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Teenager in Nova Scotia by HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI
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HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI
Teenager in Nova Scotia

At night a guard watches the solitude which
builds in the growing silence to the wee hours.

A Nova Scotia fisherman has coffee before the
sun comes up, to start the day in the bay,

close to the water in a small boat.

His daughter dreams of the boys a few miles
down the bayside road. The girls have little 

choice but be good, thinking about meeting
the bad boys doing bad things.

Caught in the rain.

Undressing and warming up against each other
in the boat house next to the oil lamp.

Feeling the smooth skin of teenagers during
the lobster season. Feeling the uncontrollable 

rush of blood down there during oyster harvests.

The fisherman's family ate good and were healthy.
His auburn-haired daughter leans against the 

mirror and kisses her lips. She wants to see 
how she looks to a boy when being kissed.

She leans against the bureau.

The boy looks just like her, same nose and
lips, that curious look in the eyes, but dark

against her pink cherry skin. The purple 
hue on the lips, like the exotic forbidden

boys.          The ones she liked best.

Her father leaves to find the fish. Proud
of his healthy children. It's honest work.

They'll get an education, maybe become artists
and describe their old dad,      and the ocean.

Well, he knows he could'a done better.
But they're alive and healthy and decent.

But his daughter,      she's had all the good 
things, now she's curious about the bad,

all the “don'ts” she grew up with.
She's a teenager! She wraps her sheer white 

window curtain around her chest, pushing up
her breasts sensually like a strapless evening

dress, like the models in the magazines.
There's a numbness over her body,

a big wave below her heart. She pretends
another kiss. Practices whispering,

“I love you.”

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poet: HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI poet: Charles P. Ries reviews poet: HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI  sitenavigation
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WHO WILL PAY THE ROYALTIES FOR THE VOICES IN MY HEAD AND OTHER POEMS (Charles P. Ries reviews)
Charles P. Ries lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His narrative poems, short stories, interviews and poetry reviews have appeared in over one hundred print and electronic publications. He has received three Pushcart Prize nominations for his writing and most recently he read his poetry on National Public Radio's Theme and Variations, a program that is broadcast over seventy NPR affiliates. He is the author of THE FATHERS WE FIND, a novel based on memory. Ries is also the author of five books of poetry — the most recent entitled, The Last Time which was just released by The Moon Press in Tucson, Arizona. He is the poetry editor for Word Riot and he is on the board of the Woodland Pattern Bookstore in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. You may find additional samples of his work by going to: http://www.literarti.net/Ries/ and you may write him at charlesr@execpc.com

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Charles P. Ries reviews
WHO WILL PAY THE ROYALTIES FOR 
THE VOICES IN MY HEAD AND OTHER POEMS			
By: Christopher Robin 42 Poems / 49 Pages / $5.00 I Press On! Publications Post Office Box 1611 Santa Cruz, California 95061-1611 Poetry isn't very funny. It's seldom stupid and it doesn't laugh at itself very much. For the most part I feel like I am in church when I read it, but in Who Will Pay The Royalties For the Voices in My Head poet and small press editor, Christopher Robin attempts to change all that. He writes poetry that is at once funny, filled with pathos, irreverent, stupid, ridiculous and heartfelt. Who Will Pay The Royalties For the Voices In My Head is Robin's first book of poetry. In it he chronicles a litany of sufferings and transforms them into joy such as, "ORDINARY": 'Taking the bus to community college / to compete / with the other disabled / for attention – // They used to watch me; / when I was in my early twenties – // I'd have brightly colored Mohawks / and wild hippie clothes; / carrying a bedroll - // It's so nice to be / 28 and ordinary; / I dress like a man now / and carry a loaded / pencil sharpener.' Most of the poems in this collection focus on the period of Robin's life while he was homeless and dealing with occupational rehab, caseworkers, and down and out jobs. If only half of its content is based on fact, I'd be exhausted, so I asked him how he was doing. He told me, "I've been on disability since I was twenty-one years old. I do odd jobs when I can, the odder the better. I've been told I have a brain injury, which keeps me from working at McDonalds, or any other meaningful work. I also have carpal tunnel syndrome, and it's really hard to find a job that doesn't involve either my brain or my hands. I suffered a lot in my younger life, living on the streets and being strung out, and poetry came out of it, but I didn't seek suffering or the low-life in order to make art. It was the other way around. I don't believe in that. Suffering is really overrated.' He went on to tell me, 'I think you only get to the essential humor of life by transcending the profoundly personal, or the sadness of the world, into universal art. We have to laugh to survive it all. The world is so scary and god-awful.' Robin is the editor of one of the finest and funniest cut-and-paste zines out there. I asked him how he became an editor. 'I had a lot of time on my hands, still do, and wanted to communicate with others in the mail-world. I was told I would never work again in 1991, then again in 1998 (when I was also given the name Zen Baby from a very kind neuro- psychologist); so I decided the only place for me was the zine world. 'My mentors are my fellow poets and other obsessed freaks that spend all their time doing things no one in the real world gives a damn about. My mother was also a great influence on me. I admire how she devours books, plays the violin, lives with a 300 pound pig, doesn't give a damn and doesn't own a TV. Other influences are: The Weekly World News, Church of the Subgenius, Timothy Leary, John Waters, Granpa Stuped comics, Robot Chicken cartoons, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, Morrisey, and Marshall McLuhan." He extols the saving grace he has found in poetry in, "MUSE": 'When I drove drunk / through Flagstaff / wishing to be caught / or comforted / strong armed in hospitals / exiled in small towns / accused and denied / struggling to write on the underside / of a bridge wall / no light or paper / When I was geeken' in the Atlanta projects / sorely not missed / in motels / When I was strapped down / force fed panic vitamins / or dreaming with the hallucinogenic / cough-syrup-sun underneath / a happy jet lag / lobotomized with cable / or meditating on Gita / over the river - // She was always there.' And describes his life in, "CHRIS'S LIFE": 'Walking past / the lesbian café / after job / raking leaves / with dog shit / on my shoes / carrying / a huge painting of / clowns.' While I have often laughed out loud while reading through the jam packed and mad capped Zen Baby, I found the poems in his book of poetry to often be quite somber and he explains, 'I don't know where my writing is headed. Probably right into a brick wall, which seems to be the right direction for a small-press poet. I am constantly learning from my fellow poets, less rage, better form, originality. As for the zine, I thrive on the absurd, whether it's about myself, other poets or just the world in general. Reality is subjective so I twist and fool with things till I can laugh at something, and hopefully others will. I'm also glad to showcase the best of the current, underground poets, in my opinion; along with the personal and political diatribes that hopefully make it stand out a bit more than just a poetry zine, just a political zine or just a zine for the editor to whine to himself. I want it to be all of those things. There aren't too many cut-and-paste zines still out there that are actually good. I'd like to use an old form with some new twists.' We may think that the small press is the literary underground, but I have found there is metaphorical trap door on the floor of the small press and below is a crazy root cellar where zines like Zen Baby and Lee Thorn's FUCK exist. In them I often find poets missing in more refined mainstream publications. So it is with Christopher Robin, who is a delightful small press original. He has turned his life of vinegar into sweet mirth. Such as in the following poem called, "KATHY M.": 'I love a woman / Who is impressed / With my ability / To find my way / Out of buildings.' I invited Robin to ask himself a few questions and answer them, and he obliged me with, 'Are you ever going to get a real job? When are you going to clean off your desk? Should you just go back to living in a van and/or move to Mexico, and screw getting published? Are you going to end up completely bitter and die a nobody with a potbelly all alone at an early age? Why did you do so many drugs, you fool! Sorry, myself had no answers.' No, I guess 'myself' doesn't have the answers, but Robin does. As well as the prolific talent and uncanny ability to see what is humorous at the center of life. NOTE: Make checks payable - or send cash or postage stamps as payment – to Christopher Robin. If you'd like a copy of his magazine, Zen Baby or his mini-book of short essays entitled, Tales From a Deliberate Life they are $2.00 cheap. NOTE: If you would like to read the Las Vegas City Life's 11/04 interview with Christopher Robin and view more of his work please go to: http://www.literaryrevolution.com/chrisrobin.html

Copyright 2006, all rights retained by the poet

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Mexico Solo by HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI
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HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI
Mexico Solo			
Daring to step off the high road into Laredo and take a train to Mexico City. It was the spur of the moment, seeking abandon, and adult with full privileges. Dry white landscape seemed to twirl around a distant epicenter. Dizzy creatures and stand sitll plants in the desert, stab each other out of paranoia. An old lady with a good luck charm walked up the aisle selling tortillas ans steaming boiled chicken to the pasengers. It felt as if her house out there under the mountains, stabilized humanity. Lifetime village where the young boys play soccer behind rows of cactus. Cornfield serenaded by large flocks of parrots coaxing their food to grow. Desert-colored houses where brown-skinned lovers lay touching behind closed shades for days. It felt like he had been on the train for days. The constant rocking lulled him into illusion. It felt like he raised chickens and corn in another masculine lifetime. He recalls making love to a brown skinned girl, in the cornfields, in the moonlight. Dazed by perception, he steps outside for some air when they stop at the station. A young Mexican kid eyed the milky white blond and walked next to him saying, “I'll do anything you want.” seductive For a second , blood rushed unexpectedly at the suggestion. But then he escaped appropriately and he was solo, again, it was just him.

Copyright 2006, all rights retained by the poet

poet: HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI poet: Charles P. Ries reviews poet: HEDWIG IRENE GORSKI  sitenavigation
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