First Annual Festival of Women's Poetry  *********************November 2008*********************
« Sasha Pimentel Chacon »

Welcome Guest. Please Login or Register.
May 26, 2013, 12:00am




First Annual Festival of Women's Poetry *********************November 2008********************* :: *International section :: Women poets from around the World :: Filipina poets :: Sasha Pimentel Chacon
   [Search This Thread] [Share Topic] [Print]
 AuthorTopic: Sasha Pimentel Chacon (Read 672 times)
thepoetslizard
Full Member
***
member is offline





Joined: Jul 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 104
Karma: 0
 Sasha Pimentel Chacon
« Thread Started on Oct 10, 2008, 3:59pm »



Sasha Pimentel Chacon
Bio



[image]


Born in Manila, Philippines and author of the forthcoming book of poems Insides She Swallowed (West End Press, 2009), Sasha Pimentel Chacón is the poetry editor of BorderSenses. An Academy of American Poets Award winner, a recent multiple Pushcart Prize nominee and a Philip Levine fellow, her work has appeared in Colorado Review, The Florida Review, New South, OCHO, The Dos Passos Review, and In The Grove, among others. She currently lives in El Paso, Texas.



"Wanted: Encyclopedia Missing From Move"


I lost the Ws once. Walnuts, Wagner, a warble.
Lost the Wampanoag Indians, their wampum,
the peak I climbed which started with a W

its fissures breaking open
before breath. There was the West
Lawn (a borough just west of Reading,

population 2,059), Walla Walla, Washington,
then even the weeping willow left, and a willow
pattern from Mama's hutch. And wasn't there

a bird? I swear I saw it once, wings sleek
and blue last time I saw my grandfather, who
I forgot again and again. The ocean wide.

I wanted to lose water. My daughter.
I wanted to miss words and get others back: Wala na...
(Translation: all gone).

Mostly I wanted Grandfather's name back, hollow
in my tonsil. But I lost witness. And I became
the worm, the wood, a wound
my wholeness lifted.

Once, Grandfather had a blade. I saw him
ripping in two, open, the body
of a coconut: how sweet milk ran into his hands.


*

"Sister Poems"

One.

Sister streaming in
a hankie from the vulva:

face of two drops
of blood, body of circling

fingertips, you are
the geography of Mother's

inner body, her map
drawn out in the fall

of lining, tissue, matter
Sister before me

Sister never finished:
I will spend a life

time tracing the vessel
back to your cry.


Two. On the Phone with Her Mother, the Filipina Remembers Her Own Lost Child.


Three oceans are missing.

The one which birthed me
the one my mother carried

the last flushed away
from my open body.

I heard it wailing
in the vacuum, a shore of sound.

My eyes lolled back, I went to sleep.
Listen to what I want

to tell you. Once
I had a daughter

my mother says. I don't
know if she means me or someone

before me. Pain is language, immigrants
are not to be trusted.

We create distance
like the space between our

palms, easy as light and shadow. Listen.
I had a daughter once.

I heard her shouting
in the ear of a shell.


*





[image]

« Last Edit: Oct 29, 2008, 8:06am by shayepoet »Link to Post - Back to Top  IP: Logged
   [Search This Thread] [Share Topic] [Print]

Click Here To Make This Board Ad-Free


This Board Hosted For FREE By ProBoards
Get Your Own Free Message Boards & Free Forums!
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Notice | FTC Disclosure | Report Abuse | Mobile