poetry on mamazine:

What She Finds
by Cati Porter

Mother May I
by Cati Porter

Seven Floors Up to the Kitchen of the Soul
by Cati Porter

Sick Day
by Emily Scudder

The Newborn Explains Three Days of Prodromal Labor; The Newborn Explains His Unhelpful Sleep Patterns; The Infant Explains His Continuing Sleep Problems
by David Harris Ebenbach

Gravity
by C. Delia Scarpitti

Language
by Kristen Berger

Every Angel
by Jackie Regales

The Early Morning
by Margaret Elysia Garcia

Thunder
by Angela Papalas


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POETRY

*BEST of mamazine.com* Daddy Phase,
by Beth Ann Fennelly

we say,
as the child slaps the bottle from my hand
but opens wide for Daddy,

Daddy Phase,
perfectly natural, just a stage,
as she calls for him upon waking,
Daddy Phase as he rises to her, tired but flattered,
pretending I'm the lucky one, inviting me to keep sleeping

as if I care to keep sleeping
on the stale white bread
of this marriage bed, Daddy Phase—

me, I'm a huge bland lawn jockey
and she, she is a perfect
size zero, gigging the tireless horse of her father
back and forth across the kitchen tile

I think she just pretends to be a baby

I would like to pitch a fit
when she ducks my kiss

my lips two fat hot dogs
cooling at the drive-thru,

but would she bother to notice?
Would she feel compelled to empathize?
No,
because she's a BABY,
it's a brilliant plan

A determined competitor, I
diversify my offerings

Have you seen this one? I ask her,

apparently she has

If only she still drank my milk
still drank my bloodwarm milk
then I could squeeze her, squeeze her, squeeze her

Oh, there were entire years before she existed,
years of the single fare, years of the road trip,
years of the fishnets and the fake ID,

the Doc Martens, the come-as-you-are,
the backpack, hipflask, do-not-disturb,

I used to be a restaurant hostess Oh I had the power then,
tapping a pencil on my bottom lip
or slipping it whisperingly down the waiting list,
the tips that I palmed,
the gents that I stacked like quarters on a pool table—
one crook of my long red nail,
how they would leap to my side

but now,
now we're in the Daddy Phase

so now I remember
that each spring I'd discover
in the restaurant coat check room
some sad brown parka,
forgotten, forsaken—

so now I feel the elbows
of the empty wire hangers,
so now I hear them titter and hiss

Tender Hooks
W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Copyright © 2004
All rights reserved.

Reprinted from Tender Hooks by Beth Ann Fennelly © 2004 by Beth Ann Fennelly. Reproduced by mamazine.com with permission of the publisher, W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.

Beth Ann Fennelly received a 2003 National Endowment for the Arts Award. Her book Open House won The 2001 Kenyon Review Prize for a First Book and the GLCA New Writers Award. Her new book, Tender Hooks, was published in April 2004, by W. W. Norton. A book of essays, Great with Child: Letters to a Young Mother, is forthcoming from Norton in 2006. She is an Assistant Professor at the University of Mississippi, and lives in Oxford, MS.