Tag: Rebecca Aronson

  • In the Field by Rebecca Aronson

    This week’s Poetry Pick comes from Rebecca Aronson’s 2007 collection of poetry Creature, Creature, which holds the honor of first recipient of the Main-Traveled Roads Poetry prize. This first collection of poetry reflects the author’s familiarity with the landscape and inhabitants of both the Midwest and southwest regions of the US. They juxtapose picturesque scenes with honest appraisals of the people which inhabit them, and provide the weight of truth and a measure of clarity. In the following poem, Aronson effectively captures a culmination of images and notions leading up to the kind of moment many a Midwesterner would recognize as genuine:

    In the Field

    Where cows graze
    among mud and stones
    and their own droppings
    we spread our blanket
    and sit close
    for the first time
    this whole week spent
    in your mother’s house,
    we put our hands
    on each other and slide
    quiet under the enormous eyes
    of cows, fogging up as I
    spread my skirt (your mother said
    as skirt for walking? yes I said
    it’s a walking skirt), and we
    are moving together, the skirt
    around us so the cows might wonder
    but not the ruddy-faced man
    bobbing suddenly over a hedge
    or the one with him who
    tipped his hat, later introduces
    as your mother’s favorite
    neighbor at the market where
    he shook your hand
    a long time.

    Formerly with Northwest Missouri State University, Rebecca Aronson continues to act as contributing editor to the Laurel Review. She currently teaches and resides in the Albuquerque area.

    “Creature, Creature” is available at Barnes and Nobel online