“I could simply kill you now, get it over with, who would know the difference? I could easily kick you in, stove you under, for all those times, mean on gin, you rammed words into my belly. (p. 52)” LoveLifeDeathMotherPoetryHateGriefHealingDyingNew YorkSonPoemConflictLetting GoCancerMemoirGrievingPoemsDeath And DyingDeath Of A Loved OneVersesMountainsAlcoholismSoul SearchingLove And HateDaughtersMemoirsVerseDeath And LoveDeath And SicknessColon CancerDying At HomeGrieving The Loss Of A MotherBarbara BlatnerDeath And SonNew York QuarterlyDeath And DaughtersVerse Memoir Author:Barbara Blatner
“oh. she heard it too-no waters coursing, canyon empty, sun soundless- and the beast your life nowhere hiding (p. 103)” LoveLifeDeathMotherPoetryHateGriefHealingDyingNew YorkSonPoemConflictLetting GoCancerMemoirGrievingPoemsDeath And DyingDeath Of A Loved OneVersesMountainsAlcoholismSoul SearchingLove And HateDaughtersMemoirsVerseDeath And LoveDeath And SicknessColon CancerDying At HomeGrieving The Loss Of A MotherBarbara BlatnerDeath And SonNew York QuarterlyDeath And DaughtersVerse Memoir Book:The Still Position: A Verse Memoir of My Mother's Death Source: The Still Position: A Verse Memoir of My Mother's Death
“...gripping the rim of the sink you claw your way to stand and cling there, quaking with will, on heron legs, and still the hot muck pours out of you. (p. 27)” LoveLifeDeathMotherPoetryHateGriefHealingDyingNew YorkSonPoemConflictCancerMemoirGrievingPoemsDeath And DyingDeath Of A Loved OneVersesMountainsAlcoholismDaughtersMemoirsVerseDeath And LoveDeath And SicknessColon CancerDying At HomeGrieving The Loss Of A MotherBarbara BlatnerDeath And SonNew York QuarterlyDeath And DaughtersVerse Memoir Book:The Still Position: A Verse Memoir of My Mother's Death Source: The Still Position: A Verse Memoir of My Mother's Death