Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label memory. Show all posts

Monday, February 7, 2022

Zev Torres | Revelations Beyond Red

Miata Lady in Red

Revelations Beyond Red

 

 

“Red isn’t my color,” Nina said, over coffee, early one morning,

Not long after we first met, even though

Every color was her color.

She was — she is — one of those fortunate people who can

Wrap herself in colors and patterns that would clash on anyone else,

In fabrics and textures no one else would dream of combining,

Someone on whom everything comes together in chromatic harmony,

Who brings out the best features in every article of clothing,

Rather than the other way around.

But she won’t wear red —

Or hats, except on the coldest of days.

 

Years after we bought our own apartment

And decided that the time was right to refurbish the kitchen,

Nina, to my amazement, said,

“Let’s do everything in red. Red cabinets, red appliances.

I’ve always dreamed of a red kitchen.”

That sounded fine to me, but …

“You once said red isn’t your color.”

“To wear,” she said, recalling instantly our conversation

Fifteen years earlier.

“But red things, I love. Like

My red Miata, right?”

Of course. Her Miata.

Her soul-red Miata.

The Miata she coveted,

For which, if we ever splurged,

She would learn to drive.

 

Moments before we were to make our first red purchase —

A burgundy stove —

Nina grabbed hold of my wrist, our credit card in my hand.

“What happens,” she said, “if we get tired of our red kitchen?”

And the only red that ended up in our refurbished kitchen of

Stainless steel appliances and beige cabinets were

Porcelain tiles glazed vermilion and emblazoned with white swirls,

Randomly interspersed with blues and yellows, similarly adorned,

To disrupt the otherwise glossy white sea

Comprising the backsplash.

 

Several weeks ago, while leafing through a photo album

From the pre-smart phone era,

We came across a picture of Nina,

Stunning in a crimson dress — the color of joy and mystery,

A garnet pendant on a gold chain around her neck,

Her upper arms partially exposed,

Standing next to me,

At an event, we don’t recall.

After studying the picture, which suggests an elegant affair,

An occasion worth remembering,

Nina frowned,

Touched the image as if to spur her powers of recollection,

And, with a dismissive tilt of her head,

Turned towards the kitchen.

“Red’s not my color,” she said,

As if reaching that conclusion for the first time.

 

Then she poured herself a cup of coffee

From an auburn coffee maker that we happened upon

Only a few weeks earlier,

On a cold and snowy Sunday morning that left on her ears

A trace of frostbite rouge,

During our desperate quest to replace

The generic black, no-frills, eight-cup drip coffee maker

That had died that day, suddenly, after six years,

Filling us with a sense of urgency to act immediately,

To prevent the day, followed by the week, month, and year,

From proceeding without us,

Leaving us destined to forever lag behind the present moment.

 

But, more importantly, to ensure that we are sufficiently caffeinated

For our longstanding weekend ritual,

During which, over breakfast and Café Bustelo,

We share our impassioned assessments of the week gone by,

Issue “if it were up to me” proclamations,

And reveal to each other aspects of ourselves

Not discernible on the visible spectrum.


 
__________________________________


Zev Torres is a writer and spoken word performer whose work has appeared in numerous print and online publications including BreadcrumbsThe Athena Review, Great Weather for Media’s Suitcase of Chrysanthemums and I Let Go of the Stars in my Hand, Three Rooms Press’s Maintenant 6 and Maintenant 12, and the Brownstone Poets Anthologies (2010-2020). Since 2008, Zev has hosted Make Music New York's annual Spoken Word Extravaganza.

Saturday, December 5, 2020

Bruce Whitacre | Christmas Oranges

Orange Fruit Christmas Ornament

CHRISTMAS ORANGES


The children were not to watch

as Father unloaded the snowcapped wagon.

Crates and bushels went straight to the cellar

and under an Indian blanket.

Father pocketed the key with a wink.

Jennie had to sit to keep breathing,

her hands trembling as she cracked the walnuts.

 

That evening, candles clipped to the fir were lit.

Their dots of light graced the gingham bows, the popcorn

strings, casting deep shadows in the parlor corners.

Atop the white tablecloth brought from Ohio,

turkey with stuffing, yams, and fruit pies crowded

the table, so everyone ate standing or in the parlor.

Mother fanned herself at the fire, exhausted, while

Nora, the hired girl, hovered, hiding homesick tears.

Family and neighbors joined in rolling up the rugs,

then with fiddles and dancing. Jennie missed the beat.

Stepping to the window, she gazed through the frosted panes.

Stars arched over the prairie. Horses stomped under their blankets.

 

Father called her into the kitchen.

“I want you to see these first, Jennie. Remember?”

His carpenter’s hands, deft and hard, pried a crate open.

Golden spheres burned into view, sweet and strange.

“Oranges!” she cried. Father laughed, “They made the last train.”

She remembered from last year to peel them first

The flesh exploded in her mouth —

Ocean. Green. Warm. Sunshine.

She closed her eyes and swallowed. Not here, in one taste.

 

She carried a bowlful into the parlor.

The music stopped. The dancers paused.

She beamed as everyone surrounded her, each reaching for

an orange, the only ones any of them would eat that year.

The night froze in her memory like crystals on the panes

melting into a tale from time to time, like now,

for me, then freezing again for the next blue hour.

 

 

Merry Christmas from Florida

_____________________________


Bruce E. Whitacre
’s work has appeared or is forthcoming in The American Journal of Poetry, Cagibi, The HIV Here and Now Project of Indolent Books, North of Oxford, and World Literature Today, and was recently nominated for Sundress Publications’ 2020 Best of the Net Anthology. A featured poetry reader at the Forest Hills Public Library, he has read his work at Poets House, the Zen Mountain Monastery Buddhist Poetry Festival, Kew Willow Books, Lunar Walk, and other venues.  He holds an MFA in Dramatic Writing from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and has completed master workshops with Jericho Brown, Alex Dimitrov, Rowan Ricardo Phillips, and Mark Wunderlich. An activist and advocate for the arts and social justice, Bruce lives in Forest Hills, Queens.




Friday, October 23, 2020

Austin Alexis | Replay & Seeing Twilight

Replay


I slide down the memory of you
hoping the ride will never end.
Yet I sense one day
I’ll be too old to recall
your jokes, your jaw’s attractive shape,
my fascination with your insights.

At least for now, you live
in an orange haze of twilight
at the front of my mind
where I keep what I cherish,
though I know all of that is fading,
slowing, dissolving into night


Seeing Twilight


The air is polished pink,
then orange, then scarlet
at the shore
as dusk ages into evening.
“You’re missing the sunset”
a person says to a sleeping friend
who wakes, sits upright
on a lumpy beach sheet
to spot the orange ball
knelling into the sea,
yielding to Time and Nature,
since it is part of both.


_______________________________




Austin Alexis by Roxanne Hoffman

Austin Alexis
is the author of Privacy Issues (Broadside Lotus Press, Madgett Poetry Award, 2014) and two previously published chapbooks from Poets Wear Prada. Recent flash fiction, poetry, reviews, and plays have appeared in Home Planet News Online, Unstamatic, The Avocet, Point of View, and Long Island Sounds (an anthology). He has work forthcoming in Maintenant: A Journal of Contemporary Dada Writing. He served recently as a panelist for the Bronx Council on the Arts. He lives in Manhattan.

Saturday, October 3, 2020

G. E. Schwartz | Yellow Lantern

Yellow Lantern, 2018, Oil on linen, 87 1/2 x 108 inches, Suzan Frecon (b.1941)
Yellow Lantern, 2018, Oil on linen, 87 1/2 x 108 inches, Suzan Frecon (b.1941)


YELLOW LANTERN

for Suzan Frecon

I stand before Suzan Frecon’s
Yellow Lantern and my heart
falls into small pieces, shards,
splinters with OTHER summers
before the eye, though it be
on canvas only. My heart
being a revolutionary fool,
a holy fool, falls, into shreds,
as blood pumps, defiantly some-
how through the conduits of
memory, Yellow Lantern. here,
now, THAT taste of our past
on the tongue, like lemon, like
light.


 


______________________________

G.E. Schwartz by Caylin Schwartz

G. E. Schwartz
, author of Only Others Are: Poems (Legible Press), Thinking in Tongues (Hank's Loose Gravel Press), World (Furniture Press), Murmurations (Foothills Press), and the forthcoming The Very Light We Reach For (Legible Press), lives and writes in Upstate New York.