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Tuesday, May 13, 2025

38th Annual Poetry Contest - Judge Robert Hammond Dorsett, Deadline 30 June 2025

CSPS 38TH ANNUAL CONTEST — DEADLINE 30 JUNE 2025

This contest is open to all poets, whether or not they are members of the CSPS. The Contest is managed by CSPS President, Maja Trochimczyk, and adjudicated by an experienced, published poet who is approved for this roe by the CSPS Board. A different poet is selected to judge the CSPS Poetry Contest each year. Poems must be postmarked or uploaded to our website or from March 1st through June 30th. Reading fees for all entries, domestic or international, are $3.00 per poem for members (of CSPS or other state poetry societies affiliated with NSPS) and $6.00 per poem for non-members. There is an 80-line (two page) limit for each poem. 

Chinese Fringe Tree in Descanso Gardens, CA - photo by Maja Trochimczyk

AWARDS: Winning entries will be announced on our website, blog, and in the CSPS Newsbriefs in September 2025 and published in the fourth issue of the CQ in December 2025. Poets winning 1st, 2nd and 3rd prizes receive $100, $50 and $25, respectively. Six Honorable Mentions may also be awarded. The Honorable Mention poems and other submissions are forwarded to the CQ and the Poetry Letter editors for possible inclusion in the subsequent issues. Contest results are posted on our website. 

SUBMISSION: Please submit unpublished poems, written in English, with 80-line (two-page) limit per poem, with reading fees, using one of two options.  If submitting by mail, send a cover letter with all poet information and a list of submitted poems, one copy of each poem with no poet identification, plus an email or SASE for contest results (only for those poets who do not have an email address), to: 

Maja Trochimczyk, CSPS President & Contest Chair

P.O. Box 4288, Sunland, California 91041-4288

More information: CaliforniaStatePoetrySociety@gmail.com

You may also upload your poems and pay reading fees at our website:www.californiastatepoetrysociety.org, by first registering your account with a password, and then login-in to upload poems and pay the fees. If you find it too difficult to register on the website, you may submit your reading fees via PayPal with a note stating  "Annual Contest Reading Fees" with your name and contact information, including State Poetry Society you are a member of, to PayPal account while also emailing the poems to CaliforniaStatePoetrySociety@gmail.com, Please make sure your poems were not published in any format (print or online).

CONTEST JUDGE - ROBERT HAMMOND DORSETT

Robert Dorsett, born in Jersey City NJ, graduated from Rutgers University with a major in biology and a minor in mathematics. Subsequently, he received an MD degree from the University of NY and had a residency in psychiatry, and then pediatrics, at Cornell. He was a naval officer during the Viet Nam War and studied Chinese at the Chinese University in Hong Kong during the Mao years. 


His first book, translated along with David Pollard from the memoirs of the dissident Gao Ertai, was published in 2009 by HarperCollins (In Search of My Homeland: A Memoir of a Chinese Labor Camp). He second book, a translation from the poems of Wen Yiduo, was published by BrightCity Books in 2014 (Stagnant Water & Other Poems), and the third book of translation was a selection of Ai Qing, published by Penquin/Random House and throughout Europe as a Viking Classic. 

He has a fellowship in poetry from MacDowell and an MFA from NYU. His own poems have appeared in Poetry, The Literary Review, North American Review, Southern Poetry Review, the Wallace Stevens Journal, Acumen, Stand, California Quarterly, and elsewhere. He has given readings at the University of Iowa, University of Nevada, Pomona, at the Federal Court in Boston, and at other venues.

https://www.roberthammonddorsett.com/ 



Chinese Fringe Tree in Descanso Gardens, CA - photo by Maja Trochimczyk


After my Father’s Funeral 

Candle—
shadows light
an

altar. A
lamp revises
a room.

Nights,
stars in
italics. A

name casts
Braille upon
a stone.

by Robert Hammond Dorsett 


Chinese Fringe Tree in Descanso Gardens, CA - photo by Maja Trochimczyk











 

Monday, May 12, 2025

CSPS Poetry Letter No. 1 of 2025 - Part II Reviews of Books by William Scott Galasso, Mark Fleischer and Pamela Miller

 



JOE DECENZO REVIEWS THE YEARS WE NEVER SAW COMING 

BY WILLIAM SCOTT GALASSO

The Years We Never Saw Coming by William Scott Galasso. 138 pages.  ISBN 978-1-732752-74-0


 To break the cover of Scott Galasso’s The Years We Never Saw Coming is to step inside his personal canoe and cast off from the banks of memory and sensory perception.  The author carries the reader down the river of his life experiences initially through placid waters off comforting shores then through ever increasing currents as memories flow faster while his life’s vessel bounds wildly through the turbulent rapids that carry us each to maturity.

         In this, Galasso’s eighteenth book of poetry, he first draws us into an opium induced dream by inviting us to peer into the microcosm of nature and see its relevance to our home in the galaxy, “words tumbling like Milky Way stars in the curvature of earth.”  In his poem, “The Janus Conundrum,” he speaks of the dichotomy of winter weather with billowing clouds and dramatic “spider strands of lighting” giving way to vibrant rainbows of intense color shining light on “meadows peopled with poppies.”  But he states the quandary when he cautions us to not be fooled, “behind rare beauty false intent may lie and corked wine turns sour.”  Particularly striking is the parallel he draws to the seasonal life of a maple tree and that of man. The maple in autumn, “its hues mimic sunset,” and whose leaves “become dry as our skin does…then mulch as our bones do and we share their fate to earth returning.”

         Galasso has thoughtfully organized this collection to lure the reader into his boat drifting down his river of imagination. Subjects like nature and ecology appeal to many and bring presence to our mind for their relatable qualities. He draws the paradox that not only are we small and susceptible to nature and her will, but if viewed through our third eye we are immense and able to ingest her grandeur.  In his poem, “Sanctuary,” Galasso playfully, but profoundly dreams of a hidden world where wonderous creatures return from the brink of extinction before Paradise is lost.  Images of his world, its grace, its impact on the senses, the churning of the seasons and his desire to not let it wither dominate the theme of the book’s first section.

       While most of the book is composed in open verse, his style varies from poem to poem, but his voice is distinct throughout giving credence to his strength as a writer. The canyon starts to narrow, and the river flows more rapidly in the second section of the book. Pensive memories and observations stream through the author’s pen enticing the reader from one page to the next.

       Galasso juxtaposes the joy and fascination of youth in “Halcyon Days” with the strife and anxiety of adult life in “Some Day” for an entertaining contrast.  In “Double Take” he provides an intriguing snapshot of an elderly man as though spying on him undetected.  “There’s mileage on his face and stories worth telling…(if you) can spare the time, to listen.”  After living a full and active life while burning the wick to its end, “Old Man on a Park Bench Ponders” gives us time for  pause as the seasons transform and we seek peace and solace, “the hymn of nectar music, where every note plucked on strings vibrates a chord’s refrain.” 

      The poems grow more personal from this point giving the reader a sense that Galasso is pulling back the curtain to reveal his intense feelings of love, loss and resilience.  “A Touch of Spring in Winter” is a humorous reminder that old folk can still get their groove on and knock boots with the best of them.  He delights in memories of his spouse and eloquently describes their thrill together traveling the world.  His imagery is palpable. You can see the desert’s setting sun and taste the cognac on the Danube.  And for those who have ever raised a child to have them grow and take flight in the blink of an eye “Speed of Light” will draw a tear – the cycle of life in 26 lines with a conclusion almost Shakespearean, “life’s but a blown out candle/ a wisp of blue smoke…/and it’s gone.”      

       His literary influences are well noted throughout.  His borrowed quotations are well chosen and relevant giving the reader a heightened sense of anticipation for what’s to come.  While every poem in the book may not stir the embers of your heart’s fire or bring a glint to your mind’s eye, every poem is worth reading.  The author’s range of themes, subjects and his array of styles keep this book interesting.  His vocabulary and economy of language are warm and inviting making his verse rhythmic and understandable without being esoteric or elusive.  “A Poet’s Manifesto” might be trade specific, but all can relate to the desire to create something that boils from within.  The use of tanka provides a quick breath and change of pace to the book. The author flaunts his craftmanship by creating both social comment and humor in so few words.  Other themes include evolving relationships, shared existence and following your true self.  “Grief” is a poignant piece of loss not only of a loved one but the loss of certainty. “the future tossed, late fall leaves/ as winter bites and sunlight/ itself is dying.”   “Life After Life” asks the question what death will look and smell like when it comes?  It’s a good pairing with “Grief” and surprisingly not morose, leaving the reader curious rather than repelled.

        Galasso delves into social and political commentary but not to the point of repulsion.  He’s a poet, and his interests and experiences are vast.  It’s safe to say by this, his eighteenth book, his creative argosy has docked in countless harbors.  That which he comments on is intended to remind, inform and hopefully guide the reader to a positive awareness.  Following this, he uses music, and GREAT music, to cleanse the palate and leave the reader humming a tune as they near the author’s notes and back cover.  “Sing To Your Baby” is the best advice ever offered, ever read.  “Rock Sketches” reads like diary entries as opposed to conventional poetry.  It certainly reveals the generational peer group of the author.  Who now can imagine that once, you could have seen George Harrison, Eric Clapton and Bob Dylan for $7.50?  

The piece “Genius In A Higher Key” enumerates more than a dozen music titans of the era honoring the higher female voice.  He gives just a smattering of information about these icons allowing the reader to dig deeper for the true breadth of their legacies. His poem “Give Me The Blues” will make you warm and have your mouth say “Mmmm” like you just ate a bowl of seafood gumbo. It is a very enjoyable section, but Galasso doesn’t leave you there.  He concludes with a sentimental and wrenching poem of a relative fading from Alzheimer’s but finding connection with an old song on the radio.  Leave it to a poet to give you emotional whiplash.

Joe DeCenzo

Coordinator/Emcee Village Poets, 

Sunland-Tujunga, California


  



MICHAEL ESCOUBAS REVIEWS PERSONS OF INTEREST 

BY MARK FLEISCHER

Persons of Interest: Poetry & Prose by Mark Fleisher. 13 Poems ~ 13 Short Stories ~ 100 pages

Publisher: Mercury HeartLink www.heartlink.com. ISBN #: 978-1-949652-35-2


One of my family regrets is that my ancestors kept scant records of their family trees, things such as countries of origin, reasons why they left for a better life here. It would have been nice to connect names to the yellow-edged photographs that lay on tables as we kids dutifully filled our paper plates at family reunions, accepted the hugs of old ladies with big bosoms, and sat quietly as the old folks spoke of times long past.

        Mark Fleisher feels my pain! His lead essay, “Elias, I Hardly Knew You,” is full of interesting family details: countries of origin, dates, occupations, religious ties and more. I mention this because Mark is an interesting and professionally trained writer. He drew me in. Here is an example:

        My grandfather was a complex man. On the one hand, he could be described as a stoic—a man of few words. He would sit silently at this kitchen table, reading the papers and sipping tea from a glass cup inserted into a Sterling silver holder. On the other hand, he and I forged an odd bond. He liked baseball and he would tell me about the New York Highlanders—they were the Yankees before they became the Yankees.

        I have purposely left out any reference to the “Elias,” whom Fleisher hardly knew. Details about this interesting person, especially his mode of death, more than justifies the price of the book.

       Through this well-designed collection featuring thirteen poems and thirteen essays, Mark is about creating lasting memories. This short, untitled quatrain sets a tone:

Those days created lasting memories

and now I bask in such sweet reveries

So take me back to Brooklyn, please

where I delight in a Coney Island breeze

Indeed, the poet’s focus, as suggested by the title is on “Persons of Interest” who have impacted his life.

It is impossible to turn to a bad story. “Tale of a Working Man,” is about Mark and his friend Marty Stein coming of age in 1950s Brooklyn. They traded “Topps” baseball cards, cheered for the Dodgers, knew which pitchers threw spitballs and copied their windup styles. Mark’s first job was putting cardboard strips on wire clothes hangers. Pay: one cent per item. Pretty close to child-labor exploitation, Mark thought in retrospect, but a pile of money for a kid in 1952. One day, Mr. Solomon, Mark’s boss, sent him on a laundry delivery to folks who lived in the rich part of town. Mark completed the delivery even though the hangers gouged into his young palms drawing a spot of blood. After handing off the heavy load something remarkable happened: The client pressed a twenty-dollar bill into Marks surprised hand. How many Topps baseball cards could a kid buy for twenty dollars?

“Singapore Fling” is about Mark’s stay in a Singapore hotel 

for  a week of rest and recuperation after eight months as a 

Vietnam combat news reporter. Although all the stories 

are captivating, this one is chock-full of intrigue, surprising 

twists, humor, and danger. A must read for sure.

This nicely designed volume alternates in a comfortable 

rhythm between prose and poetry. Poems appeared at just 

the moment when I wanted an interlude between stories.

Fleisher, already an award-winning poet with five poetry

 collections on the market, demonstrates his penchant for

 painting pictures with words in “Flashes of a Crimson Sun”:


Spanish settlers called

the mountains Sandia—

watermelon in gringo lingo—

for when days retreated

from afternoon to dusk

the evening sun turned crimson

the color flashing across the valley

to the craggy peaks

whose crystals embedded

in the granite face

captured a riot of red

before sun dropped

below the horizon

bidding farewell until morning

As I noted in my opening, Mark Fleisher is about creating  lasting memories. He succeeds. He does so through  creative writing skills that engage and hold readers ’ attention. He succeeds because Mark himself is  a Person of Interest. Interesting people find love and grace behind each bend in the road. Interesting people extol the good in life. Too bad there is only one Mark Fleisher.

Reviewed by Michael Escoubas




MICHAEL ESCOUBAS REVIEWS HOW TO DO THE GREASED WOMBAT SLIDE BY PAMELA MILLER

How to Do the Greased Wombat Slide by Pamela Miller. 44 Poems ~ 78 pp. Unsolicited Press 978-1-963115-99-4


The appropriate lead poem in this exhilarating collection is the title poem, “How to Do the Greased Wombat Slide.” Having no idea what a wombat is I looked it up. I figured, What could it hurt? This wouldn’t be my first display of ignorance! I herein set forth the results of my lexical studies courtesy of Wikipedia: Wombats are short-legged, muscular quadrupedal marsupials of the family Vombatid, and are native to Australia. As a bonus, here’s a picture (see page 15).

        With that said, this little guy is cute. I wonder who would want to grease him up and write twenty-two lines of poetry highlighting the antics of acrobats, zealots, debutantes, our best selves, our worst selves waltzing through doors, while the wombat slides down a pole? Unless, that is, you are Pamela Miller, a fun-loving writer who insists that life is just a little bit crazy, so why not get on the “crazy train” and take her readers along for the ride?

        Her poem “Ten Facts About the Author That May or May Not Be True” dedicated to Nick Demske, reinforces this off-beat tendency:

1. On her opulent honeymoon in Bangkok, she repeatedly turned into a starfruit. 

2. She has teeth inside her teeth inside her teeth.

3. Her code name is Good Golly Miss Anathema.

4. She is a tourmaline necklace.

5. Her poems are critiqued by flamingos.

6. She is allergic to anything.

7. She once attacked her mother with a headcheese.

8. She once stood glistening in the Sistine Chapel, naked as a golden egg.

9. She dreams of a man whose spectacular fingers will open her like a jewel box.

10. On the last night of her life, she’ll be swept away by a tsunami of her own ingenious making.

        I have my suspicions about truth here. But true or not, Greased Wombat Slide, is a treasure of delightful reading. A cursory inventory of delicious titles invites the curious mind to delve into Miller’s creative genius: “Autobiography Written in Disappearing Ink,” “Henry Fonda: An Erasure Biography,” “The Jealous Lover Puts On Her Makeup for Hell,” “Naked on Easter Sunday,” and my personal favorite, “Love Song Written After Viewing an Exhibit of Erotic Art by Women.” 

        Make no mistake about it, Miller is a serious poet with important things to say. Organized into three topical headings: How to Dance, How to Love, and How to Endure, the poems under each heading give important clues to Miller’s poetic oeuvre. “The Burning Questions of Poetry,” (How to Dance) is a powerful poem featuring an offbeat inventory of fabulous poets. The authors are not mentioned directly by name:

“Who is Silvia? What is she?”

 . . . . . . 

“Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?”

. . . . . .

“Why does your brand sae drap wi’ bluid,

Edward, Edward?”

 . . . . . .

“Why should she give her bounty to the dead?”


It is as if Miller is suggesting that the critical questions of poetry have already been asked (if not already answered) and that the smart thing to do is to read their works and take them to heart. I challenge my intrepid readers to identify the dozen or so poets populating this remarkable poem.

       “Going Out to Lunch with Emily Dickinson,” (How to Love), imagines Miller anticipating meeting Emily along with the emotional stress of being in her presence:

       Why am I so terrified of her?

        Is it because her Big Bang poems

        make mine look like scraps of snotty Kleenex?

This poem is an utter delight. Learn why Miller avers, “I splutter like a talking fish.”

        The poems of How to Endure grabbed my attention. Miller, for all of what I call her “nerve wracking” tendencies, possesses a deep emotional well which senses the needs of her audience. “Contemplating the Future at Sixty-Five,” is a cento from Amy Gerstler. The poem anticipates death. But death is encountered with uncommon grace and dignity:

        Come winter, I’m due to wash into

        that burgeoning unearthly glow

        in all its voluptuous glory.

       The poem continues to describe the poet’s “grand entrance/ robed in clusters of bubbles,/ a clamshell bodice, and tiny silver cobras.” I was all but overwhelmed by this one.

        I would be remiss, if after noting the lead poem in my open, I failed to feature it at the end:

 


        How to Do the Greased Wombat Slide

   

       Ladies and gentlemen,

       here’s how the dance goes:


       The acrobats come in through this door.

       The zealots come in through that door.

       A greased wombat slides down a pole

       and everybody chases after him.


       Desire sweeps in through this door.

       The debutantes mince through that door.

       A greased wombat slides down a pole

       and their skirts burst into flames.


       The meek march in through this door.

       The earth rolls in through that door.

       A greased wombat slides down a pole

       and proclaims himself Grand Usurper.


        Our best selves waltz in through this door.

        Our worst selves slink in through that door.

        A greased wombat slides down a pole

        and the whole game’s up for grabs.


        The four horsemen gallop through this door.

        Armageddon thunders in through that door.

        That goddamned wombat slides down the pole

        and even you won’t be able to stop him.


       Five stars, for sure, for this unique and provocative collection

Reviewed by Michael Escoubas



Sunday, April 6, 2025

CSPS Poetry Letter No. 1 of 2025, Part I. Featured Poets - Naia, William Scott Galasso, Charlene Langfur

Weeping Cherry by Naia

We welcome the spring in the Poetry letter.with a beautiful haiga of a Weeping Cherry by our featured poet, California haiku master, Naia. She submitted for our enjoyment her previously published haiku, haiga, cinquain, and haibun.  A delight for the eyes and for the mind! Her haiku-colleague William Scott Galasso decided to share not his haiku or haibun, but free-verse poems from his newest book, The Year We Never Saw Coming (2024). A review of his impressive book was contributed by Joe DeCenzo.  Two other reviews by Michael Escoubas present the poems and prose of Mark Fleisher (Persons of Interest) and of Pamela Miller (How to Do the Greased Wombat Slide). The latter has the most original title of any poetry volume we featured in this Poetry Letter. The final poet, Charlene Langfur of Palm Springs, often writes about her garden and “her” desert, seen in a different way by featured artist, Polish American painter, Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia,  The artwork includes four haiga by Naia and seven paintings from the Desertscape series by Fodczuk-Garcia. The final pages of this issue are dedicated to announcements – already a year has passed and the deadline for the 38th Annual Contest is on 30 June 2025. We do not have the judge yet, but poems are adjudicated anonymously, so knowing the judge’s identity is not essential, A reminder about our Monthly Poetry Contest is also enclosed. Poets can keep very busy this spring!  


FEATURED POET - NAIA

Naia is a 5th generation native Californian. She discovered haiku in 1998 and joined the Southern California Haiku Study Group shortly after it was founded by Jerry Ball. Her haiku, tanka, haiga, haibun, rengay, cinquain, and split sequences have been published in a wide variety of journals and anthologies in the US and internationally, including the Basho Festival Anthology (Japan, 2001) and The Ehime Culture Foundation 2001 Shiki Anthology (Japan).  

Naia co-founded Haiku San Diego in 2010 and is the group's moderator. Beginning in 2010 and for several years thereafter, she served as California Regional Coordinator for the Haiku Society of America. Naia co-edited the Haiku Society of America's 2002 anthology titled bits of itself, and edited the 2008, 2009, and 2016 anthologies for the Southern California Haiku Study Group. Naia was co-chair for the 2013 Haiku North America Conference in Long Beach, CA, held on board the Queen Mary. She was a guest reader for both the Yuki Teikei Haiku Society's annual "Tea House Reading" (May 2012), and the Haiku Poets of Northern California's annual "Two Autumns Reading" (September 2012).



NAIA'S POETRY


hinged shoji
softly the sound
of his grief

Frogpond, Vol. 45:3, Autumn 2022




slight list
of the painter’s easel
buoy bells

Kingfisher, Issue #5




dewdrops
on this one too
unmarked grave

Modern Haiku, Issue 53:1




withered violets
the things I thought
I knew

Haiku Society of America Members’ Anthology, 2021



new love
still some green
in these autumn leaves

The Heron’s Nest, Vol. V, No. 1 (January 2003)



leaves in the wind
this time
I let him go

A Vast Sky: An Anthology of Contemporary International Haiku
Bruce Ross editor,  Tuttle Publishing, North Clarendon, VT, 2014



heirloom crib
three generations
of tooth marks

Frogpond, Vol. 35.2, Spring-Summer 2012



leaving the cabin
for the last time
pine dust on my shoes

Acorn, Issue #7, Fall 2001




buoy bells
her plan to forget one man
with another

Close to the Wind, Haiku North America Anthology, 2013



summer night
slowly he disappears
into cicada song

The Scent of Music: Haiku with a Touch of Music,
editor Marlène Buitelaar, ‘t schrijverke 
Publishing House, Den Bosch Netherlands, 2013



Aurora Borealis
he describes it
without blinking

Simply Haiku, Vol. 4, No. 3, 2006



songbird
even the crow in the next tree
listens

Basho Festival Anthology, 2001, Japan




MARIGOLDS

Their back yards face the railroad tracks, and I wonder how many times each day their privacy is invaded by strangers like me, on a long journey with no intent beyond staring out. If ever my back yard faces the railroad tracks, I hope those staring-out folks don’t mind seeing a nude old woman, watering her marigolds.

deepening autumn
my life begins to fall
into place

San Diego Poetry Annual, Spring 2013-14



STRANGERS ON A TRAIN

Our seats face each other. I glance at him now and then, the man three rows up. He appears half Asian,  his long black hair with its here-and-there streaks of early gray pulled back and fastened at the neck. I hear his phone call telling her (I imagine it’s her) telling her that he’ll be standing just outside the train station. And I imagine it’s me driving to meet  him, driving with anticipation, as if we were lovers parted too long.

gypsy moth
this longing for
my wandering days

San Diego Poetry Annual, Spring 2012-13



GHOSTS AMONG THE CORNFLOWERS

From this place at the edge of a cornflower patch so wide that it seems as if a great wave poured from the afternoon sky and liquefied the land . . . from this place, I begin to wonder. Who planted them? Who knelt here, tended here, bent and yielded here, dreamed here? Who planted these cornflowers gone to seed, to weed, again and again, until this knee-deep sea of them?
 
windswept cloud . . .
in blue ink the apology
owed since childhood
 
Frogpond, Vol. 35.2, Spring-Summer 2012




LOOKING UP INTO CORNFLOWER BLUE
              a 4-verse mirror cinquain

He’s there,
in a distant
place, where snow stays on the
mountain and bells ring like coral
tines, struck
in pine 
air...where tigers lurk among soft,
striped leaves, and wild lupines
reach up to pierce
the sky.


He’s there,
in a distant
place, where honey’s suckled
by tiny things that flit or buzz
or float...
with wings
sometimes slow, fast, iridescent!
Things with stingers, tongues, or
feelers cool to
the touch.


He’s there,
in a distant
place, where globe thistles bow
and sway...where sundrops spin through a
crystal,
while the 
bachelor unbuttons its vest
and rests in a heady
maze of vivid
pink phlox.


He’s there,
in a distant
place, where thyme flowers creep
through the veins of a maiden fern
in stone...
there, where
columbine angels peek beneath
petunia halos...there,
reciting his
poems.

Amaze: The Cinquain Journal, Vol. 3, No. 1,
 Spring-Summer 2004


Desertscape 1 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 12 in.


FEATURED POET WILLIAM SCOTT GALASSO

William Scott Galasso is the author of eighteen books of poetry, of which Rough Cut: Thirty Years of Senryu (2019), Saffron Skies (2022), and The Years We Never Saw Coming (2024), are the most recent. His verse has been published in 250 journals. He participated in 350 readings, and appeared on radio and TV programs in New York, Washington, New Mexico and California. Mr. Galasso co-edited Eclipse Moon, the 20th Anniversary issue of SCHSG, and served as an editor for the California Quarterly (Vol. 47, No. 4, Winter 2021). He’s a member of Marquis Who’s Who in America. 


METHUSELAH

10,000 feet above sea level, 
in the Ancient Bristlecone Pine Forest        
stands Methuselah, eldest of trees
                                   
pinus longaeva, seeded in 2833 B.C., 
older by three centuries 
than the Pyramids of Giza
                                   
its locale kept secret for decades  
thwarts men that flare like fireflies
eons that pass like whims 
                                                
its arboreal wisdom knows what
we cannot, how to husband water
through drought, or stay in rhythm

when earth moves and keep its roots
in place, how to bear in silence, solitude
against the banshee wailing wind
                                   
and winter ice may chew its bark
and sear sun burn its branch    
and constellations shift their gears
                                  
but the bristlecone pine endures


MURPHY’S

Cold rain slaps streets, a steady drumbeat, 
sidewalk streams slick with oil cascade into
sewers. I stride with strict purpose in black 
boots, wet black duster, black hat, blue denim,
towards the refuge of a local Irish pub.
A green, neon pixilated sign proclaims Harp
above a Celtic knot, another touts Guinness,
a third promises whiskey and comfort food.
I head to the fireplace, order a Tullamore Dew,
a black and tan, shake the rain from my hat
eschew the pool table, am soothed by rock
classics on the old jukebox. Regulars trickle
in and like the sit-com Cheers, the bartender
knows each name. Then a woman arrives
red hair, green flashing eyes, a young 
Maureen O’Hara incarnate and the clock
on the wall just stops. 


Desertscape 3 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 12 in.


FOUR TANKA ON CITYSCAPE PAINTINGS BY HOPPER 
                                                    (Edward Hopper, 1882-1967)

Hopper’s Nighthawks                          
who has not been, one alone
half in shadow
coffee cup cradled in hand
in a city full of strangers

a man and woman
sit at opposite tables
they don’t engage
Sunlight in a Cafeteria
silence fills the room

Automat in oil 
nineteen twenty-seven
a woman, not old
fixates on her cup ‘a joe
if her eyes met yours, what then?

a Room in Brooklyn
windows filter morning light
a woman in blue
sits in a wooden rocker
miles of roof tops before her


SING TO YOUR BABY…

mothers, while she lies in your womb
upon arrival, on each day thereafter.
It’s not sound alone but rhythmic patterns
which waken the brain to speech.

If your register is low, sing your 
mellow alto. If high, a soprano lullaby,
and fathers too must sing. Let bass or tenor
in sotto voce enter your child’s ear.
                                                                     
Let notes become words 
harmonics fuse sound.                       
Let nursey rhymes matter
in the pitter patter of rhythm. 
                                              
Infants can hear vocal stress,
can guess where one-word ends
another begins, the seed 
of language is sewn this way.
                              
So, sing bring joy to a soul reborn, 
to bestow the gift of speech, 
and if your key is slightly off,
who will know but you.


Desertscape 4 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. 2018, Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 12 in.


DAYS WE’D TRADE FOR NO ONE’S

                                   ~ for Vicki

Near Amsterdam station, you spoke
three words, umbrellas fell to the streets, 
or that honeymoon night in Venice
and the singer’s Al Di La.
                                             
And do you recall that day in Delos
the albatross soaring in skies,
or wading to shoulder height 
in Iceland’s Blue Lagoon. 
                       
And how enthralled we were
witnessing Bard on the Beach, 
Vancouver, as sail boats
cruised between tent flaps 

And can you forget Kauai’s gardens, 
or Sedona’s painted deserts, or 
Gibraltar’s command of the coast
as thunder and lightning raged.

Or fail to remember Budapest,
waves on the Danube silver and gold, 
as we stood on the riverboat’s deck 
slowly sipping our cognac 

Ten thousand days pass,                
pins on maps multiply, facial
lines deepen, yet as clouds 
migrate and hands clasp. 

We’d trade these days for no one’s.


SING TO YOUR BABY…

mothers, while she lies in your womb
upon arrival, on each day thereafter.
It’s not sound alone but rhythmic patterns
which waken the brain to speech.

If your register is low, sing your 
mellow alto. If high, a soprano lullaby,
and fathers too must sing. Let bass or tenor
in sotto voce enter your child’s ear.
                                                                     
Let notes become words 
harmonics fuse sound.                       
Let nursey rhymes matter
in the pitter patter of rhythm. 
                                              
Infants can hear vocal stress,
can guess where one-word ends
another begins, the seed 
of language is sewn this way.
                              
So, sing bring joy to a soul reborn, 
to bestow the gift of speech, 
and if your key is slightly off,
who will know but you.

Desertscape 5 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia, 2018, Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 12 in.


THIS IS HOW SHE SEES ME

I’m sitting on a plush gray chair
wearing a brown shirt, blue jeans,
and sandals. 

Just to my left and in front
of me, there’s a small table
with a white vase housing 
a purple orchid. Duet shades 
behind me, let the light in. 
                                       
A book rests on the left knee 
of my crossed legs. Maybe it’s 
*Hedin’s At the Great Door 
of Morning, or Ida Limon’s
The Hurting Kind, or *Doerr’s 
Cloud Cuckoo Land.

Whatever gem it is, I’m engaged.
My goatee points down, yet there’s 
a subtle smile on my lips and dimples
on my cheeks. 

This is how she sees me, my gifted,
artist wife--when I’m content to
feed my mind and willing to be still.

*Robert Hedin, *Anthony Doerr or *Doerr’s

William Scott Galasso



                                         THE YEAR WE NEVER SAW COMING

                                             2020, its sound has symmetry,
                                             but infamy’s mark will cling to
                                             its numeral, like a cross on a hill

                                             and those who endure will not 
                                             forget this scythe unseen 
                                             born in a world, half-away

                                          it is not the corona    it’s a stalker stealing
                                          surrounding sun, or    breath without mercy
                                          a nimbus rounding    a killer floating on air
                                          saint’s heads or God’s,    it’s moisture staining
                                          it is not the moon           a worker’s hands, one 
                                          pregnant with promise    love’s poisonous kiss

                                          what can be done with such viral fury
                                          which respects neither wisdom or age, 
                                          and who will it cull today, tomorrow
       
                                          this cleaver of parents from children 
                                          whose hands on glass cannot touch

Desertscape 2 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 122 in.

FEATURED POET CHARLENE LANGFUR

Charlene Langfur is a green and LGBTQ poet, an organic gardener living in the southern California desert for more than 20 years. Born in 1948 in Hackensack, New Jersey, she has published more than 300 poems from the 1960s to the present time, and she was a Syracuse University Graduate Writing Fellow in 1972, along with writers Mary Gordon and Stephen Dunn.


A POET’S MONET

Always my poems are part of my garden
the same as Monet’s paintings were part of his.
In his paintings the light is everything.
It was as simple as that, light and color.
He worked with love on his garden all the time
and said so to anyone who would listen.
The old farmhouse and the poor orchard in Giverny
began it all for him, planting, seeding, enlarging.
I know he dreamt of new plans at night as I do,
little maps of where sunflower seeds would thrive,
planting seeds in cans and cups in the sunshine,
creating tops for the little plants to keep them safe
here through the winter in the deep, deep desert.
Suppose I say Monet planted his lavender for grace,
made a purple paint to match the look and feel of them,
swayed the same way as the petals in the countryside,
and next to them, a cache of strawberries, maybe a  woman
in a blue hat picking a bowl of them for supper,
gathering fruit and greens in the simple basket.
Surely this is about a green life in a needy world
He wanted color, more color, flowers blooming at night,
a lotus garden as big as the orangerie itself, the painting
as large and complete as the museum built to keep it in.
Always in my mind my garden is bigger than it is
as I think about its possibilities, ideas afloat,
another fan palm tree like the one I planted on my porch
and five years later it is taller than the house is,
its leaves akimbo, sweet green, nimble, wild and
near it, scores of nasturtium leaves round as circles,
lotus-like leaves about to bloom into delicate petals,
more lightly orange than any poem actually has words for
and the flowers will come in huge groups
and always like Monet I know there is always more,
another pot of aloe to start, a tiny tree to plant 
and then waiting until tomorrow to see how it takes,
what happens next, the light all over the place, color galore, 
yellow petals crazy with the light breaking free.

  
THE WAY BACK

How will we get past the trouble
when it is too deep to brook,
get past it any time at all in the dark
or in the light or in the middle
of June, under the half-moon when
the flowers on the orange trees
bloom like little stars, in a time
of first love like a time of dreams
when nothing is as what it seems, steady
or true, a time to rebuild a small world
that works, when I am trying to put 
myself back together this way
in time, finding balance, wishing
everyone around me well no matter
what is happening to the world 
at large at a time when the moon 
rises over the mountains like 
an old friend come to call at night,
one small touch of the light
in a big dark 

Desertscape 6 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 122 in.


THE POEM IN THE MIDDLE OF EVERYWHERE

Some days I am exactly here with everything.
Chasing the obvious into the middle of nothing,
swaying like the fan palm trees in the desert wind,
sitting with flowers after the blooming comes,
orange nasturtium, delicate, evanescent lavender
blossoms, intricate, little, leaves that are elegant,true.
  How else to know exactly how far I have come?
Past the wars on TV, the tanks and the drones,
the peace in one place, destruction in another one.
Choirs and bombs, money and nothing at all, 
a lesbian’s long life, writing poems at dawn,
a lifetime passing in the blink of an eye, 
betrayals and love all at the same moment
but here this winter in the desert where I am,
the winter garden on my porch flourishes
as if for the very first time, aloe, fluent, tall,
the tiny purple flowers on heather, giants to the eye.


PLANS AND ALL THAT

I know how to get by in life now,
adapt often, sing a little, talk to
my rescued dog about what to do 
even as she looks at the birds
outside the window. This is it.
Working online eight hours a day.
Occasionally dreaming about
love again with all that comes with it,
friendship, sex, stupid laughter,
joy out of the blue. And I believe every 
act matters, that planting seeds is political.
I’m dreaming about signs, omens, and 
a brown hawk on the back porch,
guides to getting on with things.
Opening up at all is a part of the plan.
Wearing my green scarf on a windy day,
mulling over the climate changes as if
they are real and I’m trying to figure out what
to do on a small scale and remember 
what will happen if we allow a bunch
of self-involved billionaires guide us
to take care of money but not of life,
planning for a safe life in a world of palm trees,
leaves blowing in the winter winds,
the purple lavender flowers glowing
in the winter sunshine like gems. 


  DO NOT MESS WITH THE LIGHT

  This is how I use less now. I work at it. 
  I wake at the same time as my golden rescued dog.
  She is big-hearted and magical and full of
  problems and she is utterly smart, dog-smart.
  We love each other so completely you may
  confuse this all as a dream but I know it belongs here
  in the poem when we are out walking in the wind
  under the sun and under the moon, fat and full.
  This month it is the famous blue moon and when
  I get back to the house I cook the old-fashioned way
  with fresh lentils and celery and carrots and
  garlic, the imperative, a must, and bowtie pasta.
  Later, when the moon rises over the purple mountains
  over this ancient desert under the oasis palms,
  palm trees with leaves the same as wings that lighten us.
  And always we try to save what matters around us, 
  the soul of it, the green of it, how we have loved long
  and risen early with the light and how we love one day
  at a time, all the way through it, the small and 
  the all of it and today my dog will wear her flaming purple jacket
  and I will wear my wild green gay kerchief for luck
  and off we’ll go, ready to see the world, every bit of it,
 far as we can go and all the way back again.                

Desertscape 7 by Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia. Acrylic on Canvas 77in X 122 in.


PRIOR PUBLICATION CREDITS: 
  • "Plans and All That" appeared in Trajectory in 2025.
  • "The Way Back" was included in Yellow Arrow Publishing in 2023 (nominated for best of the net).
  • Langfur was invited to contribute to "A Poet's Monet" in Poetry East  2024 (Special issue on Monet. 
  • "Do Not Mess with the Light" was published in Pensive: A Global Journal of Spirituality in the next issue 2025. 
  • "A Poem in the Middle of Everywhere" first appeared in Vita Poetica in 2023 and was again highlighted in a special edition this month in 2025.
FEATURED ARTIST 

Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia was born in Bielsko-Biała. Poland. She graduated from the Faculty of Painting at the Academy of Fine Arts in Poznań, where she studied under Professor Jerzy Kalucki. She resided in Los Angeles for a long time, and has since moved on to live and work in the Mojave Desert, CA. The artist has shown her works during numerous collective and individual exhibitions in Los Angeles, New York, and Bielsko-Biala. An abstract painter, who uses acrylics, oils, and watercolors.
      “My paintings are an inner landscape, a personal map of my ways, which my reflections on life use to wander through gardens, skies, and deserts. I use the color as a language to express my thoughts. Sometimes it overflows through the painting and comes before me as an object, a painting installation. It takes on a new meaning.”
                                                                                                                                                   ~  Joanna Fodczuk-Garcia