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DORIANNE LAUX - SPRING 2009 FEATURE  

The Cortland Review

FEATURE
Dorianne Laux
"Dog Poets" by Dorianne Laux.

Dorianne Laux
Five poems by Dorianne Laux.


POETRY
This marks an author's first online publication Carl Adamshick
This marks an author's first online publication William Archila
Wes Benson
Roy Bentley
Michelle Bitting
Kim Bridgford
Stacey Lynn Brown
Grant Clauser
Michael Dickman
This marks an author's first online publication Matthew Dickman
This marks an author's first online publication Geri Digiorno
Cheryl Dumesnil
Molly Fisk
Jeannine Hall Gailey
Kate Lynn Hibbard
Major Jackson
Greg Kosmicki
Keetje Kuipers
Michael McGriff
This marks an author's first online publication Philip Memmer
This marks an author's first online publication Jude Nutter
John Repp
R. T. Smith
This marks an author's first online publication Brian Turner
 
Book Review
"Sister" by Nickole Brown—Book Review, by John Hoppenthaler.

Book Review
"Superman: The Chapbook" by Dorianne Laux—Book Review, by David Rigsbee.

Kate Lynn Hibbard

Kate Lynn Hibbard's book is Sleeping Upside Down (Silverfish Review Press, 2006). She teaches English and Women's Studies in the Twin Cities and is working on a book about homesteading women of the Great Plains in the late 19th century.



Crack Head Tim    


He lived next door with Vicky the Drunk,
who screamed their sad business
all over the street. They ate
carryout every day but nobody's lawn
looked better than theirs. On good days
we'd see Tim pushing the mower,
his pale skin almost gelatinous
in the sun. He was the kind of guy
who looked worse when he smiled.
Their bedroom window was so close
to ours sometimes it felt like
we all slept together, especially
those nights they fought, which
was often, and she'd throw him out
and he'd pound on the door,
bellowing her name until the cops
came and hauled him away.

One winter night I woke up fast
with a bright light shining
in my eyes, a car engine revving
in the street and don't you dare
motherfucker don't you dare

and I thought he wouldn't,
I thought he couldn't,
but he drove his car up over the lawn
smack into the house, and after the
crash and splinter and thud he spun
his wheels a while in the begonias
beneath the snow and I thought damn,
I could never love a woman that hard.

 

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