Today I
received notice that I won the Bitter Oleander Press Library of Poetry Award
for my manuscript, All the Beautiful Dead
. It will be published in the spring
of 2016.
I immediately
thought of that moment in A Christmas Story when the father wins a mysterious
award in a cross word puzzle contest and a big package arrives on the family
doorstep. The mother asks 'what is it?' before they open the crate, and the father
proudly says: "Why...it's a major award!' It ends up being a plastic lamp
in the shape of a woman's leg, the lampshade an imitation of
a tasseled mini-skirt. Beautiful Kitsch. And so, I kept repeating to Michaela: 'It's a major award!' It was funny the first forty times I said it...
But, of course, this is
oh so much better.
Since the manuscript is called All the Beautiful Dead it's appropriate to make the announcement on the first Day of
the Dead. (For those
who don't know, The Days of the Dead is a Mexican celebration that takes place on
the Catholic holidays of All Saints’ Day, November 1, and All Souls’ Day,
November 2. There is probably a connection to an Aztec festival dedicated to
the goddess called Mictecacihuatl.
One of the traditions is to build a
private altar honoring those you’ve known who have died, using sugar skulls,
marigolds, and favorite foods and drink of the dead. There is also a visit to
graves - eating, drinking, and talking with the dead.
With that in
mind, here's a poem from the manuscript, from 2011: back when Michaela and I celebrated The Day of the Dead on Gower
Peninsula.
From inside a Gower cave |
(There is a
gorgeous book of the place called, simply, Gower, with
photos by David Pearl & text by the late great Swansea poet, Nigel Jenkins.)
Dia de Muertos,Gower
1.
A white egret
banks against the wind.
Sand flies.
Bottle of whiskey as offering, we wait
for a word
2.
Start
with a stone,
fallen from a wall
No, start
with the imprint of fish bones in that stone
Better yet,
start with the death of the fish, sinking
No,
no, you have to go further back,
to the beginning, the face
beneath the face...
The puzzle of the dead,
the poem
3.
Wild horses eat dune grass
(matted tails, salted bones).
We watch a grey mother,
her brown foal.
They
stop grazing, stare back.
Whitford Beach, Gower, Wales
(Previously Published in Blazevox)
Gower cliffside, looking out at Wyrm's Head (the dragon) |
Thanks to
Paul B. Roth
at
&
Anthony Seidman,
author of Carbon
Dating Hunger and Where
Thirsts Intersect,
who chose the manuscript .
More Gower, November |
"...the face beneath the face..." What mysteries we are to ourselves and others. So much to ponder. Congratulations.
ReplyDeleteSuch good new: Congratulations!
ReplyDelete