Join us as we consider a pack of poems by Pier Wright, and the complexities of pacing, prosody, and narrative poems with strange and powerful images: memory, tenderness, a “magnificent young moose,” & the magic of being caught in the act. Kathleen “Gratitude” Volk Miller, champion explicator and advocate for gratitude and neuroplasticity, analyzes the “small pointy hats of hope” as lovers entwine. Jason “Gorgeous Vectors” Schneiderman loves sticky collisions. Gabby and Alex and the crew ponder happy endings and surprises that feel like “Objective correlatives,” slushies. Spoiler: Marion “Sunshine” Wrenn makes an appearance from future past, or future perfect, or…something like that. It all makes a great story. 


Slushies, what is your “embarrassing at the moment but will be funny later” story? 


 


This episode is brought to you by one of our sponsors, Wilbur Records, who kindly introduced us to the artist  A.M.Mills, whose song “Spaghetti with Loretta” now opens our show. 


Pier Wright attended Kalamazoo College where he was influenced by the poetry of Con Hilberry and later by that of Diane Seuss. The first poetry reading he ever attended, and has never forgotten, was Robert Bly reading from Silence In The Snowy Fields. He received a Post-Baccalaureate & Masters degree from The Art Institute of Chicago. As a student he discovered Fairfield Porter, Monet’s large Water Lilly paintings at at Musée de l'Orangerie, Terry Winters, Mary Heilmann, Philip Guston’s late paintings, Giotto, Noguchi, etc.. Influences include Prayer Wheels, Marie Howe, Chris Martin, Peter Matthiessen, Stephen Dunn, John Cage, Ornette Coleman, Joni Mitchell, Phyllida Barlow, the ceramic work of Toshiko Takaezu, and, most recently, the writings of C.D. Wright. While living as a hermit for several years at the end of a peninsula in N Michigan he began working with Michael Delp. He has been the director of Wright Gallery since 2002 and is recently married.


Socials:  Instagram is pierdwright, Facebook is Pier Wright, and website is pierwright.net (paintings)


 



 


Driveway Poem


 


we arrived early at the house by the subshop


after the bar closed


it was cold and being new at love


the only way we thought to keep warm


was by undressing completely, with great urgency


in the front seat of the Ford


then my foot got stuck in the horn


just as our friends began arriving


we couldn’t have left even if we’d wanted to


with all the cars having parked behind us


so we went to the party anyway


me with my shoes untied


you unfolding yourself from the car like a magnificent young moose


the night sky on one side of you and the stars over there


the way you had of entering a room back then


as though by just walking the muddy path to the stoop


a lotus popped out



 


Gratitude


 


what was once impotent in me


remains in this fiery house


on a small lot, crap lawn


every roughed grief


the small pointy hats of hope


red hibiscus bushes wilting in a row


the heat slicked fur of a sleeping hound


a house made not of things


but the relationship between things


such as the desire two bodies have


when flying blindly toward each other


at incredible speed


so, when I ask if I can make you breakfast


what I mean is, I am thankful you are finally here



 


The Hibiscus, Key West


 


we shared thin, raw, slices of tuna,


conch salad, cracked stone crab claws,


drank dark rum, tripped over the noisy chickens


on our way to your room.


drank more rum from plastic cups,


then a table broke, the matching chair in pieces,


waltzing together across worn linoleum


like aging Tantric porn stars.


waking to Cuban coffee, I remember eggs,


while waiting for a bus to Miami


you wrote your number on a napkin.


I tried calling several times,


a memory persistent as the fly banging


on this kitchen door screen.



 


Mother’s Day


 


what a day in the garden


pulling out the knotweed


the clover and spurge


forgiving you for leaving so soon


the way they cut your head open


I recall a dream


I find you in a dumpster it’s hot


your bones are missing


and you can’t get out


just now before dark


beside the thistle and burdock


your cheeks wet I ask if you are hungry


I chop potatoes eggs olives


how tender the early dandelion greens


are tossed with sea salt


bitter with lemon


drizzled with the good oil


I keep for company