The Ekphrastic Review in interview with Trish Hopkinson! Trish Hopkinson is a widely published poet who blogs about submissions and literary journals and her website is one of three poetry sites mentioned in Writer's Digest's "101 Best Websites for Writers." We talk about our amazing writers, about reading submissions, about journals we love, and our hope for more short prose and flash fiction. We talk about how we would love to publish more ekphrastic translations alongside the originals in their own language. Check it out here.
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Pelvis with Moon At the crest of this girdle of bone a moon like a luminous mask of the dead. I wonder what the earth has made of you: a story of scaffold ditched fragment, new history of sand. How much does the spirit weigh within the sacrum’s basin? Was the life of your pelvis as a bed, a cradle for sons, or much later, this chipped hull in a desert graveyard used as an object for art? O’Keeffe saw through to a sky so blue it seemed a carnivorous eye to make of itself both the sea and reflection of sea in a landscape of dust. Her vision: bones more swan than decomposed cattle. The stark plank of beauty: Ilium. Pubis. Ischium. Coccyx. The world beyond muscle and utterance. Your mouth shut in all of my dreams. The vision I want to bury: your sunken chest, the treasure I should not take from it. Here’s a story: a woman was called to the desert, pared down. Black. White. She relinquished the flesh and blood of her New York lover to live among the earth’s slow jaws. And it revealed-- or she began to see—the hard relics: mud, clay, bone, her own permission to be a voice of the unearthed mouth. Sharon Fagan McDermott Sharon Fagan McDermott is a poet, musician, and a teacher of literature at a private school in Pittsburgh, PA. Her most recent collection of poetry, Life Without Furniture, was published by Jacar Press in 2018. It wrestles with both finding a home and feeling at home in the world and seeking sanctuary in an often challenging life. A generous artist award from the Pittsburgh Foundation, as well as a grant from PA Council for the Arts, allowed Fagan McDermott to create and publish three additional chapbooks: Voluptuous, Alley Scatting (Parallel Press), and Bitter Acoustic, winner of the 2005 Jacar Press chapbook award, chosen by Betty Adcock. archipenko “inverted grandfather clock, with pestle” should’ve been the title of this archipenko sculpture. he understood the precarious surgery of dislocating bodies like his own, a russian in paris-- the not-quite-right-ness of foreign air on skin, or of thin-boned foot above foreign stone. and he saw too the blue-green patina of time, mirroring it in his sculpture-- time as skin. what passes, what doesn’t, what wears, and what is worn. - in truth, the title was “geometric silhouette.” a mild moniker for the wild thing winding through the colonic vats of his casts and molds. Stephanie Yue Duhem Stephanie Yue Duhem is a 1.5 generation Chinese-American poet and educator. Her work appears in PANK, Glass, Lunch Ticket, and other journals. She was a winner of Red Wheelbarrow's 2018 contest, judged by Naomi Shihab Nye. She can be found online @nameandnoun or at www.sydpoetry.com. On Being Married to Willem de Kooning You left the figures faceless, Elaine, then dared to title it Home. Their arms disappear into sepia and mustard, earth’s most interior tones. He taught you well, didn’t he, shredding your still lifes until you mastered each peony and chair. If I roamed through your West 21st St. loft, I’d see your brush strokes wheeling, the light of your city poured in. Portraits are pictures girls make, he said, horn blare and leaf dust swirling. Tell me, Elaine, how you claimed the air. I’d see the floor cracking open, your initials tight in a canvas corner and the men you brought to life, Cunningham, Katz, and O’Hara, on their heels against the wall. Tell me, Elaine, how everything is made and unmade. Your hand to the pigment quickened, didn’t it, like a fish into current or a species, radiant and strange, thrashing against it. Sharon Pretti Editor's note: This poem was inspired by the painting, Home, by Elaine de Kooning (USA) 1953. You can view the artwork here. Sharon Pretti lives in San Francisco, California. Her work has appeared in journals including Spillway, Calyx, JAMA, Jet Fuel Review and is forthcoming in Schuylkill Valley Journal. She is also an award-winning haiku poet and a frequent contributor to haiku journals including Modern Haiku and Frogpond. She works as a medical social worker at a large county hospital where she also runs a poetry group for seniors and disabled adults. Riven by Rumour The Witches of Belvoir Cunning women, they sooth agues and palsies, ease painful birth with raspberry leaves and camomile, meadowsweet and feverfew, lavender and rue. Then a sickness persists, a purge fails. A baby dies. How can that be? A cow sickens, crops are blasted. How can that be? A woman is barren, a neighbour miscarries. How can that be? Whispers, grudges, neighbours’ feuds festering, a village riven by rumour. Elizabeth Hough, dead, bewitched by Anne Baker, For giving her almes of her second bread. The Fairbairn child, dead of Plannett sickness. John Patchett’s wife and new born babe death stricken. Wicked practises, sorcerye. Fear. Gossip takes on ingenious spite. Sprites are seen, black imps, a fiend. Malice and vengeance, old scores to be settled. Malevolent taunts become malignant. Hearsay, whispers, a curse uttered in anger, a gesture, insult. See, Mistress Baker keeps poisons in those jars, potions of hemlock, aconite, belladonna, stinking tisanes and steaming brews. Her only defence is conjuring fear in her tormentors. Children run, screaming, to their mothers. Dogs are set on her. There is talk of nail parings, blood, hair, wool from a marriage bed, a stolen glove pricked, dipped in water, rubbed on the belly of a cat. The Earl of Rutland’s sons dead in their beds, and my lady sickens. Wicked practises and sorcery. They come for Joan Flower and her daughters. Whipped through the streets, wrists twisted, a rope through the mouth, bridled, manacled, shackled. Look, the devil’s teat, a claw mark, see, an incubus. Devil’s whore. Broken, they stand before Francis, Lord Willoughby, Sir George Manners, Sir William Pelhorn, Sir Henry Hastings, Samuel Fleming, and Divers others of His Majesty’s Justices of the Peace. No-one to speak for the women, their voices querulous one minute, defiant bravura the next. Pinioned in a dank cell, confessions, recantations. Silence is recalcitrance. Unbiddable women must be constrained, made an example of. At Lincoln Gaol, Margaret and Phillipa Flower appear before Sir Henry Hobbert, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, and Sir Edward Bromley, Baron of the Exchequer. They are no match for their inquisitors’ tricksy sophistry, the witty word fencing of slick tongued lawyers at ease with the parlance of law and state. In a climate of witch fervour, a rabble baying for blood there is the rack. Torture by water. Confessions. Hanging. A gibbet casts a long shadow, a legacy of fear. Those fearing witchcraft carry an amulet, a charm, prophylactics, bury Bellarmine bottles as counter magic. Those fearing accusation lock their doors and keep their silence. Sue Mackrell Author's note: "In 1619 three women from the Vale of Belvoir, on the Leicestershire/Nottinghamshire border were accused of witchcraft. Margaret and Phillipa Flower were hanged at Lincoln Castle. Their mother Joan died on her way to the trial. During their ‘examination’ the sisters revealed the names of other women who had aided them: Anne Baker; Joan Willimot, and Ellen Greene." Words in italics are from the transcript of the trial. Of London-Welsh origins, Sue Mackrell has an MA (Distinction) in Creative Writing from Loughborough University UK, and has taught in universities and FE colleges. She has worked on a range of Arts Council, Heritage England and Heritage Lottery funded projects writing about those in history whose stories have been hidden or suppressed. Her poetry has appeared regularly in Agenda -https://www.agendapoetry.co.uk/ as well as in a range of print and online publications. Tying One On It’s not just a tie, it needs to be a statement, carefully composed, like a piece of music, a piano trio, a be-bop jazz group improvising in a late night club where the clientele are starting to move on not knowing what they’re about to miss, what these three will get up to once everything is in its place and they can start taking it all apart. Ascent Where does he take it from here? Where is there to go from halfway up except to the top, and then what? Down the ladder and back up again? Sisyphean without the stone. Perhaps the stone resides within, self-generating motivation rather than the random will of a bored deity. Perhaps what he pushes is himself, endless ascension into an empty sky. The Orchard Ladder Mountains crouch in the distance. A wide-ranging orchard stretches toward the foreground crowding out any other feature of landscape. The man in a dark suit, white hat, stands facing away. His gaze appears to be fixated on a tall three-legged orchard ladder left open in the middle of a field. If he climbed to the top, right now, would the wind carry him away? M.J. Arcangelini M.J. (Michael Joseph) Arcangelini, born 1952 in western Pennsylvania, has resided in northern California since 1979. He began writing poetry at 11. He has published in a lot of little magazines, online journals, & over a dozen anthologies. He is the author of five collections: With Fingers at the Tips of My Words, 2002 (Beautiful Dreamer Press), Room Enough, 2016, Waiting for the Wind to Rise, 2018, both from NightBallet Press, What the Night Keeps, 2019 (Stubborn Mule Press), and A Quiet Ghost, 2020 (Luchador Press.) In 2018 Arcangelini was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Jeffrey Braverman is a San Francisco-based visual storyteller. He began his career as a photo-journalist and he’s still capturing emotions, moments and struggles as he tries to interpret humanity through his own personal lens. Jeffrey’s work exposes people to unique ideas and concepts that can impact a different perspective on the world. You can view more of his work here: www.JeffreyBraverman.com Kostaki's Harvest Woes The soil here bleeds too The land buries itself in your nails It wants to teach you about the first people and their culture But we don’t listen with our pellets and ‘Blood and Bone’ We bring the tools of toil for another soil with its stored memories The shovel hurts the spirits who are the true keepers of the weather The garlic is hollow, the zucchinis are small, the tomatoes won’t grow. Each day you visit the garden like the migrant you are You offer excuses of being fed propaganda before you arrived The garden digs deep and yields food you won’t stomach You take off your gloves and plant your fingers to feel the pain White soap washes the dirt, minerals, the remnants of rock. The red iron bark will grow stronger than your lemon tree It will tower over your house and give you permission to stay. Angela Costi Angela Costi is an Australian-based author of four poetry collections including Honey and Salt (Five Islands Press, 2007) and Lost in Mid-Verse (Owl Publishing, 2014). An award from the National Languages Board in 1995 enabled her to study Ancient Greek drama in Greece. She received funding from the Australia Council to work in Japan on an international collaboration involving her poetry. Recent funding from City of Melbourne is enabling her to document parts of her current poetry manuscript titled: An Embroidery of Old Maps and New. She manages 'Angela Costi Poetics' - a FaceBook page dedicated to reflecting on the poetry writing process. If Bells Last of Fall’s partisans are the persimmon trees who suspend their weary gems on fog lain fields, and six persimmons in rooms closed to me ring the blue-gray toll of all not on display. If bells, they cut breaths then let each sounder vanish, cast among their shades as flint chips on the mountainsides-- dampened pink up close, they fossilize at each approach and clang. If fruit, they fade. Isaiah Silvers Isaiah Silvers was born in Washington, D.C. He now teaches English in Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. Spinning Yarn My fountain is dry, lost in the confines of the empty hallways of my soul. Death surrounds me: an old carpet, fading like the green in a dead patch of grass. Ceiling, walls, mantelpiece, chairs, all are covered in dying moss. Help me find my water, my precious muse. Pull some life from with your magic thread, the singing birds of light, of love, of peace. Guide them through the window to the outside world, the breeze moving the curtains out of their way. Let them see your earthy skin touched only by the green of your spring-leaf gown, and your waist-long hair, lit by the fire of Apollo. Show me the way back to the garden of unending words. Mari-Carmen Marin Mari-Carmen Marin was born in Málaga, Spain, but moved to Houston, TX, in 2003, where she has found her second home. She is a professor of English at Lone Star College—Tomball, and enjoys dancing, drawing, reading, and writing poetry in her spare time. Writing poetry is her comfy chair in front of a fireplace on a stormy winter day. Her work has appeared in several places, including, Wordriver Literary Review, Scarlet Leaf Review, Dash Literary Journal, Months to Years, The Awakening Review, Lucky Jefferson, San Fedele Press, Willowdown Books, The Comstock Review, The Green Light Literary Journal, and Mothers Always Write. My Mother and Andy Warhol She’s pointing out to me, so I’m aware, There’s more to him than cans; for her, what makes It art is in the thorough pains he takes On soups now grown mysterious and rare. They aren’t all the same; Scotch broth is there Along with chicken noodle. A heart aches For everything a change of taste forsakes, But here they are, displayed with equal care. In him she sees the terms of motherhood And like a Green Stamp book he will create The needs redeeming him will validate. For Mom, what lies beyond is Hollywood: However golden, Marilyn will fade, But soup is soup, eternal, ready made. Robert Donohue Robert Donohue is a poet and playwright. His poetry has appeared in Better Than Starbucks, E-Verse Radio and Pendemic, to name a recent few. The Red Harlem Readers gave his verse play, In One Piece, (about Vincent Van Gogh) a staged reading in 2014. He lives and works on Long Island, NY. |
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