I saw somebody this morning. Walking down the alley. He was wearing white tight jeans and a black and brown hoodie. At a distance, I could see that he was carrying something white and fuzzy. When I got closer, I realized he was holding a fluffy thing. A set of feathery angel wings folded in half. My first thought was, I wish I was a painter. I would like to paint him. I guessed he was walking home from a Halloween party. His pants and his wings were in sharp contrast to the dingy alley.
The second thought I had was, I think he is sad leaving his lover’s apartment. Did he have a one night stand? Does it even matter if this is a love story?
And now, I think I get
it.
You see now that I think about it, he seemed to be very happy to be carrying his costume home.
I didn't want the morning to come.
+Just in case you are wondering, this is how you do it:
HOW TO WRITE AN AUBADE
A man is screaming outside. He is poor, addicted and insane.
This is
You see, I write stories and poems. Ideas spring from images or partial images: a stolen object from a dream. Nylons in a drawer. Dried pancake mix dripped on the lip of a pan. A man welcoming me into his store. Traffic jam. Not a picture of someone whom I do not know that could play a part.
I’m gonna roll with it.

I was lonely
You wrote me a memorandum
Slipped it under our door
Sometimes I wish we could pretend
You sent me a birdcage in a birdcage
with a memorandum saying, lay it to rest
I was hungry
So you left a glass of water on the
window sill and I never came back
When you finally knew I escaped, I
placed an image of a cage in the thought of a zoo
Animals were their own worst enemies
Endlessly pacing behind bars
And now, I can.
I can’t help but think of the men who have cried in
front of me and yet wanted to hide it from me: my grandfather, my own father,
my ex. It’s the fact that they don’t want you to see them that makes it so sad.
These are the moments I will not share with anyone I am quite certain – unless
I am able to disguise the scene so much so that it is unrecognizable.
This is a work of fiction. This is work in progress.
Sonnet
By Srikanth
Reddy
I was cold.
You wove me a mantle of smoke.
I was thirsty.
You sent me a cloud in a crate.
You sent me a note.
You sent me a crate in a crate with a note saying bury this.
So I struck off with my shovel & never came back.
When the digging was over, I buried my shovel.
I buried it deeper.
I tendered my prospects to dusk.
Some men will make a grave out of anything.
Anything.
It depends on how desperate they get.
Times when a body could dig clean through the night.
I was frozen.
You intertwine me a blanket of smolder.
I was hungry.
You launch me a blur in a birdcage.
You sent me a memorandum.
You sent me a birdcage in a birdcage with a memorandum saying lay it to rest this.
So I struck off with my shovel & never came back.
When the digging was over, I buried my shovel.
I buried it deeper.
I hand in my vistas to end of the day
Some man will make a grave out of anything.
Anything.
It depends on how desperate they get.
Times when a body could dig clean through the night.
Blah, blah, blah. I'm thinking of a whole bunch of stuff today. Today I thought about L-------.
L was a girl I met in grade 8. And I was thinking about the gym class we were in together.
And how mean girls can be.
And how 3 years later, her life changed and she had a baby at 16.
And 2 years after that, she was pumping gas into my car 'cos she was the manager of PetroCan. Haven't seen her or thought of her since then.
But blah, blah, blah. THEN she just popped into my mind today. After 19 years.
What is with that?
What triggers memories for you?
Was it the bouquet of dandelions that I spotted on the sidewalk tied in a bow like a shoelace?
MMMMMMmmmmmm. I'm not sure. Perhaps a sign taped on a lamppost advertising a garage sale from 2006? Or was it musing on your horoscope, "Things will be fuzzy today but trust that everything will clear up on May 2nd"?
I wonder what the first boy I loved is doing tonight.
When's the last time he thought of L?
I am so excited to hear that Marita Dachsel is launching her debut collection this week.
"all things said & done" is described by her publisher as "a visceral exploration of the moments of life that stand out in the pages of a family album and the intervals of memory."
Marita was born and raised in Williams Lake, BC, and has lived in Kamloops, Dawson City, Auckland and Montpellier, France. She has an MFA in Creative Writing from UBC and has been published widely in Canadian literary journals. She currently lives in Vancouver with her husband, playwright Kevin Kerr, and their son, Atticus.
First crushes, first times, weddings and trips across town, across water, and across continents. Sounds awesome.
Dachsel perceptively sprinkles these moments with the details photographs don’t reveal, as in "Dispatches from an Impending Marriage": "Don't talk to me about photographers./ Nothing will capture this. A printed paper/ will only mock—/ a gaudy misrepresentation/ a plastic jesus on the mantle—/ two dimensions of fabric, teeth and skin."
This is a triple book launch so Marita will also be reading with Nancy and Sean.
See below....
Nancy Pagh was born
and raised on Fidalgo Island in Anacortes, Washington. She burst onto
the literary scene at age twelve with the publication of her poem 'Is a
Clam Clammy, or Is It Just Wet?' in a local boating magazine. Before
earning Master's degrees in Literature and Creative Writing at the
University of New Hampshire, and a Ph.D. in Interdisciplinary Studies
at the University of British Columbia, she worked in the scientific
publications unit of the National Oceanic & Atmospheric
Administration in Seattle. She teaches English and Canadian Studies at
Western Washington University and lives in Bellingham.
Sean Horlor was born in Edmonton and lived in Victoria for many years before making Vancouver his home. He has published his poetry widely in literary journals, including Arc, Event, The Fiddlehead, Grain, Pine Magazine, THIS Magazine, The Claremont Review, Inner Harbour Review, and The Malahat Review. His poem "In Praise of Beauty" won first place in This Magazine s 2006 Great Canadian Literary Hunt and was an Editor s Choice in Arc s International Poem of the Year contest. Made Beautiful by Use is his first collection of poetry.
Dewinetz published a broadside or a chapbook of her work. Check it out! Oh Dewinetz! How the hell are you, dude? Long time no talk?!?!?
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