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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

“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

“My Mother Never Died Before” by Marcia B. Loughran,

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box 1 Comment

Cover(front)MyMotherNeverDied
“My Mother Never Died Before” by Marcia B. Loughran, a poem from her prizewinning chapbook, My Mother Never Died Before & Other Poems, 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 Never Died Before”

It’s been three weeks
since my mother died and I am starting
to forget, not her, to forget
each crazy mini-moment since,
how the EMT got on the phone with me—
it’s what we all want,
our own bed, our own pajamas—
how the next day
Kevin from the funeral home
pronounced pah-JAY-mas
the way they do in the Midwest,
she’ll be dressed
in a new set of pah-JAY-mas—
he is from Ohio,
although a different part
than my mother.
Just being from Ohio
felt like a miracle to us
as we stood in the parlor of Grommer’s Sons,
which incidentally did
Presidents Taft, Roosevelt, Roosevelt, JFK—
then I stopped listening
because we walked into a room full of coffins—
thoughtfully laid out like new cars,
angled to imagine an exciting journey in comfort and safety—
some open to white quilted interiors,
some closed to accentuate a glossy finish.
I kept saying, Uh! Ugh! Uck!! as we passed through
which was probably rude.
But Kevin never blinked—
he is a professional—
and when my brother and I
squabbled, you could tell
Kevin had a sister somewhere—
maybe in Ohio—
he would squabble with, too.
Walking towards the urn display
my father spied a tasteful wooden box
holding tissues—
She’d love that one! he said.
Even Kevin laughed.
It made looking at the urns easy, I was surprised
how simple, I’d imagined a Grecian vase
with curvatures and animals in blue
cavorting, not these plain wooden containers
bigger than a toaster
smaller than a breadbox.
We picked one and wandered out
making small talk about the renovations.
I want to remember
the scraps of things,
what people say, offerings,
a patchwork quilt to comfort us—
moments of incredulity, this is
happening,
my mother has died, the event
I have been dreading and preparing for,
imagining the possibility,
possibly since I was born.
Here is how it felt to get the news:
like the boat I had been sailing
thudded into a dock.
Like I stepped onto the pier and held
the stillness of land
after a long time afloat—
my sea-legs stopped rocking.
Maybe because the cord
that had been gently, persistently
tugging me along,
pulling me over the ocean,
the cord
that yanked me into the world
has been cut.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Marcia B. Loughran, pushcart nominee

“House” by Michelle Lerner

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Front Book Cover of Protection by Michelle Lerner (Cover Image by Robert R. Sanders)
“House” by Michelle Lerner, a poem from her chapbook, Protection, released in July 2021, by The Poetry Box, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

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


“House”

I am your tin house,
your cabin, your tent
and like a tiny nomad you travel with your yurt
on your back, wrapping around you
as you writhe like a bronco, bucking at the walls
my blood just the whisper
of wind as you stretch.

You do not know yet to be lonely
you do not know
what it means
to wait.

I am a house of spirits,
yours and mine.
You hiccup and I try
to hold you in, to hold you still
with my hand on the roof of your world.

And your father surrounds me
as I surround you,
he is my house
opens windows and doors
offers me his arms, offers me his back.
Sometimes he holds you at night,
his hand on my belly, cupped
around your foot, or fist
as you sleep unknowing,
his hands not really hands,
his voice just vibrations
of the air in the eaves
of your tin house, your tent,
this space that I have given you
this room of your own
to stretch into the world
creating
yourself
as we watch, wide-eyed, and wait.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: Michelle Lerner, pushcart nominee

“Clearing Out” by Marilyn Johnston

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

front book cover of The Poeming Pigeon: From Pandemic to Protest
“Clearing Out” by Marilyn Johnston, a poem from The Poeming Pigeon: From Pandemic to Protest, released in October 2021,  by The Poetry Box, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

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


“Clearing Out”

All summer long, I’d tried to put
our things in piles and give it away.
I wanted to walk into a room
and see blank spaces on the floor,
the table—enough to clear my head
of the clutter from under the bed,
where dust balls and shadows hide.

I emptied the dishes out of the hutch, found
homes for the silver, the glass-cut bowls,
everything the kids said they’d never want.
The only item kept—one set of dishes I vowed
to finally use. An extravagant find, bought
as a new bride, 44 years ago, after hearing
anything looks best served on white plates.

I wanted to have the joy around me,
like the mindfulness I practice reading
Mary Oliver’s poems, Karr’s memoir;
while I study the Oswaldo Guayasamin
prints on our family room wall—
all that’s left, soothing, pristine.
Nothing out of place.

And I laugh now, the preposterousness
of it all—that September night, while we
awaited the alert to evacuate the fires,
how I stopped to set the table,
just wanting to see the white dishes
one final time, against the glow
of the ochre-red, smoky skies.

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

“Traveling with the Speed of Light” by Zeina Azzam

November 21, 2021 by The Poetry Box Leave a Comment

Front Book Cover of Bayna Bayna: In-Between
“Traveling with the Speed of Light” by Zeina Azzam, a poem from the chapbook, Bayna Bayna: In-Between, released in May 2021, by The Poetry Box, has  been nominated for The Pushcart Prize.

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


“Traveling with the Speed of Light”

News from Damascus scrolls on TV,
a morning chat with a friend just home
from work, seven hours in the future.
My hands can almost touch the cyclamen
on West Bank hills, as if tending flowers
in my backyard. The corniche road
winding around Beirut’s tip hugging
the sea, so close to my doorstep.

As world wanderers we click on screens,
sift symbols, look with sister eyes
in oval lenses of intersecting circles,
the radius of the voyage invisible.
Stories between ethereal mouths and
ears, voices in bits and bytes penetrate
thick mountains, deserts. We measure
epiphanies in seconds, move on,

leave unintended footprints:
there are dreams of tented trysts,
shards of conversations, mistakes—
maybe second thoughts—deleted.
Like dense coffee grounds lining once
welcoming cups, or small bowls of dull
olive pits, a sadness. Only scintillas
of thoughts linger, a salty taste in memory.

Now in Washington a white moon blooms
while the sun throws rays on Jerusalem
and Amman…and this luminous language
of loving: imaginary lines around the globe,
a curving cage of messages at the speed
of light. We reach out, draw in, close as
the space between fingers on a keyboard,
far as the great meridian from pole to pole.

Filed Under: Pushcart Poems Tagged With: pushcart nominee, Zeina Azzam

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