the greenrooms

      Of the Sunday morning talk shows, mouthing talking points

      In chorus, playing their parts with panache and glowing with the glow

      You get from a fact-free diet, urged on by a diminutive senator

      Resembling a small, furious gerbil. If consistency is the hobgoblin

      Of little minds, these minds are enormous, like enormous rooms.

      It wasn’t always like this. Maybe it wasn’t much better,

      But I used to like politics. I used to like arguing with Paul Arnson

      On the Luther League bus, whatever it was we argued about.

      It was more like a pastime, since if things were only getting better

      Incrementally, at least they weren’t steadily getting worse:

      Politicians put their heads together when they had to, Fredric March

      And Franchot Tone gave their speeches about democracy and shared values

      In Seven Days in May and Advise and Consent, and we muddled through.

      Everett Dirksen, Jacob Javits, Charles Percy—remember them?

      They weren’t eggheads or Democrats (let alone beatniks), yet they could

      Talk to eggheads and Democrats (I’m not sure about beatniks),

      And sometimes even agreed with them. It was such an innocent time,

      Even if it didn’t seem particularly innocent at the time, yet a time

      That sowed the seeds of its own undoing. I used to listen to the radio,

      Curious as to what the right was on about now, but I’m not curious anymore,

      Just apprehensive about the future. I’d rather listen to “Take Five”

      Or watch another movie, secure in the remembrance of my own complacency,

      The complacency of an age that everyone thought would last forever

      —As indeed it has, but only in the imagination of a past that feels fainter

      And fainter as I write, more and more distant from a bedroom where I lie awake

      Remembering Sputnik and piano lessons, bongo drums and beatniks, quaint

      Old-fashioned Republicans and Democrats and those eggheads of yore.

      from The Virginia Quarterly Review

      DOROTHEA LASKY

      Poem for Anne Sexting

      Beautiful Anne

      I had not seen you for so long

      But then I saw you again

      In the form

      Was it Angelo?

      What was his name? The other man.

      But that wasn’t him

      What story is it that will be the real one?

      Icy eyes and the smoothest skin

      That’s the way I remember you

      On walks to the hospital

      Light gold suitcase in tow

      She too had your skin

      Clear and faintly rosy

      Immaculate also in white dress

      With black headband

      The other Anne had kohl-lined eyes yes

      Below electric eel lids, Deco crystal cuff on right arm

      She sipped her words

      Almost Cleopatra

      The lamplight on that face

      To say the thing I couldn’t

      To say the word

      I couldn’t say

      You wore the blackest clips in your short hair

      I saw a pantoum leg across the table from mine

      Anne Sexton, your black hair is always in my memory

      To see it shine along winter seascape

      While I bit your black heart

      No you bit mine

      No not black

      What bit

      Your heart was as red as anything

      Although even the other Anne’s lips parted were not red

      No no they were blue

      No no green

      No not that. They were mine.

      from Conduit

      DORIANNE LAUX

      Song

      Let me sing, dear heart,

      in these dark hours.

      Let me suck the chilled wind

      through the spaces

      between my teeth.

      Let me follow you

      past the trashcans

      stuffed with oily rags

      as you strain under

      the awkward weight

      of the metal ladder

      and traipse the perimeter

      of the house, lean it

      against the roof

      where it will sing

      in the weak, brief sun,

      rung by tin rung,

      and I’ll hold it steady

      while you climb,

      my beloved, to the gutters

      of dead leaves, sodden

      by rain, swarming

      with worms and bird droppings,

      and scoop them

      in your gloved hands

      like a wild-haired surgeon

      excising gobbets of decay,

      pulling the dark muck up,

      proffering it, glistening,

      to the light, before christening it

      a clogful, burning, hurtful stuff,

      and flinging the muddied clump

      with a delirious thud

      onto the bright new grass.

      Let me sing of your strong, wide back

      and bucktoothed grin,

      your threadbare jeans

      that slip down your hips

      with each stretch and reach

      of the clustered muscles

      beneath your scarred arms.

      I could drown in joy.

      Time is no friend. I can’t

      love you more and so,

      my Ascension angel,

      my husband, my hinged window,

      my triptych, my good right side,

      my open door, my bowl

      of foreign coins, let me praise

      your raised fist

      gripping the slick layers

      of our falls, our winters,

      the fires you will build

      from windfall branches,

      the thousands of suppers

      we will share without speaking

      in front of the TV, our bodies

      dropped like rag dolls

      onto the torn velvet couch,

      my hand on your bent knee,

      my life streaming

      behind your closed eyes,

      your dreams leaving

      their tea-colored stains

      on my chokecherry heart.

      Descend slowly now,

      carefully, one tightly cinched

      boot at a time, let me touch

      the rosary of your spine,

      your wing nubs.

      Let me sing as you climb

      back to me, as you turn

      to face me again

      and we stand

      in a bed of roses and thorns,

      the quagmire garden

      we have made, carpet

      of brown petals, split twigs,

      the latticed backs of sowbugs

      crushed beneath our feet.

      Let me hold you a moment longer

      in my mortal arms and sway.

      Let me open your mouth

      with my mouth. Let me sing.

      from River Styx

      AMY LEMMON

      I take your T-shirt to bed again . . .

      and by now it has almost lost its scent—

      your scent, as when you were here and turned

      towards the wall while I pressed my body

      into your body and sighed, “You smell like candy”

      into your T-shirted back. Yes, the smell is yours

      the shirt warmed by your lean torso, tufted

      and delicious. I’ve washed my clothes in your soap,

      but that wasn’t it—there must be something sweet your pores

     
    ; pour forth. In three days you will be here and we will drink

      from and with each other, sleep in close quarters,

      naked, awake to heat and singing cells and slickness. But now,

      too tired even to please myself, I breathe the shirt that covers

      my pillow and dream—our yes and yes and yes opening and opening—

      from Vitrine: a printed museum

      THOMAS LUX

      Outline for My Memoir

      The time my horse got stuck in the mud.

      (Two paragraphs; no, one.)

      Went blind in right eye, took some medicine,

      I could see again. Scary detail: when the Dr.

      first shined the little light

      into my pupil, he drew back, startled.

      (Three paragraphs.) Later HS: broken heart.

      (Since this happens rarely, milk for three, four

      paragraphs); milk, speaking

      of which: I helped my father peddle it,

      in a square white truck in a small round town.

      College, my 20s: I recall little to interest you.

      I did cover many pages with writing

      and read, and turned, a thousand

      pages for every one on which I wrote.

      (Don’t see how I can say what else happened then

      and be honest.) My 30s? Wore funny glasses.

      (Maybe a two-sentence self-deprecatory joke?)

      My 40s–50s? The best part

      was a child, named Claudia. I could say some funny

      things about her, but so could every father.

      Besides, family is personal, private, blood.

      (With above exception of daughter, those two decades:

      a paragraph; maybe two, if I insert

      journal entry on day of her birth?)

      I can’t bear to write of her mother, whom I hurt.

      Lately? Read like a hungry machine,

      in a new room, in a house I love; there is still

      my child to love, and friends,

      and a beloved, named Jenny.

      My vital signs are vital.

      I tend a little garden, have a job.

      (No way I could write more than a few sentences

      on these years

      under the sentence, again,

      of happiness.) If I live a thousand lives,

      then I’ll have enough truths, maybe, and lies

      to write my memoir, novella-sized.

      from The American Poetry Review

      ANTHONY MADRID

      Once upon a Time

      Once upon a time,

      There was a beautiful shark.

      She combed her long, blonde hair,

      And it made the halibut bark.

      It made the chicken oink,

      And the whale to run for Congress.

      A man should never obstruct

      The course of material progress.

      Yet a lamb cannot but weep

      When the kiddies come home from college.

      For they have forgotten to keep

      The agreement they made to acknowledge

      The woodpecker’s right to peck,

      And the maple’s to be pecked at.

      Let’s have a little respect

      For Rubber Duck with a doctorate.

      That provocative way of standing!

      All elbows and bangles

      And hips just like a coat hanger

      And ankles at right angles! I like

      The shape of the pouring soy milk,

      The sound of the splitting log.

      But Egret finds it regrettable that her

      Sister is dating a dog.

      Don’t listen to ’em, kid!

      And don’t listen to their questions.

      This corporation’s been ruined by

      Well-meaning false confessions.

      And the world is fast a-melting,

      Though I would have it slow.

      And I don’t think it’s helping:

      The way these animals go

      Straight from hatchery to quackery,

      And, if only to amuse,

      I’ll throw my hat in with Mike Thataway in

      Black patent leather shoes.

      Maybe I’m just like my mother.

      She’s never satisfied.

      Maybe I’m just like my father:

      Always a bridesmaid, never a bride.

      Maybe I’m just like my cat:

      Licking invisible balls.

      Perhaps you’ll reflect upon that,

      Next time you’re screening your calls.

      And all the solvent and the solute,

      They were walking hand in hand.

      This the Indian poets were the

      First to understand.

      The ancient Indian poets

      Had their heads screwed on straight.

      Fixed on the body’s affluence

      And the effluents that escape.

      And the influence they enjoyed?

      Close-focus hocus-pocus.

      And every gezunte moyd

      In a juvenile honey locust

      Will prefer their Hindi distichs

      To the Indiana Hoosiers.

      We’re gonna be there from Spit Christmas

      All the way to Mucus New Year’s.

      But for now I draw the curtain

      And settle into Lent.

      Last person to go to Harvard

      Without knowing what that meant.

      from Poetry

      SALLY WEN MAO

      XX

      The night my sex returned, I shut the door,

      barricaded it with a rattan chair. The banging

      curdled the egg pudding and for ten minutes

      it was all tremor, all the time. There my mother

      was, half-asleep in her gender, and there my sister

      was, locked inside her purity panoply. And I, shut

      inside, obsessed with the insides of me, obsessed

      with the open-and-close of me, dead-sexed, hyper-

      sexed—I couldn’t stop mulling over how every seed

      burst, pummeled into pulp, jejune nectarine jabbed

      to the pit. Could anyone forget—the horrible panache

      of fruit? I despised softness, how a bite can sluice

      the flesh with teeth. I wanted to disperse like creosote

      in water; I wanted to reproduce like spores, tease

      like those stars seen so plainly out in the thawing sky

      but nonexistent, having exploded long ago.

      So entered sex, who loaded a carcass, asphyxiated

      creature, into the open suitcase. We shut it tight,

      zipped it, but the miasma stayed with us, angry visitor,

      as breath on the cinders, as grease in my hair.

      from Gulf Coast

      JEN MCCLANAGHAN

      My Lie

      We are always moving toward the valley,

      and the shadow of the valley

      moving toward us. This morning, naked

      except for a jaunty paper jacket,

      I lied to the gynecologist.

      I had read in the newspaper while waiting,

      having just told the same lie to the nurse,

      of Desmond Tutu prevailing on the world

      to bring a war criminal to court,

      and The Hague, hesitating, wanting to delay.

      I’d read of a girl severed in two,

      bent as she drew her bucket of well water,

      of lone farmers smote in their fields,

      and the slaughtered tribe Fur,

      a name I affectionately use for my own family.

      In Tallahassee I offer up my clean feet,

      my painted toes, my lie that I quit smoking.

      I study a picture of Bashir,

      his closed lips, his cheek inclined

      to receive a kiss—

      how we share the same cosmology,

      the same way of receiving a guest.

      I own up to my own crime

      against myself, which isn’t my simple lie


      but not letting the world in,

      my words swallowed in a private wind,

      my thinking too small to deliver me

      to the edge of a greater valley,

      offering a hand, a sip of water, and something of faith

      in language, which brings you to me.

      from The New Yorker

      CAMPBELL MCGRATH

      January 17

      Flocks of ibis on old tractors in cleared fields sliding to sawgrass,

      cartloads of corn, or mangoes, or clean fill dirt,

      orchards of citrus and avocado, shade houses of the enigmatic orchid growers,

      dusty horses in a crude corral fashioned from cypress limbs where the canal is

      edged with sugarcane and banana trees by the freight tracks

      hard against the Casa de Jesus,

      convicts collecting trash along the roadside in their FLA CRIMINAL JUSTICE

      jumpsuits with the SHERIFF’S DEPT school bus on the shoulder, joyless troopers

      overseeing what appears to be a collection of high school kids caught with

      bags of pot in the glove compartments of their Trans Ams,

      security towers around the Krome Immigration Detention Center, razor-wire

      reefs on which the rough boats of the loas bound for La Vilokan have run

      aground,

      gravel quarry gouging the template, coral rock pits and barrows,

      panel truck offering shrimp and stone crab claws from the Keys,

      pickups selling roasted corn or watermelons, pickups heading into the fields

      loaded with campesinos,

      faces of the Maya picking pole beans in the Florida sunshine,

      Krome Avenue: The Third World starts here.

      —

      Midwinter and we have come to pick strawberries and tomatoes, flowers and herbs, our annual nod to hunting and gathering, a voyage into the remnants of agricultural South Florida, vanishing order endangered as the legendary panther. Sure enough, Rainbow Farms has been swallowed by exurbia, and we must head farther south in search of a passable field, crossing the canals where anhinga hitch their wings to hang like swaths of drying fabric beside the dye vats on the rooftops of Marrakech, tree farms and nurseries on all sides, freeholds of the Old Floridians or ranchitos run by cronies of long-deposed caudillos, ranks of potted hibiscus and parti-colored bougainvillea, bromeliads, queen palms, Hawaiian dwarf ixora. When we finally find a strawberry field it’s late afternoon and many have given up, but there are still a few families in the rows, hunched abuelas with five-gallon buckets they will never fill today, and I wander out among them and lose myself altogether.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026