My first book of free verse poems, Breakdown, was a Finalist for the 2009 Indy Awards for Poetry. My poems and stories appear in some of the top literary mags in the US – Sou’wester, many mountains moving, Shenandoah, Witness, Cream City Review, etc. I've also published 2 novels, a story collection, and 4 plays. I've been fortunate to have received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the NC Arts Council, and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. I teach online Fiction Writing for UNC Chapel Hill, and won their Excellence in Teaching Award for 2009.
My new projects include -
My play,Cluck Variations, a comedy about an African American woman from Chicago and a white Southern suburbanite who meet at a park and learn to overcome the walls of ethnicity and culture to connect as women, was recently staged in a reading as part of the Playground A Theatre Co-operative presentation in Durham.
Starting in April I will be writing a column, Shooting My Poetry Mouth Off, for haijinx, an online magazine. I will be focusing on critiquing haiku as poems first, showing where they meet the standard of poetry, and where they fail to rise about exercises in form.
Neighbors
before my neighbor’s ranch house
two police cruisers grumble
in Park one officer stands
on wet asphalt leaning
into the rear car’s open window
my neighbor’s father, mother
pace the edge of the driveway
shaking gray-haired heads
mouths cut into deep clay
furrows of sorrow
my neighbor’s wife
slouches beside her side door
arms folded across her chest
her body trembles head ticks
in a slow disbelieving arc
heated argument
the standing officer calls
over his shoulder without looking
anywhere until a sudden abrupt
angry squawking erupts
on my front lawn
beak to beak two mocking
birds rise an upright flutter-
fight wings beating the air
before the quiet circle of impatiens
Unemployment
a row of cold houses
light so sad and yellow
it fails to extend
past the whining window panes
even the small corners
of these front stoops
huddle in darkness
somewhere a dog barks
certainly a lover must moan
blue screens flare
a drainage ditch glows
on some corner
yesterday’s debris
sparkles in the effluvial night
softly I breathe
my own breath fog
inhale the thousand effervescent
suns in the bluing sky
4 comments:
Light so sad and yellow...
What a great image and who would think to call the light "sad" (such an appropriate adjective!). I really like this poem "Unemployment." How easy to relate to it these days.
Unemployment – a word we currently deal with right now. Two persons in my close family are looking for work. I read the last 4 lines several times – I could see her and him starting a new day – watching the weather and
“softly I breathe
my own breath fog
inhale the thousand effervescent
suns in the bluing sky”
and keep going. Very nice.
Julia, Richard is quite a courageous writer; he's taken on some difficult subjects over the years.
Vagabonde, the unemployment in this country and elsewhere is a major threat to our stability, both personal and global. I'm glad to see poets dealing with this subject. Thank you for stopping by.
Wonderful mirrored imagery in the mocking birds. Loved this piece.
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