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Willawaw Journal Winter 2017 Issue 2

The second issue of Willawaw Journal features a hybrid of poetry and image as well as poetry in response to Poet Laureate Lawson Fusao Inada's "Everything."
Cover Art: Rose of Sharon, by Lorelle Otis (artist statement on back page)
First Page: Editor's Notes  Carolyn Adams   Deborah Bacharach with Keiko Hara   Devon Balwit  Eleanor Berry
Second Page: Jonah Bornstein   Lisa Marie Brodsky   Linda Cheryl Bryant with Zsazan   Tiffany Buck   Corinne Dekkers  Darren C. Demaree    
Third Page:  Steve Dieffenbacher   Salvatore Difalco  John Van Dreal   Judith Edelstein  Amelia Diaz Ettinger   David Felix
Fourth Page:  Delia Garigan   Abigail George   Brigitte Goetze  Audrey Howitt   Lawson Fusao Inada   Clarissa Jakobsons
Fifth Page: Colin James   Marc Janssen   M. Johnsen   Jola Jones   Shirley Jones-Luke   Michael Lee Johnson
Sixth Page: Matthew A. Jonassaint  Tim Kahl   J. I. Kleinberg   Joy McDowell   Catherine McGuire   Amy Miller
Seventh Page:   Lorelle Otis   Jerri Elliott Otto   Sue Parman   Diana Pinckney Bart Rawlinson  Leslie Rzeznik with Lewis Carroll
Eighth Page:  Yumnam Oken Singh   Sarah Dickerson Snyder   Barbara Spring   Andy Stallings   R. S. Stewart   Doug Stone
Ninth Page:   Patty Wixon  Vince Wixon  Maddie Woda  Matthew Woodman    Back Page with Lorelle Otis

Colin James

  Human in Nature

  Like a Scotswoman
  dancing the Flamenco,
  her “Ole’s” a little too “Ach, well.”
  Hanging around the dance studio
  signing up for everything, still.
  No one could understand a word she said
  until those startling flower dresses
  arrived by articulated lorry
  indispensably ending the stillness.

 

 Colin James has a book of poems, Resisting Probability, from Sagging Meniscus Press, and a chapbook, A THOROUGHNESS NOT DEPRIVED OF ABSURDITY. James lives in Massachusetts.

Marc Janssen

My Flat Horizon

–after The Flat Horizon by Wang Chung

And there are minerals and animals
And there are colors and blanks
And there are men and women
And there are rich and poor
And there are minutes and moments
And there is heaven and angels
Earth and men

          There are differences

And birds fly past the horizon
And nests lie in the sky
And they wing back in that
Precious mortality
And there is heaven and angels
Earth and men

          At the horizon’s border

And there is the quick and the dead
And there is the dancers and the sleepers
And there is the word and those outside the word
And there is the words and word
And there is heaven and angels
Earth and men

          That separate

 

Since 1989 Marc Janssen has worked as an ad man, a pitch man, and a salesman. Climbed the corporate ladder and fallen off it. You can find his work haphazardly scattered around the internet and in printed journals and anthologies such as Off the Coast, Cirque Journal, The Ottawa Arts Review, and Manifest West.

M. Johnsen

Mother

You were robed, you were
sinking
when I found you on the porch
soft body spilling, spine pressed
against the leg of a weatherproof chair.
Ice cubes dissolving in an empty glass.

You’d done away with language,
unlit cigarette limp
in your lazy mouth,
and your eyes weren’t closed,
and you weren’t ashamed.

 

M. Johnsen has an M.A. in English from the Bread Loaf School of English at Middlebury College. She has also attended The Kenyon Review Writers Workshop. Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Anti-Heroin Chic, Calamus Journal, SiDEKiCK, The Birds We Piled Loosely, Virga Magazine and Mortar Magazine. 

Jola Jones

Collapse, by Jola Jones

The Real Thing

what’s the real thing
sitting inside
ticking away
waiting to explode
like a makeshift bomb.
clinging to something
that’s disappearing
slowly then fast and final.
hanging on by a hair
peering through the cracks
trying to stay upright
with each two feet
as they press
the shifting earth.
a billion hits
for a cat on a spoon
while the sun and moon
chase each other
around a spinning room.
what’s this mad dance
we’re all invited to.
words are magnifying glasses
that reveal patterns
in the grass
and flickers in your eyes
that suggest what could be.
we’re grasping at things
those things
that a person once said.
she said, there’s a sea in one seed.
he said, we don’t need no coffin,
just a fire.
she said, from destruction comes creation.
he said, even if you wash away the problem
the sauce remains on the pants.
the memory of the stain lives on.
but so do the pools of light
that exist underneath
underground tunnels
and at the edges of the sand.
they are everywhere to find.

Jola Jones is an Australian artist who has been working across different fields in the arts, from poetry and performance, to film and music. In Marrickville, Jones spent 4 years creating a platform for progressive and experimental arts and community. She has also been an ongoing performer and archivist with Kinetic Energy Theatre Company in Sydney. Her latest poems challenge us to consider the question, how do we respond in precarious times? 

Shirley Jones-Luke

UnColor Me

Drain from my flesh the hue of
my ancestors, the tint of the
African sun, the shade of an
old gum tree in the middle of
the savanna, the shadows from
the tall grass as they bend in
the mid-summer breeze over
the river Nile, past the pyramids
desecrated by robbers then by
those seeking their secrets,
hidden for thousands of years
when the tone of my skin did
not matter and I was a queen
on the throne of a Nubian empire,
and not a slave mistress, a maid
nor the angry, black woman
of a color-obsessed society.

Shirley Jones-Luke is a poet and a writer. Ms. Luke lives and works in Boston, Mass. She earned an MFA at Emerson College with an emphasis on memoir and poetry. Shirley has been published in several journals and magazines. In 2016, Ms. Luke was a Poetry Fellow for the Watering Hole Poetry Retreat.

Michael Lee Johnson

Alexandra David-Neel

She edits her life from a room made dark
against a desert dropping summer sun.
A daring traveling Parisian adventurer,
ultimate princess turning toad with age–
snow drops of white in her hair, tiny fingers
thumb joints osteoarthritis
she corrects proofs at 100, pours whiskey,
pours over what she wrote
scribbles notes directed to the future,
applies for a new passport.
With this amount of macular degeneration,
near, monster of writers’ approaches,
she wears no spectacles.
Her mind teeters between Himalayas,
distant Gobi Desert.  
Running reason through her head for a living,
yet dancing with the youthful world of Cinderella,
she plunges deeper near death into Tibetan mysticism,
trekking across snow covered mountains to Lhasa, Tibet.
Nighttime rest, sleepy face, peeking out that window crack
into the nest, those quiet villages below
tasting a reality beyond her years.

Michael Lee Johnson lived ten years in Canada during the Vietnam era. Today he is a poet, freelance writer, amateur photographer, and small business owner in Itasca, Illinois. Johnson is the Editor-in-chief of the anthology, Moonlight Dreamers of Yellow Haze and Editor-in-chief of a second poetry anthology, Dandelion in a Vase of Roses, both of which are available on Amazon.com.

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