The Keys to the Jail asks the question of who is to blame for all we’ve lost, calling us to reexamine the harsh words of failed love, the aging of a once-beautiful body, even our own voracious desires. Keetje Kuipers is a poet of daring leaps and unflinching observations, whose richly textured lyrics travel from Montana’s great wildernesses to the ocean-fogged streets of San Francisco as they search out the heart that’s lost its way.
Dolores Park
In the flattening California dusk,
women gather under palms with their bags
of bottles and cans. The grass is feathered
with the trash of the day, paper napkins
blowing across the legs of those who still
drown on a patchwork of blankets. Shirtless
in the phosphorescent gloom of streetlamps,
they lie suspended. This is my one good
life—watching the exchange of embraces,
counting the faces assembled outside
the ice-cream shop, sweet tinge of urine by
the bridge above the tracks, broken bike lock
of the gay couple’s hands, desperate clapping
of dark pigeons—who will take it from me?
A former Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry, Keetje Kuipers ‘s debut collection, Beautiful in the Mouth, won the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize. She has been the Margery Davis Boyden Wilderness Writing Resident, and is currently an assistant professor at Auburn University.
Зміст
Contents
Goodbye Is Forever
Another Time, Another Place 1
Wolf Season 2
Our Last Vacation 3
If One of Us Can’t Live Like This 4
In a Sentimental Mood 5
Lover Long Gone 6
Dear John Letter, Never Sent 7
Stowaway Future 8
Thief, Thief
The Extinct 10
Sometimes a Season Changes Overnight 11
Just Outside 12
Brotherhood 14
Getting Over the Future 15
What I Thought Then 16
Traces of the Imperfectly Erased 17
In Medias Res 18
Warning Posted at the Marin Headlands:
People Have Been Swept from the Cliffs and Drowned 19
All the Rivers in the World 20
The Open Spaces
A Year of Rain
The Keys to the Jail 22
Birthday Poem 23
Letter to an Inmate in Solitary Confinement 24
The Ocean 26
Melancholy 27
The Loneliness 29
Too Many Bridges 30
Overwinter 31
Please Check Under the Bed 32
Bees, And Other Dead Things Found in Winter 33
Every Bright Thing 34
Drought 35
Five Women Ending in a Flower
I. The Girl 37
II. The Older Woman 39
III. The Whore 40
IV. The Femme 42
V. The Wife 44
Poison on the Street
Dog Gun Lake 47
Speaking as the Male Poet 48
For All the Dead Lovelies 49
I Will Away 50
The Oar 51
Abstinence 53
Sick Days 54
Perfect Crime 55
I Wasn’t Searching for a New Language, But a New Meaning 56
Some Advice
At the Museum of Modern Art 58
Cold Comfort in October 59
Entreaty 60
Some Advice for Both of Us 61
Applied Science 62
Dolores Park 63
The Doctor 64
The Story 66
Ought 67
Something with a Heart in It 68
A Beautiful Night for the Rodeo 69
Jonathan Plays in the Key of E 70
Про автора
Keetje Kuipers is a native of the Northwest. She earned her B.A. at Swarthmore College and her M.F.A. at the University of Oregon. She has been the recipient of a number of fellowships, including those from the Vermont Studio Center, Squaw Valley Community of Writers, and Oregon Literary Arts.
In 2007 Keetje completed her tenure as the Margery Davis Boyden Wilderness Writing Resident, which provided her with seven months of solitude in Oregon’s Rogue River Valley. She used her time there to complete work on her book, Beautiful in the Mouth, which was awarded the 2009 A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize and was published in 2010 by BOA Editions. It contains poems previously published in Prairie Schooner, West Branch, Willow Springs, and AGNI, among others. You can also listen to her read her work—which has been nominated seven years in a row for the Pushcart Prize—at the online audio archive From the Fishouse. Keetje’s second book, The Keys to the Jail, is forthcoming from BOA Editions in the spring of 2014, and contains poems previously published in American Poetry Review, Jubilat, and the Indiana Review.
Keetje was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University from 2009-2011, and she was the Emerging Writing Lecturer at Gettysburg College from 2011-2012. Currently she is an Assistant Professor at Auburn University where she lives with her family and their dog, Bishop (named after Elizabeth, of course).