Friday, January 17, 2025

Storyteller of the week

 Elaine Sorrentino 
 
 
Elaine Sorrentino at five
 
Poet Elaine Sorrentino has been published in Minerva Rising, Willawaw Journal, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, Ekphrastic Review, Gyroscope Review, Quartet Journal, Writing in a Women’s Voice, Global Poemic, ONE ART: a journal of poetry, Muddy River Poetry Review, Etched Onyx Magazine, Agape Review, wildamorris.blogspot.com, and Haiku Universe.

She is Communications Director at South Shore Conservatory in Hingham, MA, where she creates promotional and first-person content for press and for a blog called SSC Musings, and is facilitator of the Duxbury Poetry Circle. In 2009, she started a tradition of posting weekly light-hearted, feel-good 5-7-5 poems on Facebook for “Haiku Tuesday,” which has developed a respectable following over the years. Humor is a familiar element in much of her poetry.

A two-time breast cancer survivor, Elaine, along with poet Dzvinia Orlowsky, conceptualized and presented a program called Pink LemonAid, where writers, artists and musicians were invited to share art inspired by their experience with breast cancer—either as a survivor or as support for a loved one. They are planning to present a second version of this awareness program to a wider audience in 2025. Elaine makes her home in Massachusetts with her musician husband and various farm animals who wander into their yard. Her first poetry collection, Belly Dancing in a Brown Sweatsuit, is in production at Kelsay Books.


Disco Chic

In high school, we flaunted snug hip-huggers,
gauzy diaphanous peasant tops,
cork-bottomed platform shoes,
our exposed toes shrieked of baby blue.
We were smug in the realization
that our private school compadres
were bound to regulation skirts,
buttoned-down blouses, drab cardigans;
no checked palazzo pants
or tight ribbed turtlenecks
for our friends at the Saint schools.
Our clothes, cool - theirs, prescribed.
 
At 18, when we earned the right to vote,
open bank accounts, get sued, drink alcohol,
the disco established an equal fashion field
compelling public and parochial school grads

to don the same black polyester pants,
matching vest, and white silk chemise
then step onto the dance floor and gyrate
under a large, reflective glitter ball.


Waiting for Death
 
We thought we’d said goodbye
nine years ago
when you bolted
from the party,
several cocktails
beyond the rest of us
indignant
at our notion
            of impairment
furious
at the suggestion
of a lift home;
fierce independence
            overtook
                        reasonable decision-making.            
We watched in horror
            as you twisted down
the long, narrow driveway
your blue Jeep
            scarcely missing
                        the mailbox at the end
the three of us guilt-ridden
for not delaying your leave
by two more cups of coffee;
 but that was not your time to go
as Happy New Year FB peeps
            cheerfully announced the next morning.
Heavy-hearted, we say goodbye today,
            the essence of you
                        only a memory
still here
            yet not here,
                        only your temple remains.
No more vision boards
            to navigate
 forward motion
for my friend the traveler,
the entrepreneur,
            the big picture thinker,
your business mastery
            helped others
realize their dreams
despite your own struggles,
            your prowess
                        always landed you on your feet
the impetus you embraced
to continue your life journey
                        of experiencing wholeness;
only in these moments before death
            do you receive
                        the familial attention
you craved in life,
            you missed in life
                        you deserved in life.


I Am Not an Ass Kisser
           in honor of Truman Capote

When my journalism class read
In Cold Blood in the ‘70’s
it moved me to delve deeper
 
into the 1959 Kansas murder,
explore reporting when slaughter
wasn’t a front-page staple.
 
I lost myself in microfiche
shocked to find one short buried
paragraph in the Wall Street Journal.
 
I was incensed - so few words
to memorialize unspeakable brutality.
Where was the alarm?  The outrage?
 
I mentioned my surprise in the final
and the professor deemed it
an Eddie Haskell moment
 
upon handing back our blue books,
declaring some of us tried to butter him up
but he was smarter than that.

 
Sharing Cream Scone Secrets

Jack’s dog-eared instructions were specific:
Be sure to use heavy cream,
don’t substitute, it will not work.

I spoon, level, sift the fluffy flour, soda,
salt, zest the delicate lemon, recalling
his gentle demeanor, generous spirit;
the fragrant dough relaxes
in my farmer’s market pottery splurge,
as I stir, I smile thinking of his ‘Silver Fox’ moniker.
If alive today, my tall, white-haired friend
would nod at my ice cream scoop method
of sculpting sticky scones evenly
on unbleached parchment, painting
each creation with an extra layer of richness
and baking them into tah-dah perfection;
the warm, sweet indulgence on my tongue
reminds how much I miss his gentleness
and his knack for making tastebuds sing.


 Stepmother

He died three weeks
after discovering
his inheritance stolen.
 
Family blamed her
for robbing him─
first his money
 
then his life─
but doctors insist
it took longer

than twenty-one days
for him to develop
heart disease.




 
 

Storyteller of the week

  Elaine Sorrentino       Elaine Sorrentino at five   Poet Elaine Sorrentino has been published in Minerva Rising, Willawaw Journal, Glass: ...