Thursday, April 18, 2024

GAS Featured Poet/Artist: LaWanda Walters


 LaWanda Walters is the author of Light Is the Odalisque, which was published in 2016 by Press 53 in its Silver Concho Poetry Series. New poems have recently appeared or are forthcoming in The Southern ReviewPoetryThe Georgia ReviewThe Ekphrastic Review, and Live Encounters Poetry & WritingShe received Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Awards in 2020 and 2024. She is also a painter who once worked with acrylics but now concentrates on digital painting via Procreate on her iPhone and iPad. She lives in Cincinnati.






What Glass Is

 

Glass shows itself through what

it holds, as in a Janet Fish still life—

four old-fashioned tumblers like

the ones in restaurants for water,

 

before you had to say you’d like

water with the menu. Here the water

fills up the almost-invisible glasses

set on a glass table outside, somewhere.

 

The bottoms of the glasses kiss

their upside-down likenesses

that swim up to the table’s surface

as fast as starving koi. The glasses 

 

might obscure the road that goes somewhere,

surrounded by woods on either

side, except that we see the scene,

the road disappearing, again and again,

 

a swirl of green and ochre, repeating

concentric circles of lemon-lime grass, indigo

sky, fir trees bending in the water, filling

the curvy tumbler, tumbling the view.

 

 





Composition

 

balances, the way it settles the wings

of the shoulder blades, how my mind becomes

another thing, a composition in greasy oils,

which takes time, which allows no fussing over,

 

the mind’s surplus of feeling in need of the blade

of the palette knife, scraping off the errors

I was fussing over for too long, muddying

what should be clear—taking time to clean

 

the excess of color with a palette knife

so it has time to dry in the sun, so the trees

show in their clear tones of green and brown,

so I don’t drive off into spinning mud,

 

so the sun dries the trees in their perfect being,

so you’ll see what I mean, meant all the time.

 






Screen Porch

 

Still tangled together in bed, we keep on talking

like water overlapping, small slaps

at a blue pool’s edge, like riders 

walking their horses home,

like two people rocking on the porch swing,

loath to go in to the bright yellow light.

 






The Renaissance of Grandparenthood

 

Grandparents, if they’re lucky,

get to go down the lane again,

make up stories, say “Let’s play like

we’re pirates with the costume earrings,

 

now we’re princes, now we’re home again,”

get to see what once they had no time

to see—how lost earrings make a pirate’s

loot—and know their child should be painted by

 

a Mary Cassatt. They see, this time around,

the curves that made Giotto’s cherubim,

the child in the painting all of them

at any time, and those who sit in court

 

should recognize Giotto’s cherubim

from a blue mosaic sky—gold and earth tones

seen and shown with awe, any court aware

of a chessboard that is garden, toads and all.

 

 




Two Seasons: An Elegy for My Second Husband

 

In the video 

your daughter posted last night,

Tokyo petals

 

loiter, swirl, circle—

a blizzard like a slow dance

of cherry blossoms

 

in the lantern light,

like that night in early spring 

I left you at Good

 

Sam and it started

to sleet as I was driving.

I was terrified

 

until the flurries 

distracted me. Like flowers 

riding the headlights

 

accompanying

my journey home to our kids,

escorted by snow.

 

 


Thursday, April 11, 2024

GAS Featured Poet: Wayne Russell

 

Wayne Russell is a creative jack of all trades, master of none. Poet, rhythm guitar player, singer, artist, photographer, and author of the poetry books Where Angels Fear via Guerilla Genius Press, and the newly released Splinter of the Moon via Silver Bow Publishing, they are both available for purchase on Amazon.




The Man in the Blue Cadillac 

In hindsight

I could have been a statistic

I could have been a cold case

that rainy day 

walking back from school

to that loveless home

in 1975.

It was just a short walk 

about half a mile

but I was only five

and the distance seemed

much further.

Out of nowhere

came a blue Cadillac

he pulled up alongside me

he rolled down his window 

"Where are you going?"

he asked in an accent that 

sounded vaguely northern.

It started raining a bit harder 

and I just started walking to get away

from this stranger.

We hadn't heard of "stranger danger"

in 75' all that much.

Kids that disappeared often ended up

on the backs of milk cartons

and you read about them

at the school cafeteria while at breakfast

but that wasn't until Etan Patz in 1979.

"The milk carton campaign" was only started by 

the Ragan administration in the early 80's.

The man in the blue Cadillac was so nice

he politely insisted that I get in the front

passenger side 

as the rain grew heavier

I caved and hopped in

I could have been that kid on the evening news

and the poor boy that was the talk of the town

for a while. 

That poor kid from Florida-

I could have been the pre-Ethan Patz and Adam Walsh

but my guardian angel was pulling a double shift

that day.

And the man in the blue Cadillac

just turned out to be a good Samaritan

doing a good deed to a frightened gen-x kid

that was caught up in a rainstorm

on his way home from kindergarten.



Thursday, April 4, 2024

GAS Featured Poet/Artist: Eric Brunet


 
Eric Brunet is a poet, photographer, graphic artist, and satirist. He lives in the Mission Valley of western Montana and, despite recent mobility challenges due to a hereditary neurological disease, continues to venture into the wilderness. His photography has been featured in various galleries and magazines. His artwork, poetry, and satire has been published in a variety of literary journals and online sites. 


Rise



Catch Yourself


Not being able to stop thinking is an affliction,

entirely normal, and the reason for sleepless nights

in contemplation of glaring algebra teachers

and pink horizons speckled with approaching drones.

Better to be a wailing child stopped instantly

by a perfectly-arced dirt bomb to the head.

I grew up with two boys who once shot each other 

in the ass with a shotgun just to gauge severity. 

They were living in the now, breathless with laughter. 

The greater part of human pain is unnecessary.

You'll need to do some remodeling. Rip up that red shag carpet

and put in a skylight. The steps to meditation should not be fuzzy

or poorly lit. Wear shoes with good traction.

The true nature of space and time is slippery.

As children, we learned the nuances of a canoe

because we didn't want to drown. As adults, we own

canoes that collect dust in the rafters of cluttered garages.

Like drunken archeologists, we prop ladders

at impossible angles to retrieve relics from a reckless past.

Catch yourself says the guru in you. Stop thinking

for a few moments and breathe. No mind. Just breath.

The universe will never say It's not you, it's me. 




Unmarked Snow



Badminton In A Tempest


I should inform you I am armed,

anodynes have not slowed me.

Here’s the thing: it’s dark.

Remedies have been a distraction.

Those things that seemed harmless

are now fully in charge. I bend

backwards to the river, to wash

my face or drown. It started

with wordplay, a dictionary fetish.

After years of obsession, entire cities

have been reduced to confetti. 

Thoughts are birds in a windstorm,

swirls of feather unseen in the gloom,

announcing themselves by touching your face.





Kicking Horse



Sacred Path of the Warrior


Had a case of the Mondays so I caught a fish

with my bare hands, chased a tornado,

and rode on the world’s biggest rollercoaster.

Next day: bungee jumping from a hot air balloon,

Tuesday is spaghetti night and roller disco.

Arrested for stealing a motorcycle on hump day

but posted bail and saw both a solar and lunar eclipse.

Learned Swahili on Thursday, got a tattoo,

and went skinny dipping at the aquarium.

Built a catapult on Friday and shouted “Drinks are on me!”

at a dive bar on the wrong side of the tracks.

Spent most of Saturday creating a cult

and experiencing weightlessness. Milked a cow.

Sunday was a day of rest under the vast silence

of stars, most of them unnamed.  




Last Mile