Nov 27, 2019
Suzanne Frischkorn is a talented and prolific poet living in Connecticut, my home state. Listen to her explain how she got into poetry and the poetry scene and what influenced her work and the many similarities that we shared "growing up" in CT as women writers and poets in our formative years.
http://yourartsygirlpodcast.com/episodes
You can purchase Girl on a Bridge here: https://mainstreetragbookstore.com/product/girl-on-a-bridge/
Poem from Girl on a Bridge ---
Great Lash
You wear too much eye makeup. My sister wears too much. People think she's a whore.
Our
cornfields were paved in asphalt, sulfur
lights snuffed our stars. When one
of us had
no shoes, we went barefoot, walking
streets
laid with tar. First we coated
lashes blackest
black from tubes of green and pink,
our eyes
lined kohl. If it was Thursday we
found
boyfriends and waited by the liquor
store for
anyone to buy us Smirnoff. Anyone at
all.
We were not sweet girls.
*
We
were not sweet girls, yet we wore silver
chains with silver hearts & crosses,
onyx
rings, blush, lipstick, powder. Hair
flipped
by vent brush before entering a
night without
stars. Our parents were line
dancing, were bank
tellers, were absent. We were a
family that knew
nothing about its
members.
*
We
cut school and watched Foxes.
We cut school and drank
vodka.
We cut school and got
stoned,
did our makeup, walked the
streets.
One of us got out. One of us
ran
into our connection working a shoe
store,
one of us glimpsed another with a
baby,
one of us marries her Thursday
night
boyfriend and shatters her
image.
*
We
were not sweet girls, no. If there had
been corn, or stars? Maybe the
deep
sweet girlness would have surfaced ―
dreamy
fresh-faced girls ― petals listening
to rain.
You can purchase Lit Windowpane here: https://mainstreetragbookstore.com/product/lit-windowpane/
Poem from Lit Windowpane--
Window
A damp windowsill means nothing— it’s no bird tapping
on a pane— I am waiting
for the swallow’s stone, the anodyne
to illness brought by sparrow song.
This morning rain gathers in still puddles and the songbirds
sing without percussion― loud notes echo
the empty street— they sing and
sing and sing. No owl has brushed its wing
against our windowpane and sunlight
overcomes the clouds.
Thrush birdsong: lacey throated stars. The April
of our fifth year reeds withered around the pond.
Last summer I painted the porch ceiling
robin’s egg blue. Spring now and the sparrows
weave a nest in our dryer vent.
I watch you ladder your way into their world, lift
bits of twine and sticks and string, yet
you know they will return. How I love you
then— how I should have loved you all along.
BIO: Suzanne Frischkorn is the author of Lit Windowpane (2008), Girl on a Bridge, (2010) and five chapbooks. Her honors include the Aldrich Poetry Award for her chapbook, Spring Tide, selected by Mary Oliver, an Emerging Writers Fellowship from the Writer’s Center, and an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism.
Visit her website: https://suzannefrischkorn.com/