-Front Page -        -Page 2 -        -Virtual Grub Street Blog -        -Indexes & Specialty Pages-
        -Reviews! Resenas! Recensioni! -        -Eye Online -        -Online Bibliography-

 

Interviews
Out of this World An interview with Albert Goldbarth.
Translating Poetry into Poetry. An interview with C. K. Williams.
Nature Poems in a Post-Natural Age. An interview with Gary Snyder.
The Poet of Green Bananas and Baclao. An interview with Victor Hernández Cruz.
Ted Kooser's American Life in Poetry Column
#166: R. S. Gwynn.
#164: Ellen Bass.
#160: Steve Orlen.
#146: Marvin Bell.
#135: Ruth Moose.
#126: Karin Gottshall.
#122: Wesley McNair.
#120: Kim Noriega.
#116: Roy Jacobstein.
#113: Freya Manfred.
#111: Felecia Caton Garcia.
#105: Ruth Moose.
#86: Linda Pastan.
#85: Lisel Mueller.
#84: Connie Wanek.
#83: Dale Ritterbusch.
#82: Jeff Vande Zande.
#81: Tess Gallagher.
#80: James McKean.
#79: Alex Phillips.
#78: Bruce Guernsey.
#77: Li-Young Lee.
#75: Lita Hooper.
#74: David Mason.
#73: Roy Scheele.
#72: Jan Beatty.
#71: Albert Garcia.
#70: Sharon Olds.
#69: Marsha Truman Cooper.
#68: Wendell Berry.
#67: Catherine Barnett.
#66: Marie Howe.
#65: Keith Althaus.
#64: Lola Haskins.
#63: David Tucker.
#62: James McKean.
#61: Leslie Monsour.
#60: Julia Kasdorf.
#59: Amy Fleury.
#58: Pat Schneider.
#57: Richard Newman.
#56: Don Welch.
#55: Jo McDougall.
#54: Ruth L. Schwartz.
#53: Peter Pereira.
#52: Connie Wanek.
#51: Jim Harrison.
#50: Grace Bauer.
#49: Rodney Torreson.
#48: Walt McDonald.
#47: Robert Morgan.
#46: Bob King.
#45: Anne Caston.
#44: David Baker.
#43: Lola Haskins.
#42: David Bengtson.
#41: Diane Thiel.
#40: Alberto Rios.
#39: Nancy McCleery.
#38: Leslie Monsour.
#37: Shirley Buettner.
#36: Judith Slater.
#33: Katy Giebenhain.
#32: Curt Brown.
#31: Gloria G. Murray.
#30: Naomi Shihab Nye.
#29: Debra Nystrom.
#28: Ron Rash.
#27: Angela Shaw.
#26: Claudia Emerson.
#25: Rodney Torreson.
#17: Wendell Berry.
#11 David Wagoner
#10 Marge Piercy
#4 Ruth Stone
#3 Marnie Walsh
more>>>
 

Related Links

RSS/XML
Specialty Pages / Indexes
Poetry Index
Reviewing Policies
Book Review Index
Poetry Book Review Index
Ted Kooser's American Life in Poetry Index
Poetry Foundation Syndicated Columns
Palm Beaches Events Calendar
Calls for Submissions
Writing Competitions
Virtual Grub Street's Radio Dial
Author Pages
Wendell Berry
Claudia Emerson (Winner of 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry)
Thomas Gray
John Keats
Ted Kooser
Giacomo Leopardi
Federico Garcia Lorca
Lisel Mueller (Winner of 1997 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry)
Pablo Neruda
Naomi Shihab Nye
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Gilbert Wesley Purdy Pages
Online Bibliography
Bibliography of Paper Venues
Journals Cited
    

American Life in Poetry #75: Lita Hooper.

Thursday, September 21, 2006   8:33 PM

BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE, 2004-2006

In many American poems, the poet makes a personal appearance and offers us a revealing monologue from center stage, but there are lots of fine poems in which the poet, a stranger in a strange place, observes the lives of others from a distance and imagines her way into them. This poem by Lita Hooper is a good example of this kind of writing.


Love Worn

In a tavern on the Southside of Chicago
a man sits with his wife. From their corner booth
each stares at strangers just beyond the other's shoulder,
nodding to the songs of their youth. Tonight they will not fight.

Thirty years of marriage sits between them
like a bomb. The woman shifts
then rubs her right wrist as the man recalls the day
when they sat on the porch of her parents' home.

Even then he could feel the absence of something
desired or planned. There was the smell
of a freshly tarred driveway, the slow heat,
him offering his future to folks he did not know.

And there was the blooming magnolia tree in the distance--
its oversized petals like those on the woman's dress,
making her belly even larger, her hands
disappearing into the folds.

When the last neighbor or friend leaves their booth
he stares at her hands, which are now closer to his,
remembers that there had always been some joy. Leaning
closer, he believes he can see their daughter in her eyes.


From "Gathering Ground: A Reader Celebrating Cave Canem's First Decade," University of Michigan Press, 2006, by permission of the author. Poem copyright (c) 2006 by Lita Hooper, whose most recent book is "The Art of Work: The Art and Life of Haki Madhubuti," Third World Press, 2006. This weekly column is supported by The Poetry Foundation, The Library of Congress, and the Department of English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. This column does not accept unsolicited poetry.




Also at Virtual Grub Street by/about Ted Kooser:


Also of Interest:

  • Call for Submissions Page: A regularly updated listing of competitions and calls for submission of poetry, prose, freelance journalism, visual arts, academic/professional papers and more.

Labels: ,

Comments are displayed on individual pages only.
Access individual pages by clicking post title.

0 Comments:

<< Home

Poetry
Dead Butterfly by Ellen Bass.
The Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry
They Sit Together on the Porch by Wendell Berry
Herndon Remembers Lincoln Standing on His Head by Jared Carter
Saying Goodbye by Jared Carter
Under Stars by Tess Gallagher
The Infinite by Giacomo Leopardi
To Himself by Giacomo Leopardi
Gacela of the Memory of Love by Federico Garcia Lorca
Gacela of Distracted Love by Federico Garcia Lorca
My Son the Man by Sharon Olds
Anaktoria on the Stoop by Gilbert Wesley Purdy
Mark Hanna Under Starry Skies by Gilbert Wesley Purdy
more>>>
Book Reviews
Seriously Playful. Notes from the Air: Selected Later Poems, by John Ashbery.
Moxie and Dreams. Feminine Gospels by Carol Ann Duffy, and Burnt Island by D. Nurkse.
The Cosmic I. Present Company by W. S. Merwin.
Sex Trek: the Next Generation. Sex Carnival by Bill Brownstein.
True Stone and Epitaph: The Poetry of Pablo Neruda. The Essential Neruda: Selected Poems ed. Mark Eisner.
A Word Association Test. Words Brushed by Music ed. John T. Irwin.
more>>>
Essays
Desire to Burn. Did his misreading of a poem contribute to Kurt Cobain's demise?
The Poet and the Rock Band. John Berryman's ghost makes cameo appearances on the Hold Steady's new album.
The Garden of Memory. Pulitzer-prize winning poet Lisel Mueller's gentle, steady voice was shaped by a harsh history.
The Song of an Odd Bird. Why Stevie Smith is the right poet for our times.
The Elegy and the Internet.
Het nieuve wereldbeeld: the Magical World of Guy Davenport..
Obits and Memorials
Guy Davenport's Memorial Service Was Held This Morning.

Powered by Blogger

My Yahoo
Postami

Page Loads Since XXXXXX:


--Privacy Policy--