Pushcart Prize Nominations


for poems published in 2015

The poets:

Rob Carney, “The Story of the Seahorse and the Wave” 
Published February 4, 2015

Susan Elbe, “Perhaps”
Published July 22, 2015

Susanna Lang, “Cooling Off in the Pavilion of Being Stripped Naked”
Published November 11, 2015

Matthew Murrey, “The Evening of the Day Johnny Carson Died”
Published July 22, 2015

Mark Neely, “Mars One”
Published August 5, 2015

Nance Van Winckel, “Dispersals”
Published May 6, 2015

Sugar-bowlKay Juricek

The poems:

Rob Carney

The Story of the Seahorse and the Wave

Always he’d been there, at home in the ocean,
anchored to the sea grass by his tail,

but his thoughts kept drifting ’til one day he let go
and was carried away by Beauty.

He didn’t know she’d been watching him,
approaching in the shape of a wave,

and now he was spinning with her inland
over trees, up foothills, a mile beyond the shoreline.

The sky above was like new blue water,
and the stones below a new reef,

and his body grew
to fit the sudden size of his heart—

full of loss
as he saw her receding. . . .

He waited on a lookout rock,
but she didn’t return.

To be at home in this strange terrain he’d need legs,
hard hooves, and the wind’s own balance,

and so he became the first horse
and galloped away.

Letter

Susan Elbe

Perhaps

The dog hears
some pitched harp
of sound that we can’t hear,
her head cocked toward some bright apse
up there, some star shape
the bent light of her eyes can’t parse.
Who knows what her ears
catch in the spear
of light that raps
against late evening trees. A wide-eyed hare
of heaven? The whispered close of a feathered hasp?

Pink-grapefruit

Susanna Lang

Cooling Off in the Pavilion of Being Stripped Naked

Ghost Painting, Yao Luan, Qing dynasty

Beside the stream, three leafless
trees hold out their branches
like witches’ fingers. It’s always
November in this other world,

even the trees stripped to the bark,
the bark smoothed, light failing,
winter eternally ahead of us. 
Three angular ghosts climb out

of the water, straining toward the bank
where others wait their turn to cool off. 
There is so little left to be removed
from these beings, none of them

clothed, their features and sex
left blank, their gestures
half-hearted.  Perhaps only the desire
to return must still be rinsed off

so they can accept the end as an end,
a stillness, a look into empty glass
or a canyon so deep the floor
cannot be seen. The gallery is closing;

I go out into the snow that falls
through bare branches, erasing
distances, but still cold on my face
and the skin between sleeve and glove.

Yellow-ribbon

Matthew Murrey

The Evening of the Day Johnny Carson Died

We were watching clips of old Tonight Shows
and there was Jimmy Stewart, an old man 
reading an awful poem he’d written
about his dog that had died,
a dog named Beau.  We howled,
“Beau!”  “Ha!”  What a hoot.  His poem
was jammed with rhymes, but buried
in it was a description of his dog at night
lying in the bed between Jimmy and his wife—
both of them old and asleep, until he woke up
to find Beau awake and staring, caught in
“this fear of the dark, of life, of lots of things.”
His voice broke as he read that line.
Staring at our TV—where two dead men
were sitting near each other, one reading
and one listening—we got quiet, like a couple
of dogs in the night that hear something 
and look up, cock their heads and listen.

Lemon-and-flower

Mark Neely

Mars One

The talk at the office party is of the man
who signed up to take a one-way trip to Mars,
leaving his wife and kids behind.

Bruce cowers with a sweaty drink
as a vice-president glides by
in her green dress. He’s thinking

of the old explorers—Odysseus
blinking awake in Circe’s bed,
James Cook beaten

to death at Kealakekua Bay.
He imagines Earth receding in a porthole,
or watching through a long scope

as its shrouded landmasses
bloom with mushroom clouds.
He’d never have the nerve.

He clutches his soggy plate
as a group of gossiping computer techs
veers closer. Hell is other people.

Bouquet-in-yellow-and-red

Nance Van Winckel

Dispersals

His mother, and mine too, want us with them in the afterlife. Their end-of-life worry reflects an eternity of missing us. When we say, Guess you’ll have to come find us in the inferno then, we get the deeply steeped frowns under the double set of raised eyebrows.

The past burns off first and fast, next the husks we’d grown—bright, brittle, loudly sparking. Then the serious heat drills in . . . just before the serious smoke of us rises over the city we loved clear to the bitter end.

 

Rob Carney at EIL

Susan Elbe at EIL

Susanna Lang at EIL

Matthew Murrey at EIL

Mark Neely at EIL

Nance Van Winckel at EIL

Kay Juricek at EIL




3 responses to “Pushcart Prize Nominations”

  1. Maureen says:

    Congratulations to all!

  2. Basel Al-Aswad says:

    Wonderful, they are all so crisp and clear….Congratulations

  3. Seana Graham says:

    I loved reading these and am struck by some similar themes reaching through them. The paintings are beautiful too.

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