From realpoetik at scn9.scn.org Sun Nov 1 17:22:44 2009 From: realpoetik at scn9.scn.org (RealPoetik Magazine) Date: Sun, 1 Nov 2009 17:22:44 -0800 Subject: [Realpoetik] Jenny Drai Message-ID: <86a3fe410911011722i713296a6g8b6fc26f4d4aecc1@mail.gmail.com> from* *HUMAN SURFACE 1. No light but morning the window’s provision just blue cloak. Rapture the optical that foliage persisting stalwart some winter trees where I tell you tales of human conditions and just blue dawn fading into a white-blue grey sheet. My life is not as it aught. Or is it? You can, you can I think. Just sit a few moments producing unguent these spilling sky drafts some drained colors and just blighted leaves shaking wet cold oh no fluttering like birds. 7. Stream in the reeds through the eyes and a light step the meadow brings the braid to hair. Strands in your voice speak over activity rippling water to understand rain dripping hair in wet bunches through trees. The human surface struggles upward through a scattered float. Shouts beside hair tendrils and the meek light waiting. The drowning human between me heard. Aloud a synthesis. Aloud a larynx calls a stream pushing orange sun below the reeds. Paper boats burning water is tongues. All day I’m close enough to catch my your in mouthfuls. *Jenny Drai* grew up near Chicago but has also lived in Hamburg and Munich before arriving in Oakland, California eight years ago. Her work has appeared in or is forthcoming in *Five Fingers Review*, *580 Split*, *Spinning Jenny*, *Sorry for Snake*, *Court Green*, and *Monday Night* as well as other journals. -- RealPoetik realpoetik.blogspot.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From realpoetik at scn9.scn.org Sun Nov 8 18:46:48 2009 From: realpoetik at scn9.scn.org (RealPoetik Magazine) Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2009 21:46:48 -0500 Subject: [Realpoetik] NOAH ELI GORDON Message-ID: <86a3fe410911081846q6ca88821h472fe8364f7c95dd@mail.gmail.com> A NEW KIND OF POEM for (and after) Arda Collins There is no ocean in your ear to it. What there is is this muffin, left a long time on the granite countertop. It is a kind of decision. You decide to write a new poem. Invent a better equipped kitchen. Stainless steel appliances, a refrigerator whose refusal to hum is both frightening and reconciliatory. It gets quieter. It gets sort of orange. You think of the word lavender. You have no choice but to. There it is, just floating direly in front of your face. How many types of ambiguity can a muffin conjure up? Did you really ask yourself this? Between the questions, as between two towering beachfront hotels, there are waves upon waves upon waves passing through a tiny sliver of ocean. What, exactly, do you think of the word lavender? Do you think you can put your ear to it? I’m trying to be completely unambiguous. If I were to say, “The only thing inside a muffin is muffin,” I would certainly mean it. *Noah** Eli Gordon* is the author of several collections, including *Novel Pictorial Noise*, which was selected by John Ashbery for the 2006 National Poetry Series, and subsequently chosen for the 2007 San Francisco State University Poetry Center Book Award. His essays, reviews, poetry, creative nonfiction and other itinerant writings can be found in recent and forthcoming issues of *Bookforum, **Boston** Review*, *Denver**Quarterly, Fence, The **Massachusetts** Review, Review of Contemporary Fiction*, and elsewhere. He pens a quarterly column on chapbook culture for *Rain Taxi: Review of Books*, and is an Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado-Boulder. -- RealPoetik realpoetik.blogspot.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From realpoetik at scn9.scn.org Sun Nov 15 22:47:40 2009 From: realpoetik at scn9.scn.org (RealPoetik Magazine) Date: Sun, 15 Nov 2009 22:47:40 -0800 Subject: [Realpoetik] Nadia Herman Colburn Message-ID: <86a3fe410911152247q113bc99bwecf44a590e8b375d@mail.gmail.com> STORY I don't know what made me do it. It was like getting up late at night and going out to find the moon, hung full, at the end of the block. Framed, between the low row of houses. As if it had been there, waiting, all the time. When I came back inside, there was my life, enormous about me. It hung, as in a story, and then started to shrink. A girl with pigtails came into the room and reached up and grabbed the thing like the moon and started swaying with it back and forth, tossing it up and down. I lay down, letting the page turn, for choice. Letting the light come up, as a decision. When I woke, you were there, at the head-end of the crib, still in your blankets. A small form. Your breath like someone escaping, then being caught. As if this time it will be different. Up in the sky, intact. A small stranger opening her arms. Letting the thin silver slip through into the blank before the hands can clasp. Or, in the undergrowth, the little squirrels, or in the dark burrows, beneath the house. *Nadia Herman Colburn* lives in Cambridge, MA where she teaches literature at MIT. Her poetry has appeared in many places including *The New Yorker*, * Conjunctions*, *American Poetry Review* and *Slate*. She is currently working on a meditative memoir about pregnancy, motherhood, social responsibility and art, pieces of which are forthcoming in the *Southwest Review* and *Literary Imagination*. -- RealPoetik realpoetik.blogspot.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From realpoetik at scn9.scn.org Sun Nov 22 18:37:04 2009 From: realpoetik at scn9.scn.org (RealPoetik Magazine) Date: Sun, 22 Nov 2009 21:37:04 -0500 Subject: [Realpoetik] MATTHEW HENRIKSEN Message-ID: <86a3fe410911221837x63e8f680g4dc2ad2b02e10cc0@mail.gmail.com> ECLOGUE Only expectation makes sorry dwellings However necessary destruction I never tossed a brick out my third story window I don’t want a stranger to expect An apology from an open window As I am unmanaged in this city What needs naming needs mostly to remain unnamed And stare blankly at a stranger staring blankly back On ugly afternoons I fracture the light That makes up this street and its bleak gloss In the city’s empty frame I find the story of broken bottles Unbroken and unnamed faces In pieces of glass and in their eyes Clouds pass The city otherwise empty An empty frame exactly what Convinced me it is here Before I am here Before the river with filthy imaginings Brought the city here with its belongings *Matthew Henriksen* publishes Cannibal Books with his wife Katy and co-edits *Typo* with Adam Clay. Recent poems appear online at *Raleigh Quarterly*,*The Cultural Society * and *Front Porch*. His chapbook *Another Word* is imminently forthcoming from DoubleCross Press Single Sheet Series. -- RealPoetik realpoetik.blogspot.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From realpoetik at scn9.scn.org Sun Nov 29 16:16:27 2009 From: realpoetik at scn9.scn.org (RealPoetik Magazine) Date: Sun, 29 Nov 2009 16:16:27 -0800 Subject: [Realpoetik] ALLISON TITUS Message-ID: <86a3fe410911291616m406d022by722080d3e643037a@mail.gmail.com> * OFFICE [Department of the Lost and Found] Whatever have you come here for, the basement of a building near the turnpike. Discards and burglaries pile up by early afternoon, like always, lord over this office of our winter’s machine: the wreckage of the ship still wedged hull-deep in the permanent glacier. The wreckage of the ship, a bear suit, penknife and hunting knife and so on. Statuette of a lion given over, who knows, put it with the statuette of the penguin. Poor drop-in with your grief-heavy voice, take back your map of polar drift; take back your mechanical leg. Poor, dear drop-in with your grief-heavy mouth, take back your McMurdo Station, and the solitary southernmost ATM, and the ice-breaker breaking the harbor, day in and day out, this muscular opera of finders keepers. Take back your overcast biding; take back your weatherproof throat. Allison Titus* is the author of *S**um of Every Lost Ship* (Cleveland State University Poetry Center, 2009) and the chapbook Instructions from the * Narwhal* (Bateau Press, 2007). -- RealPoetik realpoetik.blogspot.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: