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	<title>Unshod Quills &#187; coffee</title>
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	<link>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills</link>
	<description>A Pandemic Journal of Arts and Letters</description>
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		<title>A Letter From the Editor</title>
		<link>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/a-letter-from-the-editor-3/</link>
		<comments>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/a-letter-from-the-editor-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2011 10:36:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[UQ Compatriots]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Beerlight]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[coffee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Bowie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dena Rash Guzman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Enough Rope]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[HAL Publishing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Middle Kingdom Underground]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unshodquills.wordpress.com/?p=1144</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear Readers, DAVID BOWIE DAVID BOWIE DAVID BOWIE! Unshod Quills is a theme based publication, centered around themes chosen by the editor or other participants in the Unshod Quills Writing Collective. DAVID BOWIE! One of my dream themes, and this issue is very much about him. With just the beerlight to guide us, we also [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_1145" style="width: 490px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><a href="http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/img_7100.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-1145" title="IMG_7100" src="http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/img_7100.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="480" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Study of a Shanghai Street Sweeper in the Rain on the Way to Morning Coffee - Shanghai, China, 12/11 - Dena Rash Guzman - on the theme of Coffee</p></div>
<p>Dear Readers,</p>
<p>DAVID BOWIE DAVID BOWIE DAVID BOWIE!</p>
<p>Unshod Quills is a theme based publication, centered around themes chosen by the editor or other participants in the Unshod Quills Writing Collective. DAVID BOWIE! One of my dream themes, and this issue is very much about him. With just the beerlight to guide us, we also feature works based on the themes of love, coffee, Joan of Arc, dancing about architecture, and enough rope.</p>
<p>Speaking of coffee, David Bowie and enough rope, this is how I spent my pre-Christmas unvacation:</p>
<p>My publisher, <a href="http://www.haliterature.com/" target="_blank"> HAL Publishing</a>, flew me to its hometown of Shanghai earlier this month. I was there to stage, for an audience of over 300, a group performance of my smutty little short story, &#8220;A Brief History of Dan Orange of Shanghai.&#8221; This was a multimedia presentation featuring myself and a truly international cast of artists including Estel Vilar, UQ Contributor <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/09/14/ginger-wrong-chen-groupthink-america/" target="_blank">Ginger wRong Chen</a>, UQ contributor <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/09/14/katrina-hamlin-groupthink-america/" target="_blank">Katrina Hamlin</a>, the enigmatic Barbara A., and Mr. Brian Keane. Video backdrop was provided by Colorado&#8217;s own <a href="http://vimeo.com/32392300" target="_blank">Jerimiah Whitlock</a>. The occasion? <a href="http://sh.asia-city.com/events/article/close-dena-rash-guzman" target="_blank">The River South Arts Festiva</a>l, a four day celebration of independent Shanghai art and literature, featuring <a href="http://www.thatsmags.com/shanghai/article/1471/hals-middle-kingdom-underground" target="_blank">Slamhai3</a> and the release of HAL&#8217;s second collection of short stories,</p>
<p><span style="text-decoration:underline;"><a href="http://vimeo.com/32942681" target="_blank">Middle Kingdom Underground: short stories from the people&#8217;s republic of </a></span></p>
<p>The US edition should be ready for sale around February 15 and I&#8217;ll have two stories in the book, one co-written with HAL founder and regular UQ contributor, Mr. <a href="http://unshodquills.com/tag/bjorn-wahlstrom/" target="_blank">Bjorn Wahlstrom.</a> The book&#8217;s theme of vice in modern China is heavy and dark, and the stories by fifteen authors, both local and non-native to China, are accordingly complex and delightful.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, a click to the title above will take you to the stunning and beautiful and bizarre Middle Kingdom Underground book trailer, produced and directed by September Unshod Quills contributor, Portlander <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/06/01/posie-currin/" target="_blank">Posie Currin.</a> In addition, the HAL book release was filmed and will soon be broadcast internationally on the new fine arts internet TV network <a href="https://bravoflix.com/" target="_blank">Bravoflix</a>.</p>
<p>Where do coffee, David Bowie and enough rope come into the above recap? Let me write you a prose poem, that will make no sense, in order to explain myself.</p>
<p><em>Coffee &#8211; I drank a lot while I was in China. Not so much tea. Coffee. I  learned that I make a terrible pot of French press. David Bowie &#8211; that&#8217;s Bjorn, but minus any glitter and plus a freighter of stardust. Bjorn wears all black all the time, unless it&#8217;s raining, and then he wears white leather tennis shoes. Enough rope &#8211; after nearly setting his neighbor&#8217;s kitchen on fire with my suitcase, I learned that Bjorn keeps enough rope on hand to escape out a window just in case of some such event as a clumsy American starting fires with suitcase and a hotplate in a stairwell. There are no fire escapes in those old buildings. Rope is good. He&#8217;s four stories up and to get in or out one must pass through two neighbor&#8217;s kitchens and  twisty flights of narrow, steep stairs. It&#8217;s a gorgeous place, though, and Bjorn has a cat that is in the process of self-actualization. Perhaps soon big fat Blackie cat will get his own rope. </em></p>
<p>I&#8217;m grateful to HAL for having me as a guest performer at their book release party, and for all the support they&#8217;ve shown to Unshod Quills over the past year.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, back in America, managing Editor Wendy Ellis and I struggled to confine our selections of art and literature for December to a reasonable number.  That is why we chose not one, but two featured poets for this issue.</p>
<p>Having worked with <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/12/16/james-h-duncan…-poet-december/" target="_blank">James H. Duncan</a> a number of times over the past four years, I am already acquainted with his eloquent ornate minimalist style, and have long been a fan. James was an easy choice to feature, and we hope you enjoy his work as we do.</p>
<p>Our second feature is an amazing writer who sent a suite of submissions on the theme of childhood alone, and our skirts were blown nearly clean off by the gale force of their brilliance. Be sure to look at the poetry of <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/12/14/catherine-woodard-featured-writer/" target="_blank">Catherine Woodard.</a></p>
<p>Both of our featured poets are based in New York City. We get it, New York: we want to be a part of it, too.</p>
<p>December&#8217;s featured artist is from another part of the universe: Greece. <a href="http://unshodquills.com/2011/12/16/sugahtank-john…rtist-december/" target="_blank">Sugahtank John Roubanis</a> is a talented graphic design artist and illustrator; his King Kong poster take this month&#8217;s front page. We love his work, from the scratchy, ropy sketches of near-human figures to the sublime political graphics to his logo work. Sugahtank&#8217;s vision told us it needed a good sharing with the Unshod Quills readership. It actually spoke to us.</p>
<p>We are also happy to see the return of Kevin Sampsell. His Bowie piece is hilarious and I for one will never be able to look at him the same way, fiction or not. Rusty Barnes is in this issue with some uniquely elegant and rough country flavored fiction, while Timothy Gager tells you you&#8217;re gonna need a bigger sandwich. Order up. Also look for the work of Portlander Jenny Forrester and the best middle school Bowie obsession fiction we&#8217;ve ever read &#8211; Jenny Hayes is in the house. HAL Publishing&#8217;s W.M. Butler shares a treacherous story about bullies and rabbits and the beauty and brutality of childhood, and it&#8217;s an editorial favorite. We have the work of Frank Reardon, Matty Byloos and Nancy Flynn&#8230; Ryan Werner kills it with his minute by minute rundown of Bowie and Jagger&#8217;s video for &#8220;Dancing in the Street.&#8221; I love Bowie, yes, but everyone makes mistakes. Look for UQ&#8217;s own X. Joloronde and Robert Myer on Joan of Arc, too.</p>
<p>I could go on but just look to the right and click away. Thanks for visiting, and we&#8217;ll be releasing our next call for submissions on New Year&#8217;s Day &#8211; I&#8217;ll let you know now that one of our themes will be David Lynch.</p>
<p>Spread these writers around like the pandemic they are.</p>
<p>Ever yours,</p>
<p>Dena Rash Guzman<br />
Editor<br />
Unshod Quills<br />
in the woods near Portland, Oregon, USA</p>
<div id="attachment_1147" style="width: 234px" class="wp-caption aligncenter"><a href="http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/img_6943.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-1147" title="IMG_6943" src="http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/img_6943.jpg?w=224" alt="" width="224" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Dena Rash Guzman, seated, listening to Ginger wRong Chen in Shanghai - 12/11</p></div>
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		<title>Kevin Shea</title>
		<link>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/kevin-shea/</link>
		<comments>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/kevin-shea/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2011 08:01:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[UQ Compatriots]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brooklyn]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Childhood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[coffee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Bowie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kevin Shea]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Walter Edgewater]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unshodquills.com/?p=1111</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Walter Edgewater Talks to God on the Train (on the theme of David Bowie) The trees outside are slow today. God, are you there? It’s me, Walter. You again? Yes, me again. Whaddaya want? I’ve got a brand new song to show you, though it probably won’t blow your mind. So sing it already. Jesus. [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6><strong>Walter Edgewater Talks to God on the Train</strong><br />
<em>(on the theme of David Bowie)</em></h6>
<p>The trees outside are slow today.<br />
God, are you there? It’s me, Walter.<br />
<em>You again?</em> Yes, me again. <em>Whaddaya want?</em></p>
<p>I’ve got a brand new song to show you,<br />
though it probably won’t blow your mind.<br />
<em>So sing it already. Jesus.</em> I’m on the home</p>
<p>stretch. Only a few more months of pills<br />
&amp; this brain fog. <em>You’re welcome.</em><br />
What did you do? I never asked for your help.</p>
<p><em>You’re stuck with me now.</em> Well, unstick me.<br />
I’m not playing your game. I give back<br />
my ticket. I’m done. <em>You entered</em></p>
<p><em>into a contract, Walter.</em> That was the old me.<br />
I doubt that’s valid anymore. Until the end<br />
of time. You don’t run the atomic clock.</p>
<p>You swam against the tide but you drowned<br />
in the sky. That makes sense to me now.</p>
<p><em>I’ve got a song for you too: Because my love</em><br />
<em> for you would break my heart in two,</em><br />
<em> if you should fall</em><br />
<em> into my arms</em><br />
<em> &amp; tremble</em><br />
<em> like a flower.</em></p>
<p>What happened to originality? <em>It was lost</em><br />
<em> when I became man.</em> Not so easy, is it?<br />
<em>I don’t know how you people do it.</em></p>
<p>It’s a matter of resolve—a feeling<br />
that everything will get better. The body,<br />
this fleshy mess, repairs itself &amp; houses<br />
whatever it is that writes my songs.</p>
<p><em>You know I’m the ghost writer, don’t you?</em><br />
No, you’re not. It is mankind<br />
that sings. It’s why we gave ourselves<br />
vocal chords, chatterbox. You wouldn’t</p>
<p>understand. <em>Hey, I put this thing in motion</em><br />
<em> in a matter of days. Do you realize how quickly</em><br />
<em> I could take it all away? You should read</em></p>
<p><em>my latest pamphlet.</em> That’s okay, old<br />
friend. Things have changed. We built this<br />
up &amp; we’ll be the ones to tear it down.</p>
<p><em>But what about me?</em> We’ll give you<br />
a front row seat &amp; then, once it’s gone,<br />
it’s back to the infinite nothing for you.</p>
<p><em>Maybe I’ll see what Beelzebub’s up to.</em><br />
Whatever you do, get ready.<br />
You’ll wish that you had somebody<br />
to sing your songs for you.</p>
<p>________________________</p>
<h6><strong>Walter Edgewater &amp; The Tiny Cup  </strong></h6>
<h6><strong>(<em>on the theme of coffee</em>)</strong></h6>
<p>Frankly, gentlemen, I don’t care<br />
about what business was like<br />
when you were street vendors.<br />
All I want is a place to sit, but not<br />
atop rogue coats left by a ghost</p>
<p>or a robot. Everything belongs<br />
to someone. No apparitions, only<br />
partitions between the real</p>
<p>&amp; the right, plate glass window<br />
connected by sunlight—showing<br />
insides, smudges, &amp; tape stains.</p>
<p>Two girls sit next to me:<br />
1. The one I love, wrote her<br />
love poems on Valentine’s, &amp; now,<br />
President’s Day. 2. One wearing the same<br />
green &amp; black flannel shirt as me.</p>
<p>Hunched over the same way.<br />
Hair tossed &amp; messed the same way.<br />
Chomping fingernails the same way.</p>
<p>Funny how these minute details<br />
&amp; modicum appearances are missed<br />
by one &amp; celebrated by another persona.</p>
<p>1. She’s got polka-dotted sneakers,<br />
gray &amp; white flannel. Before we were<br />
seated, she raised her voice &amp; needed to<br />
leave immediately—people crashed<br />
&amp; bumped her like she wasn’t there.</p>
<p>Now seated in the sun, she’s kissed—<br />
now, again. Still wearing sneakers.<br />
3. Girl across table: please stop<br />
picking your nose. By now, you should</p>
<p>know that I see everything, all<br />
is filtered through me. To understand,<br />
I throw myself into the depths.<br />
Someday I’ll get out &amp; we’ll see.<br />
Until then I’m here &amp; we’ll see.</p>
<p>_________</p>
<h6><strong>Walter Edgewater Sees a Nosaj Thing</strong><br />
<em><strong> (on the theme of coffee)</strong></em></h6>
<p>Is this what the kids are listening to<br />
today—zombie music? Two guys<br />
in overcoats, eyes like silver dollars,<br />
(<em>sand dollars</em>, Papier Gamâché says), skulk<br />
&amp; swing arms, shoulders brandished, ready<br />
to strike anyone willing to look. I’m sore<br />
to the spine, back cracking &amp; knees rigid.<br />
In a shifty room I’m not moving,<br />
not even the softest toe tap or head nod.<br />
In between acts, tripping patrons flock<br />
to doors, need to leave. They reach the back,<br />
run into the rope blocking the path<br />
from the pit, gaze around, befuddled.<br />
This is the strangest thing they’ve ever seen.</p>
<p>Nosaj Thing finally takes the stage,<br />
the shakers rush forward &amp; nod knowingly<br />
to the music of the skinny kid,<br />
barely twenty, so busy, knob-twisting,<br />
head-neck-shoulder dipping &amp; ducking,<br />
so busy up there, an art so intricate,<br />
tempo controlled by twists of the wrists,<br />
effortless, he only stops midair<br />
to casually wipe sweat from his brow,<br />
a movement figured into the equation,<br />
all so mathematical, precise, every single<br />
sound placed in its proper container.<br />
He plays for ninety minutes straight<br />
without even the slightest silence. I pay<br />
attention as best I can with some guy<br />
swaying in front of me, inching closer<br />
&amp; closer with every loop, no regard<br />
for my space, until I’m purposely mouth-<br />
breathing down his neck so he knows<br />
<em>I’m</em> the strangest thing he’s ever seen.<br />
He asks me to back up. I do not change.<br />
I leave early, joints too tired to stand.</p>
<p>Today is a Sunday. I drink coffee<br />
in my leopard print robe. Tomorrow,<br />
I’ll listen to last night’s songs<br />
through headphones at my desk<br />
as I answer work emails.</p>
<p>_______________</p>
<h6><strong>Walter Edgewater Never Gives all the Heart</strong><br />
<em>(on the theme of love)</em></h6>
<p>I never give all the heart, for love<br />
is bullshit, mostly. I leave<br />
work early to find your sheets<br />
left at last night’s laundromat, children<br />
threatening as I enter. They’re right<br />
where you left them—cold<br />
in the dryer. You return home<br />
again, but only to complain<br />
about the heat—we can’t control it,<br />
or our hearts. I hope you’re happy<br />
when you’re not here, where others<br />
appreciate you more, as you remind me.<br />
I was happy, years ago, &amp; I was<br />
last night. A thin young woman<br />
danced next to me—I leaned<br />
against the stage—her hairy arm<br />
brushed mine bare. She stared<br />
at me, I thought, but really<br />
she looked through to the stack<br />
of empty beer cups left<br />
by the night’s opening<br />
act. She split them apart<br />
&amp; swung the little swill<br />
&amp; screamed,<em> I’m just really thirsty!</em></p>
<p>All night I heard airborne signals<br />
of love from another (<em>You know</em><br />
<em> I love you, right?</em>). I tried giving<br />
everything once before—I failed.<br />
Tonight I sloppily tuck you in<br />
after you chastise me for stealing<br />
the blankets last night, as I do<br />
each night, while I sleep &amp; you lie<br />
awake. Everything is sometimes<br />
lovely &amp; a brief, dreamy, kind<br />
delight (the latter a word used<br />
so often to describe me)—sometimes.<br />
I have lost before<br />
&amp; I will lose again.<br />
You have lost me before<br />
&amp; you will lose me again.</p>
<p>_________________________</p>
<h6><strong>Walter Edgewater’s Reasons to Fall in Love with Walter Edgewater</strong><br />
<em><strong> (on the theme of love)</strong></em></h6>
<p>I have a job.</p>
<p>I am a locomotive.</p>
<p>My name is an anagram for “Wet, Wet, Large Dear.”</p>
<p>As a boy, the tip of my finger<br />
was ground in the gears<br />
of a mechanical chicken.</p>
<p>I have no will to live.</p>
<p>I live to serve my maker, wherever he is.</p>
<p>I see stars.</p>
<p>I drink shit coffee.</p>
<p>I skinned my foreskin<br />
in a bicycle accident<br />
as a child &amp; didn’t<br />
know if I should show<br />
my friend because I didn’t know<br />
if he or she was a he or a she.</p>
<p>I’m pretty okay at math.</p>
<p>I contemplate the philosophies<br />
of everything in the universe.</p>
<p>I can do as many sit-ups<br />
as Herschel Walker,<br />
the former Dallas Cowboys star less famous<br />
for his multiple personality disorder.</p>
<p>I’m a language poet.</p>
<p>I’ve never been to a dogfight.</p>
<p>…</p>
<p>Okay, I’ve been to <em>one</em> dogfight.</p>
<p>I lost my virginity on a kitchen floor</p>
<p>next to bowls of dog food.</p>
<p><em>Horses</em> ride <em>me.</em></p>
<p>I’m a champion<br />
luchador.</p>
<p>I make my own cardboard.</p>
<p>Everything I buy is on sale.</p>
<p>I’m lonely.</p>
<p>I see the best minds of my generation<br />
at the titty bar.</p>
<p>I’m really good at pissing<br />
money away at the greyhound track.</p>
<p>I’m a member of a world-<br />
wide poetry collective<br />
based on chicken sandwiches.</p>
<p>I once stepped on a beehive<br />
&amp; when they swarmed on me,<br />
<em>I </em>stung<em> them</em>.</p>
<p>Do I contradict myself?</p>
<p>I fall in love but never<br />
out of it.</p>
<p>I’m a sailboat skipper.</p>
<p>I’m a coxcomb<br />
but I just found out.</p>
<p>I planted America’s seed<br />
in the sun.</p>
<p>I am the godhead<br />
on fire.</p>
<p>I was born at a very early age.</p>
<p>I intend to live forever,<br />
or die trying.</p>
<p>I can seal an envelope.</p>
<p>I am an actor<br />
&amp; this page is my stage.</p>
<p>I am a Renaissance man<br />
on weekends in April &amp; May<br />
at the Oklahoma Renaissance<br />
Festival in Muskogee, OK<br />
at the Castle of Muskogee.</p>
<p>I get jokes.</p>
<p>I’ve been to the center<br />
of the earth to search for the black sun<br />
but found only rotten dinosaurs<br />
(also known as oil, according to someone<br />
who claims to have loved me once).</p>
<p>I objectify the human form.</p>
<p>I make a mean grilled cheese.</p>
<p>I make a gentle grilled cheese.</p>
<p>I make cheese.</p>
<p>Please, please, please—I’m in love<br />
with the world, so help me<br />
make it love me back.</p>
<p>I’m in love with you.</p>
<p>________________________</p>
<h6><strong>I Give Walter Edgewater a Haircut</strong><br />
<strong><em> (on the theme of childhood</em>)</strong></h6>
<p>Walter has been here since childhood,<br />
numbed &amp; sleeping &amp; threaded with cloth<br />
to a three-post bed—the fourth yanked off</p>
<p>for whenever he thrashes or tries to<br />
sail off. He’s fitted with a permanent sleep<br />
mask, smeared with coal &amp; threaded</p>
<p>with green &amp; white electrical wires. I speak<br />
into his ears while I cover my mouth<br />
with the mesh of a window screen. First</p>
<p>I state the true meaning (here, “paper”)<br />
&amp; then what I will really say (here, “piper”).<br />
Piper, Walter. Piper. He doesn’t know</p>
<p>anything but the boxy outlines of letters<br />
projected onto the back of his sticky eyelids,<br />
&amp; the white text forging lines on black</p>
<p>expanse. I really mean “source” but say<br />
“sauce.” Sauce, Walter. I’m feeding him<br />
sleep intravenously &amp; I stick patches</p>
<p>on his forehead &amp; chest. All is hooked<br />
with a nest of messy wires to the plasma<br />
TV hanging rigid on the wall. I suppose you can say</p>
<p>he can only see what I tell him to imagine, indirectly.<br />
Tonight, it’s time for a haircut in our old home-<br />
town: the barbershop run by the local ex-con (Mike</p>
<p>the Butcher, as our grandmother called him).<br />
He’s known for slicing little boys’ ears. Walter, gracious,<br />
shows me the list of rules on the brown wall: “1. If your hair is long</p>
<p>we’re going to buzz it.” But wait—who’s that outside<br />
in the darkened lot, next to the wooden wagon?<br />
It’s her, last’s night final procession,</p>
<p>the woman with silken locks &amp; no face. Why can’t you<br />
give her a goddamned face, Walter? I’m saying face<br />
&amp; I MEAN IT. Face. Face. Fine.</p>
<h5>Author Biography</h5>
<div>Kevin Shea is originally from Quincy, MA. He now lives in Brooklyn, NY and currently works at The New School for Social Research. He is also a recent graduate of the MFA program at The New School. His writing has previously appeared in <em>The Alembic, Asinine Poetry, The Equalizer</em>, and is forthcoming in <em>Forklift, Ohio:</em><em>A Journal of Poetry, Cooking &amp; Light Industrial Safety</em>.</div>
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		<title>James H. Duncan &#8211; Featured Poet &#8211; December</title>
		<link>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/james-h-duncan-featured-poet-december/</link>
		<comments>http://www.literaryorphans.org/rookery/UnshodQuills/2011/12/14/james-h-duncan-featured-poet-december/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2011 08:01:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[UQ Compatriots]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Childhood]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[coffee]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[David Bowie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[featured writer December]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James H. Duncan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Love]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New York]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unshod Quills]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://unshodquills.com/?p=1092</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sons of the Silent Age (on the theme of David Bowie) on a rare evening not yet shot dead my own whispered pacing fades across the carpet through the lush echoes of a vinyl caress to witness another crossed out calendar box on the kitchen wall, a snake-line of black Sharpie trailing behind crumpled papers [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h6><strong>Sons of the Silent Age</strong><br />
<em>(on the theme of David Bowie)</em></h6>
<p>on a rare evening not yet shot dead<br />
my own whispered pacing fades across<br />
the carpet through the lush echoes of<br />
a vinyl caress to witness<br />
another crossed out calendar box<br />
on the kitchen wall,<br />
a snake-line of black Sharpie<br />
trailing behind</p>
<p>crumpled papers scatter and run low on heart<br />
as somewhere in the walls symphonic voices from<br />
old Berlin crush the soul of another son<br />
of the silent age</p>
<p>too often, watering plants in the moonlight<br />
feels like any other opaque lie<br />
and fingers tremble over spilled ink,<br />
inflamed pages, idiot remorse;<br />
I can’t stand another sound<br />
is all I hear in my rotten ears<br />
and the last grain of time finally slips away<br />
to reveal<br />
the three hands of the clock gliding<br />
in and out of life<br />
in and out of sight<br />
and in the heavy blink of your silken eyes<br />
I realize I am finally tired<br />
and I crawl to the waiting bed like<br />
a dog into the hole where<br />
he buried his bone<br />
to sleep the good sleep I’ve<br />
heard rumors of through all these silent ages</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>__________</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6>Strawberry Fields Forever<br />
<em>(on childhood)</em></h6>
<p>their house was made of brick<br />
and the strawberries grew<br />
in their fields like gasoline wildfire</p>
<p>the fields surrounded<br />
the house on all sides, and they<br />
went right up to the house,<br />
built about a century<br />
ago by strawberry farmers<br />
now maintained by an elderly<br />
strawberry farmer, his wife<br />
who stared down from<br />
the second story<br />
window of that brick<br />
house, and the farmer’s grown<br />
son, who walked<br />
around with some uncertain<br />
handicap of the body<br />
and mind</p>
<p>I picked as fast as I could<br />
when the farmer or his<br />
slower son spoke to my mother<br />
or to other nearby pickers<br />
or when the old woman<br />
stared down<br />
from<br />
her window tower<br />
watching us</p>
<p>but when they<br />
were all gone<br />
I ate berries fresh<br />
from the dirt</p>
<p>no one needed<br />
to wash those berries</p>
<p>they were stymied<br />
with bugs often<br />
enough, and were small,<br />
but they were real<br />
and they were raw<br />
and juicy in the summer<br />
sun<br />
and I recall the sweat<br />
of that sun falling<br />
down on us<br />
as we picked up<br />
our full baskets (my<br />
stomach also full)<br />
and walked to the porch<br />
of the brick house</p>
<p>the farmer’s son always<br />
wore overalls, blue<br />
jean overalls with dirt<br />
scuffed around his<br />
knees and ankles,<br />
and he’d talk kindly to my<br />
mother in a slow stilted cadence<br />
as if he were reciting to a class<br />
of students who might<br />
mock him, but<br />
we never mocked him</p>
<p>I knew he was just a strawberry<br />
farmer’s son, and even then<br />
as a child I realized<br />
that being one was better than being<br />
like most other men I saw in the world<br />
—with or without the handicap</p>
<p>and sometimes the old<br />
farmer was there, too</p>
<p>sitting on his porch<br />
tired and talkative and<br />
older than any man I had<br />
ever seen in my life<br />
and they’d take our few<br />
dollars and we would<br />
walk back to our car,<br />
load the car, drive away</p>
<p>maybe we’d be back later<br />
that month, or that summer,<br />
sometimes we never<br />
went at all<br />
many of those summers<br />
went by, the absent<br />
summers, and I am glad<br />
I have not been back since<br />
the age of eleven<br />
or twelve</p>
<p>I don’t want to see how<br />
the old woman no<br />
longer watched from her<br />
window tower<br />
or how the old man no<br />
longer sat on his<br />
porch in the sunlight<br />
and I don’t want to see how<br />
the farmer’s grown son<br />
dealt with the banks or the funeral<br />
homes or the land investors<br />
or the neighbors or the<br />
nurses at the hospital<br />
or the whole world<br />
crashing down<br />
around him</p>
<p>I want to close my eyes<br />
and look up from<br />
the dirt, the rows of fire<br />
engine red strawberries,<br />
and see them there<br />
all of them<br />
and see my mother there<br />
picking beside me<br />
putting each strawberry into<br />
a yellow bowl</p>
<p>put one<br />
more strawberry<br />
in my mouth;<br />
never open my eyes<br />
again</p>
<p>_________</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6><strong>The Night No One Went Home</strong><br />
<em>(on childhood)</em></h6>
<p>potshots from the gristmill<br />
and away we go a’running</p>
<p>weedstalks tough like tire irons<br />
thumping polecats skitter wild</p>
<p>in August, we dream of October<br />
in October we dream of honor,<br />
and we know a ghost is waiting</p>
<p>someone set fire to the gristmill<br />
the summer after the shooting</p>
<p>the coupe still sits burnt out<br />
amidst the wishing field of grain</p>
<p>the wind runs through that grain nightly<br />
the moon watches with envy</p>
<p>children think they are alive<br />
especially when they play dead</p>
<p>potshots strike the hollow oak<br />
where we once thought of honey bees</p>
<p>and owl eyes in nighttime fevers;<br />
the moon a great dying tilt-a-whirl</p>
<p>and this I promised to promise—<br />
with a match left in my pocket,<br />
I’ll wait for you come, Autumn<br />
lest I burn it down alone</p>
<p>_____________________</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6><strong>as the sowing, the reaping</strong><br />
<em>(on love)</em></h6>
<p>fear oiled the mechanics of our love<br />
and in the reproductive silence that followed, you opened<br />
gifts a day early, wrapping falling to the floor<br />
mingling with popcorn spilled from a paper bag<br />
from which we each pulled greasy specks and chewed<br />
in the quiet of October, red leaves stuck to the windowpane</p>
<p>the mistake too often made is giving small books<br />
of poetry from unknown publishers from Portland<br />
or Fort Collins or Montpellier or Louisville;<br />
the first pages are fingered gently by each of you<br />
a sense of wonder and worry thriving in the veins<br />
the books are gone soon enough on trains and jets<br />
never seen again, forgotten, unread, lost<br />
always lamented over, wishing they formed a stack<br />
in my study corner rather than a troubled mind</p>
<p>on most nights, those books were worth the trade,<br />
other nights, though—not a page would I barter for a single<br />
image of you against the dawn of that last day together,<br />
pictures and pages in the fire of this heart’s eternal uncertainty;<br />
curling black pages like their raven hair; gone gone</p>
<p>_______________</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h6><strong>The Raped and the Loved</strong><br />
<em>(on the theme of coffee)</em></h6>
<p>the art gallery displayed photos of the raped<br />
and the children they bore, hated, and one day<br />
learned to love, women with long nimble weeping<br />
fingers and toes, slender souls of nonpareil scar-tissue<br />
that writhed and sang in a dirt-floor celebration<br />
of militant reinvention, spring-loaded renunciation,<br />
and the most unkind joy the godless world of man<br />
and his guns and his machetes has ever known</p>
<p>they served coffee and European beer and someone ranted<br />
midwest polemics and another of economic recoil, and many<br />
a bitter word of oil companies retched across the room<br />
as the ivory white smiles of the raped looked on,<br />
their little reminders of a man’s murder-lust holding their hands<br />
or sitting on their laps, or standing beside them, trying to help<br />
carry the burden of the repellent world on their shoulders as the most<br />
stunning blue light caressed the African skies behind them,<br />
nothing at all like the disemboweled orange din hovering over our<br />
American sprawl, where the machetes are dull, the smiles are<br />
numb, and the raped and loved go equally unnoticed</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Author Biography</p>
<p>James H Duncan is a New York native and is the editor of <a href="http://hobocampreview.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Hobo Camp Review</a>, an online literary magazine that celebrates the traveling word. James has twice been nominated for the annual Best of the Net award and once for the Pushcart Prize for his poetry. He is the author of five collections of poetry and short stories and has appeared in dozens of print and online magazines around the world. He now resides in New York City where he works as a freelance writer and as a writer/editor at American Artist magazine, where he has published numerous articles on art history and contemporary realist painters. His website is at <a href="http://jameshduncan.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">here.</a></p>
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