Susan Elbe Madison, WI
Susan Elbe is the author of a chapbook, Light Made from Nothing (Parallel Press), and a full-length poetry collection, Eden in the Rearview Mirror (Word Press). Her poems appear in many journals, including Blackbird, MARGIE, and North American Review. Among her awards are the 7th Annual Oneiros Press Broadside Contest, the 2006 Lorine Niedecker Award, the CALYX Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize, and a Rowland Foundation Fellowship to Vermont Studio Center. She was born and raised in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood and remains a Chicagoan at heart.
E. Ethelbert Miller's comments:
"I was impressed by the overall range and styles I found in this application. A solid collection of work. In the middle of judging, I wanted to see an entire manuscript. The writer loves baseball and these poems touch all the bases."
Susan Elbe Putting Love in Its Place
This is how we lay down love, in the chain-smoking dark a glow that eats itself to ask.
This is where we lay it down, underneath, where what we lose, finds us.
Once we were an all-night city, the moon-skinned clouds the mole-blind river.
We stepped into the water and became the boat, a shimmer in the upside-down.
On a park bench, we forgot our lives and let them come to us, wind-smacked,
crumpled, the cheap ink of romance staining us, a mystery of misinformation.
This is why we lay down love, because all there is is wreckage that we keep
returning to, a dim-lamped room of memory, its flimsy curtains blowing summer in,
large between us, the unrumpled bed, a hard pine in our throats. This is how we lay down, love,
in the slattern, kissing dark, in the unmasked part, in the kicking-can emptiness of the unasked-for heart.
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