Note: This is our last “Poetry and the 2020 Election” post, opening the field to poets beyond our psychosm. We thank heartily the Hudson Valley poets who contributed to this effort, and Jacket2 ‘s Kenna O’Rourke and Jessica Lowenthal for their continuous presence and care in making what we have done sing.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Poetry @ the Green with Joy Young and Nicole Bond
320 S. Canal
At nine years old your childhood was for rent.
A continuous game of musical beds, where
a lease was signed on a new family before you
had the chance to unpack. I first met you in spring.
Tuesday, June 28, 2022
Poetry @ the Green with Nicole Bond and Joy Young
320 S. Canal
Dear White Couple Who Have The Black Pre School Aged Child,
We don’t know each other, but I see you in the neighborhood, usually at the bus stop in the mornings.
It’s hard not to notice a white woman and man walking with or pushing a Black pre-school girl in a stroller, up and down a Chicago South Side street. It’s an off-putting precursor to what will inevitably be the same wave of gentrification that crashed over neighboring Hyde Park.
Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Blue Hour Reading Series with Sarah Gambito and Joseph Legaspi
Zoom
I was so afraid. I couldn’t escape it. It was bigger than me and 3 horned. It dashed for me and missed and missed again. It leapt for me in my skirt. I was younger than it. It opened its parent mouth and I could die trying.
Watch Sarah Gambito’s 2022 reading with Joseph Legaspi at the Chicago Poetry Center:
Sarah Gambito begins at 30:36 minutes.
How much our hands are God’s
to be running fingers over braille cities.
We are this hand pushed through our womb.
Weeping with each other’s blood in our eyes.
I dreamed that I slept with the light on.
Watch Joseph Legaspi’s 2022 reading with Sarah Gambito at the Chicago Poetry Center:
Joseph Legaspi begins at 13:52 minutes.
The gowns and dresses hang
like fleece in their glaring
whiteness, sheepskin-softness,
the ruffled matrimonial love in which the brides-
in-waiting dance around, expectantly,
hummingbirds to tulips. I was dragged here:
David’s Bridal, off the concrete-gray arterial
highways of a naval town.
Poet Joseph O. Legaspi discusses the experience of studying poetry in the Philippines, how the notion of community continues to evolve and influence his work, and what it means to live and work as a poet in New York City.
Wednesday, April 13, 2022
Blue Hour Reading Series with Keetje Kuipers and Charif Shanahan
Zoom
Not that you would reinvent your life each second, but that you could.
How many lives do we get to live?
What happened at the beginning, that first major intersection: back in NYC,
Back from school, fallen out of school, dropped like a squashed-up napkin,
You did not choose to walk in that direction, you wandered there, then
Stayed. Not because you wanted to stay
But because others wanted to decide who stayed.
Watch Charif Shanahan’s 2022 reading with Keetje Kuipers at the Chicago Poetry Center:
Charif Shanahan begins at 1:57 minutes.
Specks of toothpaste fleck the mirror.
A fan spins dust in the hall.
I find “this is it” too vulgar to accept
So I wait for a new starting point
As though life will begin there and then.
Do you know what I mean?
Not what I’m saying, what I mean.
– Charif Shanahan, “While I Wash My Face I Ask Impossible Questions of Myself and Those Who Love Me”
Lit Hub is excited to feature another entry in a new series from Poets.org: “enjambments,” a monthly interview series with new and established poets. This month, they spoke to Charif Shanahan, the …