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Pushcart Poems

“Have You Ever Had Kugel?” by Marilyn Johnston

November 30, 2022 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Front Cover of The Poeming Pigeon, Issue #12
“Have You Ever Had Kugel?” by Marilyn Johnston, published in The Poeming Pigeon: A Journal of Poetry & Art (#12), released in October 2022, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


Have You Ever Had Kugel?

You’ve never had kugel—not until you’ve eaten it
in an alley café in the Jewish Quarter in Krakow
in a shy November light, around the corner
from where your grandparents once lived,
now a vacant lot.

You’ve never had kugel—the noodles cooked
tender and moist, layered with fresh-made
cottage cheese mixed with cinnamon,
plump-dried raisins, a dollop of sour cream,
and served on a blue-patterned plate
with a cloth napkin—not until it’s served to you
by a Yiddish-speaking woman in an apron,
as she runs to greet you from the kitchen
as if you’d just arrived for Shabbos dinner.

Kugel doesn’t taste the same unless one hand
is holding it while looking out the side window—
a shot fired, dogs approaching in the distance.
Not unless there are holes bored in the walls
of your mother’s Museum of Shattered Memories
in the attic trunk, and each time you try to peek inside
she cries, so you’re careful to leave the lock tight.

Kugel satisfies, unless you choke it down, like fear—
scanning the exits as you learn Cousin Viola must
have done, as she opened the vial and wondered
if the poison would be painful.

No, you’ve never had kugel—
not in your ceiling-fanned, poetry writing,
post-graduation trip to see where your family perished.
Not until you finally arrive at Auschwitz and you walk
under that gate, inscribed “Work Sets You Free,”
and the crematoriums appear where the tracks end,
where the stricken faces from every photo you’ve ever seen
from the Camps lie like ghosts on the beds’ rusty frames.
Not until you have to run outside, gasping for air.

Not until you finally get it that their kugel
was carved from sweat and cold winds,
seasoned with a mixture of dread and faith,
then steamed in the world’s blind eye.

And I ask you, again—
have you ever had kugel?

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Marilyn Johnston, pushcart nominee

“El Barrio” by David Gonzalez

November 30, 2022 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Front book cover of SOUNDINGS
“El Barrio” by David Gonzalez, published in Soundings, released in October 2022, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


El Barrio

Bring on the clave Tito Puente-style,
bring on two-three ritmo magic,
vaya papi que tu mambo moves me,
vaya mami que tu mirada mirrors my own curiosity,
vaya la clave,
vaya el sacred groove que me tiene floating y flotando,
and planted into the bedrock de esta tierra firme,
of this, our earth.

The winged clave,
uprooted, sold-out,
and chained to the miserable hold of a Portuguese slave ship, forced into migration,
this sacred syncopation
mixed with the strains of Andalusian canto
in the sugarcane fields of El Caribe,
and landed at this spot,
this town,
this Nueva York,
El Barrio,
El Barrio, el fingertip grip onto the American dream,
where half the streets open wide to the horizon,
and the other half are dead ends,
y donde el ritmo no tiene fin,
and the groove is deep.

El Barrio, where milk is not milk—but leche,
where manteca is manteca,
where the plantains are maduros,
ripe, sweet, brown smiles.

El Barrio, where the WhatsApp call,
la llamada a tu pueblo is fricken free,
Grandmother’s voice is honey
and you need it to be.

Listen, Abuela, in Puerto Rico, Cuba, Santo Domingo, Mexico y Honduras,
los muchachos eh—speak English at school,
pero español en la casa,
el lenguaje de nuestra sangre—our blood tongue at home,
and each morning I recite for them your prayer, Abuela;
que Dios te cubre con su santo bendición,
may God surround you with his sanctified blessing,
and then they cross themselves and go outside,
and cross themselves again when they pass the storefront churches
where the Charismatic Pentecostals are raising the roof,
and once again at the corner of 176th and Amsterdam,
where gladiolas, lilies, and everlasting silk rose blossoms
mark the spot where Papo was shot,
his lifespan “June 14th, 2000 – June 2nd, 2018, R.I.P.”
spray-painted onto the tenement bricks,
and scrawled beneath the sad youthful eyes of Jesus on a plastic gold crucifix are the words
“Why do the good die young?”

I’m gonna move to Puerto Rico when I retire,
I’ll get a house near the beach
and eat mangoes all day,
but, hey, then my kid’ll probably go to college (que Dios le bendiga) in Ohio,
marry a sweet, smart girl from there,
y entonces los nietos…the grandkids will need me
and I’ll need them to know where they come from,
who we are,
and how we live,
so I’ll stay here in El Barrio,
life is that way,
life is that way,
moving and changing like the crackle and burst of Tito’s timbales,
moving and changing
in El Barrio.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: David Gonzalez, pushcart nominee

“Life Is a Small Family Farm …” by Peter Kaufmann

November 30, 2022 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

front book cover of The Round Whisper of No Moon, designed by Robert R. Sanders
“Life Is a Small Family Farm Going Out of Business or Maybe It’s Just the Auction” by Peter Kaufmann, published in The Round Whisper of No Moon, released in November 2022, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


Life Is a Small Family Farm Going Out of Business
or Maybe It’s Just the Auction

You will try and try again,
slowly the machinery will break down.
The old rust colored tractor, held together with bailing wire
will keep running, tires cracked as chapped lips.
The wheat still sprouts green and forever each spring,
which come more often now.
The banker’s shadow appears on the side of the barn
leaning with the prevailing wind,
like the row of cypress trees
that line the dirt road.
The neighbors sold out.
No one knows the new owners, who will not live there.
The auction is scheduled,
all your years priced to sell,
the stamps patiently collected, 40 cents on the dollar.
Someone will argue over the Indian basket
you decide to keep at the last minute.
Someday kids will look through the windows,
maybe salvage the 6-paners or decide to move in,
clean out the squirrel nests and porcupine shit,
where they will find your old spatula with the wooden handle
and your old love letters,
leaving the calendar on the wall
with the picture of a farmer’s wife
holding a jar of preserves,
hair held back in a polka-dotted scarf.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Peter Kaufmann, pushcart nominee

“They Thought They Were Angels” by Juan Pablo Mobili

November 30, 2022 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Cover-Front-Contraband

“They Thought They Were Angels” by Juan Pablo Mobili, published in Contraband, released in April 2022, by The Poetry Box., has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


They Thought They Were Angels

Those were the years when the Flying Panini Brothers
would soar onto the modest void of their small tent
holding a rose’s stem between their teeth like a bear carries her cubs

As imperfect as they were, they thought they were angels;
on the ground they were fallible creatures, but in mid-air
they felt holy, like hummingbirds God made with His own hands

Those were the years when young women came back from the prom
with their brand-new dresses ripped under their coats
after some holy boy dropped them off at their homes

You could see them driving away, drunk and laughing
down the street, and disappear into a darkness that would last
forever in the young girls’ hearts

Those were the years where all of God’s voices led us to silence
to admire men because they seemed to glide under the circus tent,
unimpeached by conscience or society under their tiny capes

and now they are beginning to fall one at a time
like the fruit of a misshapen tree that finally dies
like impostors with wings who thought they were angels.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Juan Pablo Mobili, pushcart nominee

“Venus Comb” by Kristin Berger

November 30, 2022 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Front Book Cover of Earthwork
“Venus Comb” by Kristin Berger, published in Earthwork, released in August 2022, by The Poetry Box Select, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


Venus Comb

All the women I know are done twisting
themselves inside out: applying eye cream,
adjusting the mirror, covering the gray,
hiding chins in tipped-up selfies.
The small moons of their ovaries
might send out one more egg,
a pilotless explorer.
They are done watching for blood.
From a softened center, vertebrae
like antennae, they listen for the scuttle
of years hoping to sit next to them,
quietly, like a rumor, like beauty.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Kristin Berger, pushcart nominee

Pushcart Nominees for 2021 (and links to poems)

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

We are thrilled to announce the following poets have been put nominated for a Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Press Awards, for poetry published in 2021. 

2021

  • “Traveling with the Speed of Light” by Zeina Azzam, published in her chapbook, Bayna Bayna: In-Between, released in May 2021, by The Poetry Box.
  • “Clearing Out” by Marilyn Johnston, published in The Poeming Pigeon: From Pandemic to Protest, released in October 2021, by The Poetry Box.
  • “House” by Michelle Lerner, published in her chapbook, Protection, released in July 2021, by The Poetry Box.
  • “My Mother Never Died Before” by Marcia B. Loughran, published in her prizewinning chapbook, My Mother Never Died Before & Other Poems, released in January 2021, by The Poetry Box. (Second place winner of The Poetry Box Chapbook Prize)
  • “1969” by Tiel Aisha Ansari, published in her prizewinning chapbook, The Day of My First Driving Lesson, released in January 2021, by The Poetry Box. (First place winner of The Poetry Box Chapbook Prize)
  • “My Mother’s Satchel Whispers” by Carolyn Martin, published in her chapbook, Nothing More to Lose, released in January 2021, by The Poetry Box.

 

Image of book covers for poems nominated for Pushcart Prize in 2021

 

We wish all of these talented poets the best of luck!

Filed Under: Announcements, Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Pushcart Prize

“My Mother’s Satchel Whispers” by Carolyn Martin

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

CoverFront-NothingMoretoLose
“My Mother’s Satchel Whispers” by Carolyn Martin, a poem from her chapbook, Nothing More to Lose, released in January 2021, by The Poetry Box, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


“My Mother’s Satchel Whispers”

From beside your bed
on this seasick ship,
I listen to you moan and pray.
I wonder if you can smell
Dresden death
seeping through my seams
and hear the sounds of bombs,
screams, and labor pains
echoing through
the darkness in between
your documents.
I remember how
you clutched me tight
and rescued me
from blood-stained tracks,
rats and snow,
the taunts of brutal men.
And when János said,
We must go,
you never thought twice.
The heavier I got,
I never feared
you’d leave me behind.
We were wedded each to each,
my sweet, steady woman.
My companion, my guardian.
What can I give you
as we plow through
unsteady storms
toward The Promised Land?
The only thing I have:
the vow we made
to protect your memories
until we both wear out.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Carolyn Martin, pushcart nominee

“1969” by Tiel Aisha Ansari

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment


“1969” by Tiel Aisha Ansari, a poem from her prizewinning chapbook, The Day of My First Driving Lesson, released in January 2021, by The Poetry Box, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

Please enjoy the poem, and feel free to leave a comment.


“1969”

The day I got the best advice of my life was the day
I asked my mother, why do some kids believe in Santa?

I knew where gifts came from. Grandparents sent them.
Aunts and uncles. Family friends. Real people.

Christmas meant leaving Philadelphia in the dark,
cold dawn over domes with chemical names

looming above the marshes along the New Jersey Turnpike
among strange stinks that woke me in the back seat.

Across tidal flats with no sea in sight
Manhattan’s skyline floated against a smoggy horizon:

grey towers over a tangle of asphalt loops,
rows of brownstones, cliffs of New York granite.

In the shadow of the George Washington Bridge
(which I thought of as an extra grandparent)

we ate roast lamb with macaroni and cheese
with my father’s family in Yonkers

or after a visit to the Buddhist temple in the Bronx,
noodle soup, stewed pork hocks, peanut and pressed-tofu salad.

I said we shouldn’t leave the tree, in case the glass birds
ate the toy fruit decorations. Grownups called me “imaginative.”

We unwrapped presents, thank-you-hugged the givers
played Pounce and Scrabble, went to bed in guest rooms

or fell asleep in homebound cars
clutching new toys and warm with hugs.

I couldn’t see what Santa had to do with it. I had to ask.
My mother said: “Some people think lying to children
doesn’t count as lying.”

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: pushcart nominee, Tiel Aisha Ansari

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