IBPC WINNING POEMS FOR DECEMBER 2006
Judge David Kirby  
First Place:  A Poem That Thinks It Has Joined a Circus 
by Liz Gallagher 
Inside the Writer's Studio  A handkerchief is not an emotional hold-all. 
A cup of tea does not eradicate all-smothering sensations. 
A hands-on approach is not the same as a hand-on-a-shoulder 
willing a chin to lift and an upper lip to stiffen. 
A forehead resting on fingers does not imply that the grains 
of sand in an hourglass have filtered through. 
A set of eyes staring into space is not an indictment that the sun 
came crashing down in the middle of the night. 
A sigh that causes trembling and wobbly knees should be 
henceforth and without warning trapped in a bell jar and retrained 
to come out tinkling ivories with every gasp. 
A poem trying to turn a sad feeling on its head does not constitute 
a real poem, it is a can-can poem dancing on a pin-head 
and walking a tight-rope with arms pressed tightly by its sides. 
Judges Comments: 
While some critics will tell you that movies about movies or plays about plays are self-involved and decadent, sometimes I feel as though poems about poems are the only ones worth writing. Why? Because, at the moment of "getting it," and this applies to the moment of reading the poem as well as writing it, there is no more electric charge than that which comes with seeing a poem strut its stuff. Of course, part of the poem's and the poet's and the reader's achievement is that none of these three essential elements of the artistic experience knows exactly how that experience works. Just as the tightrope walker has to wobble on the wire, so the poem has to shake and tremble in order to startle and amaze as much as this one does. --David Kirby 
Second Place:  There Once Was a Daughter Who Lived in His Shoe 
by Laurel K. Dodge 
The Writer's Block  In the unmade bed, she had no legs. 
The fruit that her mouth coveted 
was bruised, the milk in the dark 
refrigerator, watery and blue, 
the bowl in the barren cupboard, cracked 
and empty. Her legs were watery 
and blue, her mouth unmade and bruised. 
She was dark and cracked and empty. 
She was covetous and blue. 
She was barren. She had no fruit. 
She was a cupboard, a bowl, 
a refrigerator that could not be filled. 
She was a bed no body slept in. 
The leash waited, coiled in the dim hall. 
The dog was dead, the birches, bark peeling, 
bent; the hill she once scaled, slippery. 
She was the dimness, the coil, the wait. 
She was the peeling and the impossible 
ascent. The dog was dad; she had no legs. 
The dad was dead. She was unmade. 
Judges Comments: 
Is there anyone breathing who does not love fairy tales? The poet Miller Williams says that you ought to be able to explain any poem to a six year-old, and fairy tales do that for you. There's the surface story for the child in us all, but for you adult readers out there, there are elements reminding you that life is not all beautiful princesses and knights in shining armor. There are depths in this poem, disturbing ones: we look closely, we turn away for fear of seeing too much, and then, because of the poet's power to mesmerize, we find that we can't help looking again. --David Kirby 
Third Place:  Escorting a Child Offender to a Wake 
by Derek Spanfelner 
The Critical Poet  Her body is crumpled plastic laid flat, 
complexion waxy. Crow's feet mark 
the tendencies of her nature. Her grandson, 
my ward, tells me of milk and cookies, 
the simple tenets she upheld, unquestioned kindnesses. 
He wrote a poem about it Mom will read in eulogy. 
We meet the rest outside, who greet each other 
(hard-shelled and sentimental alike) 
in the camaraderie of grief. This child, 
who has shown younger cousins who is boss 
by stripping their underwear and ignoring their pleas, 
is a puffy-eyed prize in the open arms of his mother. 
"My oldest (of eight)," she beams to obscure relatives. 
The uncle auctions salvaged cars. Knuckles having 
earned their gold, he asks questions as one acquainted 
with the ease of plain answers. He offers money because 
"he's a good kid at heart, always the first to help out." 
I can't tell him how the boy put his hands around 
their necks and threatened to kill them if they told. 
Instead, I note more auspicious behavior, for the man 
expects to run the value of therapy 
through his calloused fingers and know 
the knot will hold. I cannot tell him 
that no boy is a convertible. That if a dent 
could be smoothed, another is bound to surface; 
that where I work, no one is ever fixed. 
Judges Comments: 
I'll add this poem to my list as I complete my stint as judge by saying that it, like so many others, could have easily been my first choice. This is a poem that I don't understand, though I offer my lack of comprehension as a supreme compliment. What I want to say is that this poem, like a lot of the many I have read during my time as judge, has what I call a meaningful ambiguity to it, a scary, hypnotic power which lets me know instantly that I'll be reading it again and again and getting more out of it each time. A thriller only works if the audience is slightly behind the detective's perceptions; if you know who done it from the beginning or if you never find out, you'll be disappointed, but if you're poised to shout "Aha!" a few seconds after the mystery's revealed, well, that's art, folks. I'm confident that that's what this poem is doing and will continue to do for me. That's how poetry works. --David Kirby 
Honorable Mentions:  Beans (Curgina) 
by Denise Ward 
Lit With Kick!  September came like winter's 
ailing child but 
left us 
viewing Valparaiso's pride. Your face was 
always saddest when you smiled. You smiled as every 
doctored moment lied. You lie with 
orphans' parents, long 
reviled. 
As close as coppers, yellow beans still 
line Mapocho's banks. It 
leads them to the sea; 
entwined on rocks and saplings, each 
new vine recalls that 
dawn in 1973 when 
every choking, bastard weed grew wild. 
Solitude 
by Cherryl E. Garner 
South Carolina Writer's Workshop  There is small art in solitude. 
It shakes sometimes like random shock, 
as though one spot explains the arc 
or one fine point defines the line. 
There is no talk when none's received, 
when simple converse meets no mark, 
as though the circle rolls the ball, 
as though the line supports the box. 
There is no black like night assigned 
to pounding chest and clenched, cold heart, 
as though the sphere explains the sky, 
as though void space can break the fall, 
when locking shut in one timeframe, 
some voodoo shimmies out one name. 
Beach 
by Millard R. Howington 
South Carolina Writer's Workshop  I liked to jog to 
the pier my one day off and have 
breakfast, gazing at an ocean 
through salt stained windows. 
There was a bar nearby, mainly 
deserted in the off season and 
I'd stop in, enjoy a brewski, flirt 
a little with the waitress there; 
she loved to draw my attention 
to the rare big busted patron and 
ask me if I knew how they got 
that way. On the slow walk back 
to my summer rate motel, I skirted 
water's edge and wondered just 
how long that little sandpiper 
with the one leg was going to last.