Discussion host Dr. Thelma T. Reyna |
Responsible to their art and the panel, all have arrived early. This gives opportunity to go through the agenda and any last-minute adaptations.There are quite a number of Burbankers floating into the room to share the poets' stories. None a typical or stereotypical immigrant, each will relate to listeners the poet's origin story, why their destiny carries them to the west coast of the United States from birthplaces in Italy, Spain, and Vietnam.
Kyle Moreno, Reader Engagement Librarian welcomes his guests. He's proud of the excellent facility. The amplification system has powerful loudspeakers and the panel and Q&A will share two microphones. The technology works as intended.
Toti O'Brien
Toti O'Brien
SHADOWS OF FIRE
Venus rose from the sea, they said. Of course, naked.
Long, curled hair, echoing the rippling of waves.
Perhaps, she had a mermaid tail (mythologies melt).
Like the Lady of Guadalupe, she stood on a crescent
(hers was abalone). Like that Mary, she niched in a
sort of vulva lined with mother of pearl, and was
haloed by cool layers of blue.
Athena rose dressed from the head (the brain) of her
father, Jupiter, king of gods. Dressed means with spear,
shield, armor—and clothes, underneath. Shoes were
on her feet. She looks marble in sculptures, but she
was splattered in blood, at least from the ax blow
that split open her father’s skull. She did not wash.
No need. She was bound to war.
When she stepped out of the mess of gray matter,
she marched on. She didn’t turn back, oblivious
already of the place she had come from. Soon
she was on horseback, and they called her Joan
the Maid. She donned a red tunic under the chain
mail, waved a red flag, her mount was harnessed
red—all preluding to her firing farewell.
She was seen afterwards, still in scarlet tunic,
playing Malinche. She spoke many tongues, and
too well. She went on, always marching westward
like a sun vainly looking for its resting place,
fated to constantly resurrect. They say she never
met her half-sister, the azure goddess,
or the pious mother of Christ.
She was not invited to family parties. Fairies missed
her baptism. No aunt demonstrated how to make
apple pie. She knew not the flavor of milk. At night,
she drank straight from the bottle as she leaned against
the iron rail of some bridge, listening to the roar of
water smashing on stone, catching (out of the corner
of her wide open eye) a meteor falling.
Toti O'Brien
BAILARINA
They kept her for long hours
standing on a small chair
so her eyes would be level
with theirs, pupil into pupil.
They asked her all the questions
for which she had no replies
secrets you never told her.
“No,” she murmured, “no,”
meekly enduring the torture.
But later she had her fill.
Briskly, she grabbed her skirt
at the edges, both sides. She
held it up and started her mad
zapateo. The skirt swell
became large like a tent
under which four campesinos
could hide from the farmer,
though it was never worn
in a field. Four boys on the run
could abide, quietly breathing
the damp warmth of no secrets.
Skirt of heaven and hell.
Matrix of all secrets.
UNTITLED, 2
So they asked Joan of Arc
why always your thighs?
They allow, she replied
the longest consecutive lines.
There would be my back
it is true. But the story, then
should be written by somebody
else. My thighs are at hand.
Why the inside? The surface
is softer, a bit easier to carve.
And they open and close
like a notebook.
Teresa Mei Chuc
in the Northernmost
part of Vietnam,
in a Vietcong
reeducation camp,
my father watched
to see if the
chili peppers
would spin
in the clear water.
If the peppers
were still,
then the water
was not poisonous.
Father said
the best way
to get water
was to cut
a bamboo tree
or a banana
tree
with a knife.
The water
in the heart
is pure.
Teresa Mei Chuc
Praying at the Cemetery on Con Son Island
Endless gravestones
unnamed
a yellow star on each stone
lights the night
I try not to breathe in spirits
but I breathe in
the smoke of incense.
A bat flutters by
A green grasshopper lands by my foot
Someone is saying hello
Perhaps it is a girl who died in a Tiger Cage
There are not enough
incense sticks for all
of the graves on Con Son Island.
2 comments:
Thank you, Michael, for being at our event, for your staunch support of our panel and their glorious work. We appreciate you immensely!
Thank you Michael, for this great great great reportage.
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