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Posts Tagged ‘Claudine Moreau’

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NCPS at Cary Arts Center (2)

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Has this old Cary High School building ever before been filled with such light and creativity? Standing just inside the high windowed doors, I see Joan Barasovska and Kathy Ackerman greeting arrivals. In a moment they will look up at smile at me. To my left Deb Doolittle stands in quiet contemplation of the long table where authors display their books. A few meters behind Joan, beside the large coffee tureen, is the lavish spread of fruit and pastries Chad Knuth has prepared – I wish I hadn’t eaten that protein bar during the 2+ hour drive from Elkin. All around me people are coming together and dispersing only to regroup, old friends and new acquaintances simmering with excitement and joy. It is already a great morning for poetry.
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Each September at its fall meeting the North Carolina Poetry Society features readings by the winners of the following contests:
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Brockman-Campbell Book Award: for the best book of poetry published by a North Carolina author in the preceding year.
Lena Shull Manuscript Award: for a manuscript by a North Carolina author; the winning book is published by NCPS.
Susan Laughter Meyers Poetry Fellowship: an annual residency and honorarium offered to one North or South Carolina poet.
Randall Jarrell Poetry Prize (sponsored by North Carolina Writers’ Network): for an individual poem by a North Carolina author.
Jaki Shelton Green Performance Poetry Award (co-sponsored by North Carolina Literary Review at East Carolina University and NCPS): for an individual poem recited / performed.
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In 2023 the September meeting was held at the NC Museum of Art in Raleigh, in 2024 at the NC Arboretum in Asheville, and this year’s meeting on September 13 was at the Cary Arts Center. Since 1939 the building served as the (former) Cary High School and is now on the national registry of historic places. Today’s and last Friday’s post feature some of the poetry shared by the 2025 winners; see the post from September 26 for more photos and poetry offerings!
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The Way I Love Him in Durham
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Now, when we argue, he yells,
Why don’t you love me the way you did in Rome?
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He means: the way we got lost
in the Gallery of Maps on the way
to the Sistine Chapel, how we’d drink
Aperol at breakfast, filled our days
with too many Caravaggios and Berninis.
The way my mouth was so open
to his at the Vatican. How we explored
the Forum and imagined the games
of the Colosseum: venationes, naumachia.
How we stuffed our bellies
with black ink pasta, ox, and marrow.
The way we escaped a thunderstorm
under an awning and kissed
while lightning lit the Pantheon.
Our joy buying a wool hat
in the Campo de’ Fiori at the stone
feet of the first martyr of science.
How our bodies fit as we descended
into the Capuchin’s crypt of pelvises,
the dark ossuary that left us humble and mortal.
How crossing the Tiber to Trastevere
meant we’d soon make love in our cellar
apartment below young drunk revelers.
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The way I love him in Durham
is washing sheets and dishes,
grocery shopping and cooking,
waiting until dinner to uncork wine.
A slow dance on the patio to The Smiths
under the crisscross of air traffic.
The commutes and kids tiring our libidos,
watching him fall asleep to sci-fi.
I know the pink scars over his heart
as if they were my monogram.
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We wait for the sign, the burning
of our bread, of our ballots,
for which color smoke rises out of us.
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Claudine Moreau
from Demise of Pangaea, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC, © 2024; finalist for the Brockman Campbell Book Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society.
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Claudine Moreau teaches physics and astronomy at Elon University and also serves as faculty director of a first-year student neighborhood. Someday she hopes to retire on a mountaintop where the sky is dark enough to see the Milky Way. She has also published the chapbook Dark Machines, Fugitive Poets Press, ©  2012.
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Claudine Moreau

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Our History Revealed
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The foundation of our nation is built on the backs and bones of African Americans
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Our Heart, Hands, Blood, Sweat, Tears and Intellect all serving as fertilizer to a burgeoning country
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Our Ancestors’ Grave Sacrifices and Noble Contributions must be Revealed and Recognized
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Consequently we employ the Power of the Fine Arts
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As palette is to canvass
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Documenting Our Pain
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Commemorating Our Achievements
and Celebrating Our Triumphs
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Because History, like the Arts is a Living, Breathing entity
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Unceasing and Beautiful when the Majesty of all the Shades and Tones of the African Diaspora, are TRULY Represented
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Dionne D. Hunter
Performed at Cary Arts Center on September 13, 2025; Second Place Winner in the 2025 Jaki Shelton Green Performance Poetry Award.
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As a United States Navy Veteran, mother of two, and grandmother of four, Dionne Hunter has gravitated to Spoken Word as an expression of her emotions and ideals. Her work has been included in anthologies published by Writing Knights, The Poet’s Haven, and Crisis Chronicles Press. Contact: http://www.dionnehunter.com
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Dionne Hunter

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Other winners of this year’s JSG awards are JeanMarie Olivieri, Marcial CL Harper, and (not pictured) Asthma Olajuwon. (Contest guidelines here.)
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JeanMarie Olivieri

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Marcial CL Harper

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Core
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Papa, you tailor your trousers with spider silk.
So many bottled nectars on bronze carts
flank your marble table, pour down
the slender throats of your petal-gowned women.
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Papa, I am a stemless apple.
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Papa, no ice and alcohol
could help me drizzle a glass.
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Papa, you open my skull with an Alaskan blade.
So many blossoms crammed there,
Papa, and they will fly out in the perfumed,
string-quartet wind and I will be
a dark bowl of bone.
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Papa, there is pollen on your hand.
That hum is not your pale-haired companion.
Papa, the bees are coming.
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Becky Nicole James – finalist for the Lena Shull Manuscript Award
Core first appeared in Gingerbread House, (June 2022)
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Becky Nicole James holds an MFA from Queens University. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in many publications including MARGIE, Echo Ink Review, Illumen, and Moon City Review. Contact: https://beckynicolejames.com/
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Becky Nicole James

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Toolbox
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Tan leather scraps
cover brass grommets,
rusted finishing nails,
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a small bag of thumbtacks
bound by sea-green rubber
band,
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single-edge Gem blades,
a boxed emery stone:
Use only light machine oil.
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Deeper –
bristly twine,
household cord,
looped and neatly bound
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like his favorite
sky-blue tie,
knotted four-in-hand.
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Charles Wheeler – finalist for the Lena Shull Manuscript Award
Toolbox is from his unpublished manuscript East of Candor, and was first published in Pinesong 2016, the annual anthology of North Carolina Poetry Society contest winners.
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Charles Wheeler

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Thicket
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– Guilford Courthouse National Military Park, NC, 2021
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Cutting crosswise through the battlefield
on narrow trails I realize I’m lost, not lost
but can’t tell where I am, the smooth
dotted and dashed lines on my folded map
untranslatable to this hill, this stream, this woods.
The bright moment, a leaf twirling down, a lurch
of tiny fear and I think then, on this very ground,
they couldn’t see the line that was coming,
only they knew it was. I’ve gone to ground
in my new world, as if I hoped to glimpse myself
in the quiet face of some particular earth,
or as if the trace of those distant lives
might slide wide like a curtain. . . . But I get lost
every time, until I wonder if disorientation
is my true condition. I think disoriented:
unable to find the east. Still I found my way here,
homed but unfamiliar, a southern campaign
of red dirt and magnolia. Meeting my own mind
again in the vital thicket. What did those men
watch and listen for, to steady them? What call
do I wait for now, what drumbeat, what rising?
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Anne Myles – finalist for the Susan Laughter Meyers Poetry Fellowship
Thicket first appeared in Pinesong 2022, the annual anthology of NC Poetry Society contest winners, and in Anne’s book Late Epistle, Sappho’s Prize, Headmistress Press, 2023.
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Anne Myles is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Northern Iowa and holds an MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Arts. Originally from New York, she lives in Greensboro with her greyhound and cats. She has also published What Woman That Was: Poems for Mary Dyer, Final Thursday Press, 2022. Contact: http://annemyles.com.
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Anne Myles

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A grieving of a tree
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When the chainsaw begins,
I sit at our small round kitchen table
over a bowl of oatmeal, alone
with only the whir of fridge, view
of backyard grass, bushes, pine straw.
At the buzzing, I know they’ve come
for the Bradford pear tree next door.
Invasive species, spreads in forests,
these trees aren’t helping anything.
But, this tree is glorious today,
its death day. White flowering branches
drape over the sidewalk, cascade
over the street. The neighbor told me
twice, that our tree, the one eight feet away
from this one to be taken out, will be
happier. Trees who grew up together,
who must have known each other
for a couple of decades, at least.
Two days ago, I pat the tree to be downed,
thanked it, and yesterday too, but today,
I walked right by it without saying
anything at all, thinking about how
I woke up crying about all that the dark
does and does not hold. I didn’t pat the tree
this third day, the very day the saw sound began
and I wished I had. I knew the sound
was coming and I wonder if the tree
knew its fate as we sometimes know things.
In the height of its flower, each branch falls
with an odd grace, like the most beautiful dance,
by a dancer whose arms are being cut off
one after another until petals litter the asphalt
as if it were a wedding not a funeral.
A buzzing. A buzz. Until the tree
becomes wood stacked just feet
from its cut trunk. Branches full of light, gone,
as if they had never been there, as if their glory
had been a prayer taken with the breeze.
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Liza Wolff-Francis – finalist for the Susan Laughter Meyers Poetry Fellowship
First published online at Braided Way on October 21, 2024, this poem is part of the collection submitted in application for the fellowship.
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Liza Wolff-Francis, the 8th Poet Laureate of Carrboro, North Carolina, holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Goddard College. She is a feminist ecopoet and has taught creative writing workshops for over a decade. Her most recent book is 48 hours down the shore, Kelsay Press, 2024. Contact: https://www.lizawolff.com
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Liza Wolff-Francis

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This year’s NC Writers’ Network Randall Jarrell Poetry Prize is awarded to Molly Bolton for her poem Still Deer Ballad, with runner-up Janis Harrington for Ode to Our Last Prepubescent Summer and Ross White as Honorable Mention for Ship of Theseus. Bolton’s poem will be published in poetrySouth.
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More information about the winners and the contest at NC WRITERS’ NETWORK 
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Molly Bolton

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Jan Harrington

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Chad Knuth, NCPS VP of Programs

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[with poems by winners of the NC Poetry Society Adult Contests]
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The Atheist
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Her playground shoes
teem with sand and mulch.
She kicks them against
the passenger seat,
floorboards anointed
by the debris of recess.
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From the altar of a booster seat
she asks who I love more
her or Daddy,
as she wraps a clutch of gold hair
around a hooked finger –
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its end a wet fireless wick.
I tell her I love them both
more than anything.
She is fast
with first grade
scripture –
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how Haley says you
must love God more
than anyone.
I reach for her knee,
that sprig of branch.
Through
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tears
she says she loves
me more, too.
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Claudine Moreau
First Place, Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award of the NC Poetry Society
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Rodanthe
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You watched the cottage
pitch and yaw on its stilts
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writhing in video frames
until it slides sideways
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into the surf, you said
Why do people build there?
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A fair question given
a rising sea. Next day’s sun
comes bathed in lavender,
dolphins chase each other
across the living room’s picture
window, terns dive feeding fish,
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tiny sea-turtles wriggle
from warm sand behind
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the garage. You can only dream
this life, this view, this broad ocean
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of where you’ve come,
screaming that fiery
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breath, beckoning you
home, stepping through the glass-
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door to ride down
this swaying deck, down,
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down to the licking crests,
slipping beneath
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the darkest water.
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Michael Loderstedt
First Place, Bruce Lader poetry of Witness Award of the NC Poetry Society
read at Awards Day at Weymouth Center by Joan Barasovska
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Life is a swaying deck. What will save us? Better to hold tight and imagine it is not going to burst beneath us, or to leap, eyes closed or eyes open, into the void? Some mornings the drone of mowers from the next block is a comfort that summer is coming and all is as it should be; other mornings their incessance is another bitter reminder that for some people life still follows its benevolent routine. Swaying, we are swaying and gravity and balance elude us.
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I sit on the porch with the book closed before me. An hour passes. Why would I want to read these poems that some judge somewhere has deemed are worth sharing with the world? Why would I want to share any more of the world’s troubles or its implied triumphs? Well, I don’t want to, but finally I open the book anyway. Page after page. The faces of these poets as they read at Awards Day appear to me, or my mind conjures a face and a voice for the ones I don’t know. And, well, at times I have to smile.
Fleeting but with at least a moment’s healing. And where the swaying may take writer and reader down, down into the darkest water, I see that the world wants to share with me, no matter what it is I may want. At last, after the final poem, I remember Rule #2: I will cry with you.
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Front Hallway
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Nine births
eight named
if only
for a day
six
children living
laughing bickering squealing
muddying up the house
on the table there
between the bible’s leaves
a whisper
of hair
a sunny towhead
the memory
too
fragile
for a name
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Laura Alderson
Second Place, Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award of the NC Poetry Society
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Madame Butterfly
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“Mom looks great,” my brother proclaimed
on a quick visit after she had endured
pneumonia and sepsis.
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Maternal astronaut orbiting
the son, she ignored her tubed tether,
the hiss and click of oxygen concentrator
at apartment’s center, and served
weak tea and sweet biscuits
before alighting on a chair,
delighting in his quips.
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A monarch-embroidered kimono,
porcelain foundation and blood-red lipstick
masked her sallow visage, haggard physique.
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When we were little, she fluttered
through the house each evening,
tidying rooms, readying her face,
donning heels, before our father’s headlights.
shot through the shutters like lightning,
and thundering, he flung
open the door.
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Jennifer Weiss
Honorable Mention, Jean Williams Poetry of Disability, Disease, and Healing Award of the NC Poetry Society
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The Adult Contests of the North Carolina Poetry Society are open each year from December through January. Details and Guidelines, as well as a list of all the 2025 winners, are available HERE:
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Poet Laureate Award: Judged by the North Carolina State poet Laureate and sponsored by Kevin Watson (Press 53)
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Robert Golden Award: Endowed by Nexus Poets and Linda Golden
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Charles Edward Eaton Award for sonnet or traditional form: Endowed by an anonymous donor
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Mary Ruffin Poole Heritage Award: Endowed by Pepper Worthington
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Bloodroot Haiku Award: Sponsored annually by Bill Griffin
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Poetry of Courage Award: Endowed by Ann Campanella
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Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award: Sponsor initially by David Manning and annually by Susan Carol Hayman
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Bruce Lader Poetry of Witness Award: Sponsored annually by Doug Stuber
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Katherine Kennedy McIntyre Light Verse Award: Sponsored annually by Diana Pinckney
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Alice Osborn Poetry for Children Award: Sponsored annually by Alice Osborn
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Jean Williams Poetry of Disability, Disease, and Healing Award: Endowed by Priscilla Webster-Williams
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Besides annual contests for individual poems by students and adults, North Carolina Poetry Society also sponsors: Brockman-Campbell Prize for best book of poetry published by a North Carolina author; Lena Shull Award for a poetry manuscript, including publication by NCPS; Susan Laughter Meyers Fellowship, including a one week residency at Weymouth Center for the Arts and Humanities in Southern Pines, NC.
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Sam Ragan; NC Literary Hall of Fame

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Green River
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Those summers we spent the afternoons rolling
down the levee by the mud brown river. We blew
dandelion seeds and helped my grandmother pick
rhubarb from the small patch of garden she kept
behind her shack. We fill in love with what rural poor
people have: sunlight and sky, the work of their hands.
My grandmother taught me how to live with mice,
their unsuspecting necks snapped while bacon fried
in her pan. She was not sentimental of mice
or men. She told me it was as easy to love a rich man
as a poor man. She told me that the Kentucky rain
poured over her garden, over the ugly river because she missed
her daddy’s farm. She braided my hair while we listened
to Judy Garland sing and skip her glittery heels down
the yellow-brick road. I never felt richer than when
I was in her lap, her calloused fingers rubbing my ears, practicing
my spelling bee words. C-h-r-y-s-a-n-t-h-e-m-u-m, rolling
over my tongue like a tiny thimble. Honey, you’re going to leave
this place one day. Her needle and thread nearby. The tired
Singer machine propped on the kitchen table.
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Brooke Lehmann
First Place, Robert Golden Award of the NC Poetry Society
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[with 3 poems by Claudine R. Moreau]
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Lesson on Cryovolcanism
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How can a moon cry?
I wonder as I display the face
of Enceladus, the Saturnalian moon,
to students pecking on cell phones.
Their saltwater brains
enmeshed in everything
but this moon dressed
in bright fresh eruptions
of sow fall, pockmarked
craters, and frozen blue
rivers of tears.
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It is January, my season
for venting and remembering –
the snow packed mountain
road which winded up
to the Flat Rock Church
that my father rebuilt,
post and beam. Every nail
hand-hammered,
every cement block place
and trialed with his patience
in finding God in hard work.
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I want to tell the class
that humans are the only
species known to cry
from emotion.
Instead, I get locked
inside my mind’s
digital inventory –
to see a wooden pin
box engraved
with his name next
to the pulpit, wreathed
with baby’s breath, steam
and smoke escapes every seam.
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Claudine R. Moreau
from Demise of Pangaea, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC, © 2024
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Here’s how science works: observation – hypothesis – test – revise – test again – etc. Even gravity, which so far has bruised me every single time I’ve fallen, has chinks in its unassailable wall of theory. Revise – test – revise again. Science is less about nailing down and more about thrusting open.
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What would happen if a scientist were to investigate love? A review of the literature would be in order, but the theories of Masters & Johnson and the Kinsey Report are to love as Newton is to Heisenberg. Perhaps the poetry of love would be more helpful, but wouldn’t that be like trying to map the cosmos without a standard candle, no reference point from which all other distances can be calculated? Uncertainty indeed!
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And yet poets just can’t quit writing love poems. (And death poems. I argue that without an awareness of mortality there would be no poets and no poems at all. Perhaps knowing that all of this that is me will one day cease makes me even more desperate for love.) How would a science of love work? Is it a two body problem? Where each body’s mass and velocity keep changing and changing without pattern or predictability? A recipe for crashing or flying apart. Or, on some more beneficent cosmos, might each body practice its love science – observe, contemplate, revise – and at least on some days experience a stable orbit?
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Clearly the chance for a unified theory of love is pretty slim. And yet, in the cold and darkness of space, how can we not be drawn to warmth and light? Each love poem is another data point. Each fond glance is a photon arriving from the void. I will allow myself to be encouraged and not afraid of infinite complexity in this expanding universe.
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Red Nebula
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The doctor examines
every inch of me, every defect
I’ve collected on this skin.
When she gets to my breasts
she sees it –
a spoonful of jam dropped
by mother at birth,
beacon of wonder or disgust.
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All my life I”ve wanted it gone.
I lied about it like a bad tattoo.
The doctor measures,
collects data on her notepad –
radius and diameter,
sketches its blurred perimeter.
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Her eyes are cosmic cameras
lit even now by the big bang
of my birth. They rove the dried
alluvium of hips, descend
into the canyon of my C-section.
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She zeroes in with calipers
to the belt’s middle more – my Alnilam.
Without warning,
she scoops it out,
as if it were a black hole
and would consume me
atom by atom.
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This is when I am certain
that I love my mark of Cain –
imagine the nebula
going into a lover’s mouth.
Its sweetness, red
texture like cotton candy,
its wholesome intention
swelling the brain.
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Claudine R. Moreau
from Demise of Pangaea, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC, © 2024
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I recall my one conversation with Claudine Moreau some twenty years ago, learning she teaches physics and astronomy at Elon University, and saying to myself, “Hell, Yes!” Poetry is required to grasp modern physics; physics requires a poet to convey it. A beautiful equation is a crystal of metaphor; reality is no click of billiard balls but a cloud of imaginings. Every decade or two I re-read The Dancing Wu Li Masters to marinate myself again in what cannot be touched but only felt.
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Like these poems. Demise of Pangaea – Moreau’s lines contain hard images which one might collect like fragments of iron in permafrost after a meteorite explodes, but the collection, the whole, is the flash and steam and momentary brilliance of matter and atmosphere colliding. Halfway through the book I grumbled, “These are not at all chronological. How am I to connect these poems and make them make sense?” Exactly, exactly. Whose life makes any sense at all as it unspools? Contemplating my life is like looking through a telescope – the moments that seem separated by only a fraction of an arc-second are actually years apart, light-years distant. These poems are raisins in a pudding: as it cooks and expands, they separate so that when we open it, each sweet, pungent moment stands out by itself. Galaxies in an expanding universe.
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And so I return to the title poem for my reference point, my Alnilam in the center of Orion’s belt. Once the earth was whole, a single land mass, and seemed surely destined to remain so forever. But deep forces and dark machines work on us and our desires, and no one can bridge every chasm and rift as the continent splits in two. Hold on to the bright moments. Seek a high point from which you can embrace the Milky Way. Every star burns out, as it must. Fix it in your memory. Perhaps in the glimmer of a star, in a poem about love, you may for a moment forget how heavy / Earth makes all of this.
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Sample additional poems and purchase Demise of Pangaea at Main Street Rag, HERE
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Demise of Pangaea
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It’s June and the sky never goes dark –
the solstice sun entombing night.
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An endless red dusk
seeps like a wound,
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bleeds through Oslo’s
barcode skyline.
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Harbor fjords become gnomons,
track the day’s slow radioactive decay.
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We are in bed, midnight sun exposes
the long ridge between our bodies.
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I watch your chest rise,
a hundred tiny moles move outward –
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the continents pull apart by slow churn,
some invisible thing rising through rock.
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Claudine R. Moreau
from Demise of Pangaea, Main Street Rag Publishing, Charlotte NC, © 2024
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IMG_0880, tree
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