The Spring 2012 issue of Poetry Quarterly has been posted on-line, and two of my poems are in it: "Outside the Abundant Life Chapel" and "The Food Truck."
The Abundant Life Chapel is located in Charleston, West Virginia. I was in Charleston in 2010 for a conference. I was giving a workshop on a Sunday afternoon, and since I had no conference-related activities in the morning, I decided to attend meeting for worship at the Charleston Friends Meeting. I arrived at the meetinghouse early, so decided to walk around a bit until others arrived to open the meetinghouse. As I walked past the Abundant Life Chapel, the sound of gospel music flowed through the walls and the closed doors. The bass was thumping a lively beat and it sounded like the congregation was rocking. The impression stuck with me through the day; by that evening, I was writing out the words of the poem.
"The Food Truck" was inspired by the Hispanic food trucks that have appeared along the Route 1 corridor in Howard County, Maryland, where I live. No doubt, they are elsewhere. They can be found in industrial park parking lots, on the side of the road, and any location where Latinos may gather to eat, socialize, wait for work. I wanted to write something about them, but I was having trouble identifying the specific theme. The reality of farmers in Mexico and Central America being forced out of farming by the flood of cheap American corn seemed the perfect backdrop for the poem, and the food truck operator became a farmer who had left his farm for better economic prospects in America.
The Spring 2012 issue of Poetry Quarterly is available at http://poetryquarterly.com/?page_id=7
Enjoy!
Saturday, June 16, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Flying Paper Plane Poems in Baltimore
To go along with my previous post, here's video of our paper plane poem escapade in Baltimore. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yHtx2K82Ahs
Saturday, June 9, 2012
Paper Plane Poems
The editors of the journal Do Not Look At The Sun have a knack for coming up with quirky and interesting themes for their issues. The theme for the Spring 2012 issue is "Paper Plane Poems." Dylan, Kathy, and I helped with distribution by flying paper plane poems at the Inner Harbor in Baltimore. It was a great day for it-- slight breeze, lots of people milling about prior to the Orioles-Phillies baseball game. Lots of baseball fans, but how many also enjoy poetry? Not sure, but one Phillies fan helped fold and fly a poem.
Friday, May 4, 2012
Two More Poems in The Copperfield Review
The Copperfield Review is turning out to be a great place for me. I've got two poems in the latest issue, Spring 2012: "David Sang in Welsh Today" and "Separated in Death, Even as in Life." Just about all of the historical poems in my Skimino Cycle have been published there.
Check out the poems as well as the Copperfield Review's new look at http://copperfieldreview.com/?p=527
Check out the poems as well as the Copperfield Review's new look at http://copperfieldreview.com/?p=527
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
A bit of a break from poetry
I knew this was going to happen. It's happened before. I've been teaching this semester-- population geography at University of Maryland, Baltimore County-- and just like in the past, I'm busy enough preparing lectures, reading essays, and grading tests, in addition to my full-time work as well as family, that I don't have time to write poetry. Or, don't make time to write poetry. But, just so you don't think the inkwell has gone dry, I'll share links to what I have been writing.
Last Monday, the Census Bureau announced the list of urbanized areas and urban clusters for the 2010 Census, as well as urban and rural population and land area information. I wrote the news release.
A blog post describing how we define urban areas was posted today on the Census Bureau's Random Samplings blog.
I'll have an entry about the Census Bureau's activities at the 2012 Association of American Geographers conference posted in the Census Bureau's Research Matters blog. That entry was actually written in mid-February, but due to delays in releasing the Research@Census web site led to a backlog of blog posts. Mine should appear in the next few weeks (I hope)-- suitably edited into past tense by the blog editors.
It's not poetry, but it'll do.
Enjoy!
Last Monday, the Census Bureau announced the list of urbanized areas and urban clusters for the 2010 Census, as well as urban and rural population and land area information. I wrote the news release.
A blog post describing how we define urban areas was posted today on the Census Bureau's Random Samplings blog.
I'll have an entry about the Census Bureau's activities at the 2012 Association of American Geographers conference posted in the Census Bureau's Research Matters blog. That entry was actually written in mid-February, but due to delays in releasing the Research@Census web site led to a backlog of blog posts. Mine should appear in the next few weeks (I hope)-- suitably edited into past tense by the blog editors.
It's not poetry, but it'll do.
Enjoy!
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Up by Four More in the First Quarter
Well, the first quarter of 2012 has gone well! In addition to the three poems published in The Copperfield Review, I just got word that I'll have two poems in issue # 4 of Symmetry Pebbles-- "Walking Along the River Fuji, the Poet Basho Finds a Child Abandoned by Its Parents" and "Patuxent River Story." Although the word "river" in each poem's title suggests some symmetry, the two are quite different. "Walking Along the River Fuji," consists of two tankas, with the whole poem inspired by a passage in Basho's "Records of a Weather-exposed Skeleton" in which Basho and his traveling companion come along a small child abandoned by its parents. I've read Basho's book a couple times, but what struck me this last time was the matter-of-factness with which Basho leaves the child behind rather than taking it with him. "Patuxent River Story" is from my U.S. Route 1 series, and is about the prostitutes that are pushed from one county to another in the Laurel, MD area.
I've also got two poems that will appear in an upcoming issue of Poetry Quarterly-- "The Food Truck," which also is part of my U.S. Route 1 series, and "Outside the Abundant Life Chapel," which draws upon a brief moment when I stopped outside the Abundant Life Chapel in Charleston, WV while walking to the Charleston Friends' (Quakers') Meeting. Given how clearly I could hear the thumping bass while standing on the sidewalk, I can only imagine the amplitude of spirit that must have been present in the chapel.
You can find these poems here on my blog. I'll post the links when the journals are published.
I've also got two poems that will appear in an upcoming issue of Poetry Quarterly-- "The Food Truck," which also is part of my U.S. Route 1 series, and "Outside the Abundant Life Chapel," which draws upon a brief moment when I stopped outside the Abundant Life Chapel in Charleston, WV while walking to the Charleston Friends' (Quakers') Meeting. Given how clearly I could hear the thumping bass while standing on the sidewalk, I can only imagine the amplitude of spirit that must have been present in the chapel.
You can find these poems here on my blog. I'll post the links when the journals are published.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
Three more poems at The Copperfield Review
I seem to have found a home in The Copperfield Review. Three more of my Skimino Cycle poems have been published in the Winter 2012 issue: "They Rode on Borrowed Horses," "John's Lament," and "She Will Not Thirst Again." These poems fit temporally with the three poems published in the Summer 2011 issue as all focus on John and Mary Ratcliffe. The three poems published in the Fall 2011 issue represented a step back in time, as they were set in the 1700s and early 1800s.
Many, many thanks to the editors at The Copperfield Review. If you want read my poems there, see http://www.copperfieldreview.com/poetry/Ratcliffe%202012.htm
Many, many thanks to the editors at The Copperfield Review. If you want read my poems there, see http://www.copperfieldreview.com/poetry/Ratcliffe%202012.htm
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