Saturday, February 13, 2016

You, My Love (My Life Poem for Emily)


You, My Love

You inhabit me my love
Grow deep and young inside me
Like a sapling
You sink your roots
They wander
and wonderfully
entangle me my love.


You transfuse me my love
My blood is no longer my blood
For you are present even there
Flowing
Ebbing
Beating
Searching out
my innermost places my love.


You have taken up residence my love
In the furthest reaches
Of the slumber of my sleep
You run with me
Your hand in mine
In impossible places
In surreal dimensions
of my dreams my love.


You come to me my love
A smile that creases my face
An echo of your joy
Surprising me
In the midst of my day
Memories of you
Flash and burn
Images of you
flickering and searing across my mind my love.


You, like a spirit my love
Like the inside of my soul
That I never knew
Before you
Who pulses now always
Inside of me my love.


You, embodiment of answered prayers my love
Extension of grace
Shining down upon me
Soaking into me
Seeping into my every thought
The crown upon my head my love.


You are there in the morning light my love
In my waking moments
I reach for you
I am drawn by the immeasurable gravity
Of your love my love
Against you
Amaranthine rock my love.


You infuse laughter in my life my love
You peal
And beckon me
Your song dances
Your voice
Clarion
Notes floating
And leaping
Whirling
And washing over me my love.


You abide restlessly in my heart my love
Always increasing
Pushing me further
Multiplying passion
Never ceasing
Insatiable hunter
Of my heart my love.


Always always always my love
You will remain the lover of my youth
As we grow old and everything around us decays and rusts
For you and I my love—nothing alters
For you my love
Are Beauty, eternally defined
Tattooed kisses accumulating overlapping everlasting
Across the story of my life my love.


You, the radiant carrier of life my love
Your belly swollen and growing 
Your face beaming and golden
You, emerging and evolving
Into an even higher form of beauty 
Me, falling deeper and deeper into you 
You, Possessor of generations, my love. 


You: succor, nourisher and protector, 
Our babies cling to you
Like vines they surround and grow to you. 
Pillar of strength and zenith of grace
Your love refuses to ebb and only grows
Washing over, sustaining, and imbuing protection
You are the sun and your gravity immense
Pulling us deeper into the chasms—of your love,
Mother and lover of our children my love.


Keeper of the worries, my love
Your heart is open and bare 
where my own toughens
You mother and love without a shield
Absorbing everything 
every tear, every cry
every scraped knee and bruised heart
you take on as your own
Carrier and champion of our hearts , my love.

Beauty amplified and multiplied
You exist outside yourself 
Like a spirit
Each smile on our children's faces
Every sparkle of their laughter
 is your own
Their kisses, their shared embraces exist
Because your beauty and grace seeps 
Into their very core, my love

You my love
Are me
And I
am you.
my love.
We
My Love
We.

Wednesday, February 10, 2016

The Girl on a Train: Read It Because You Can Finish It In Three Days (or during one long day at the beach)

Our 20162015 and 2014 Reading Lists.

The Girl on the Train

READ IT BECAUSE: You can finish it in three days (or in one day at the beach)--it's that fast of a read.  Aside from it being a pretty dark novel this is a perfect beach read.  This story touches upon all the major nerves: falling in love, betrayal, jealousy, depression, murder, delusion...you get it all--the whole gambit.  In particular, Hawkins does a great job masking the outcome from the reader--this is the pull that keeps the pages turning.


The Girl on the Train: A Novel by Paula Hawkins
You have 7 highlighted passages
have never understood how people can blithely disregard the damage they do by following their hearts. Who was it said that following your heart is a good thing? It is pure egotism, a selfishness to conquer all. Hatred floodsRead more at location 442
Blackouts happen, and it isn’t just a matter of being a bit hazy about getting home from the club or forgetting what it was that was so funny when you were chatting in the pub. It’s different. Total black; hours lost, never to be retrieved.Read more at location 912
We did one round of IVF, which was all we could afford. It was, as everyone had warned us it would be, unpleasant and unsuccessful. Nobody warned me it would break us. But it did. Or rather, it broke me, and then I broke us.Read more at location 1061
but failure cloaked me like a mantle, it overwhelmed me, dragged me under, and I gave up hope. At the time, I resented the fact that it was always seen as my fault, that IRead more at location 1067
He never understood that it’s possible to miss what you’ve never had, to mourn for 
let’s be honest: women are still only really valued for two things—their looks and their role as mothers.Read more at location 1080
Parents don’t care about anything but their children. They are the centre of the universe; they are all that really counts. Nobody else is important, no one else’s suffering or joy matters, none of it is real.Read more at location 1095

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Salvage the Bones: Read It Because: You will be reminded of both the devastating scope and power of Hurricane Katrina but also of the largely forgotten swathes of the American population

Our 20162015 and 2014 Reading Lists.


Read It Because: You will be reminded of both the devastating scope and power of Hurricane Katrina but also of the largely forgotten swathes of the American population.

There are some great books that I read and I think to myself: I could write something like this someday (as an aspiring writer).  These storylines and worlds are one which I have lived or could imagine living.  Salvage the Bones is NOT one of those books.  Jesmyn Ward creates a world and captures its dialogue and cultural inner monologue with a level of detail and tenderness that will keep its characters alive in your thoughts long after you've finished the novel.

It's been more than a decade since the costliest hurricane in the US history ravaged the United States. I missed this weighty novel when it was published in 2011, joining an expansive family of "Katrina fiction."  While the hurricane plays a pivotal role in the story, its presence remains lurking on the periphery for the bulk of the narrative.  Instead, Ward draws the reader inside the community surrounding a poor backwoods southern family.  It's easy to forget that these communities still exist at this level of poverty in America--in that vein it reminded me of Winter's Bone (I only saw the incredible movie, but I've heard the book upon which the film was based is equally amazing).

Ward's artistry is most strikingly displayed in how she somehow manages to humanize a character that dogfights his nursing pitbull.  Don't think that's possible?  I dare you to read the book and disagree!

Ultimately, Ward pens a timeless tale about family, loss, longing, love and death that stands as a masterpiece for the foreseeable future.










Salvage the Bones: A Novel by Jesmyn Ward
You have 8 highlighted passages

He is really the color of the red earth after someone has dug in it to plant a field or pull up stones or put in a body. It is Mississippi red.Read more at location 131
Manny was holding the ball as tenderly as he would a pit puppy with pedigree papers. I wanted him to touch me that way.Read more at location 151
I clung like a monkey to Mama, my legs and arms wrapped around her softness, and I cried, love running through me like a hard, blinding summer rain.Read more at location 851
Daddy is wiggling from underneath the truck. It bulks over him like the rest of the detritus in the yard: refrigerators rusted so that they look like deviled eggs sprinkled with paprika, pieces of engines, a washing machine so old it has an arm that swished the clothes around and looks like a handheld cake mixer.Read more at location 1289
There is a movement behind my breast that feels like someone has turned a hose on full blast, and the water that has been baking in the pump in the summer heat floods out, scalding. This is love, and it hurts. Manny never looks at me.Read more at location 1357
“Why?” Daddy breathes to Randall and Big Henry standing over him, the blood sluicing down his forearm. They are gripping Daddy’s wrist, trying to stop the bleeding. Skeetah is punching the metal he meets. China is bloody-mouthed and bright-eyed as Medea. If she could speak, this is what I would ask her: Is this what motherhood is?Read more at location 1885
The waiting room was scrubbed clean and pale; it smelled of Pine-Sol, coffee, and weariness.Read more at location 1907
I will tie the glass and stone with string, hang the shards above my bed, so that they will flash in the dark and tell the story of Katrina, the mother that swept into the Gulf and slaughtered. Her chariot was a storm so great and black the Greeks would say it was harnessed to dragons. She was the murderous mother who cut us to the bone but left us alive, left us naked and bewildered as wrinkled newborn babies, as blind puppies, as sun-starved newly hatched baby snakes. She left us a dark Gulf and salt-burned land. She left us to learn to crawl. She left us to salvage. Katrina is the mother we will remember until the next mother with large, merciless hands, committed to blood, comes.Read more at location 3691