LYN LIFSHINOn the Day Rushing to the Metro Already a Little Late
on my Way to Ballet I Nearly Skid on Acorns, Catch Myself I think of Malala, maybe rushing, never wanting to think her name means "grief stricken," as I've written a poem about becoming what you’re called. Maybe she was humming a song she heard once on TV before the Taliban banned it or was watching leaves drift from the bus or giggling with girlfriends. Maybe she was thinking of being a doctor and coming back to treat young children in her region, her swat. Or maybe she was hoping to see a certain boy with licorice eyes and a smile who always made her giggle. No longer able to wear school uniforms, told to wear plain clothes, Malala wrote in her blog, Instead, I decided to wear my favorite pink dress. Maybe the last beautiful thing she saw as the bullet entered her mahogany curls until later she woke up in the hospital's cone of light 98 The Paris-American Lyn Lifshin’s Another Woman Who Looks Like Me was published by Black Sparrow at David Godine October, 2006. (Also out in 2006 is her prize winning book about the famous, short lived beautiful race horse, Ruffian: The Licorice Daughter: My Year With Ruffian from Texas Review Press. Lifshin’s other recent books include Before it’s Light published winter 1999-2000 by Black Sparrow press, following their publication of Cold Comfort in 1997 and 92 Rapple from Coatism.: Lost in the Fog and Barbaro: Beyond Brokenesss and Light at the End, the Jesus Poems, Katrina, Ballet Madonnas. For other books, bio, photographs see her web site:: www.lynlifshin.com Persephone was published by Red Hen and Texas Review published Barbaro: Beyond Brokenness. Most recent books: Ballroom, All the Poets (Mostly) Who Have Touched me, Living and Dead. All True, Especially the Lies. And just out, Knife Edge & Absinthe: The Tango Poems. In Fall 2012, NYQ books will publish A Girl Goes into The Woods. Also just out: For the Roses poems after Joni Mitchell. Just published Hitchcock Hotel. Also forthcoming: Malala, secretariat: The Red Freak, the Miracle, The Tangled Alphabet: Istanbul Poems.
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Next week's poet:
John Sibley Williams |