Alarie Tennille
Photo of Alarie Tennille at the age of 18
Alarie Tennille was born and raised in Portsmouth, Virginia, with a genius older brother destined for NASA, a ghost, and a yard full of cats. She was a pioneer coed at the University of Virginia and graduated with a degree in English, Phi Beta Kappa key, and black belt in Feminism. After a career mostly in editing and writing (let’s forget a stint at Social Security), Alarie is retired and pleased to have more time with her husband, cats, and poetry. She serves on the Emeritus Board of The Writers Place in Kansas City, and emcees Rose Garden Readings at a local park. Alarie published her first chapbook in 2010, followed by three longer collections from Kelsay Books (all on Amazon).
Running Counterclockwise was first runner up for the Thorpe Menn Award for Literary Excellence in 2015. Alarie’s latest book, Three A.M. at the Museum, was named Director’s Pick at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art. She was delighted to have Lorette Luzajic, Editor of The Ekphrastic Review (TER), write an introduction to that book. Lorette honored Alarie with the first Fantastic Ekphrastic Editor’s Choice Award. It’s small wonder that you’ll find her largest collection of online poems in the TER archive. She has also been nominated several times for a Pushcart Prize and for Best of Net.
At age 6, Alarie decided she wanted to be an artist, but a summer creative writing class at age 17 changed her path. She didn’t think of herself as a poet, but a friend kept prodding her to write her family’s memoirs. Surprise! They surfaced as poems. The three major themes in Alarie’s poetry are family, art, and quirky news or ideas. Those quirky poems are more rare, but easier, since they feel like they drop from the sky. To learn more about her, check out her blog at alariepoet.com.
Comments by Editor Sharon Waller Knutson
I’ve been a fan of Alarie Tennille ever since I read “Ballroom Dance School” in 2013 on Your Daily Poem but it wasn’t until I recently commented on her poem, “Anticipating My High School Reunion” on Verse-Virtual in March that we started exchanging emails and discovered we write in a similar style and have published in the same journals. I have selected five of my favorite poems of hers that I have read over the years.
Ballroom Dance School
We all learn to leave
tennis shoes at home,
to move counterclockwise
around the floor, and not
to watch our feet. Eventually,
we know whether a song
invites a foxtrot or rumba
without being told. We stop
counting. Our hips undulate.
We slink like housecats.
But you can always tell
who has studied ballet.
It’s in the hands. The rest of us
can learn the steps, but not that
way of springing sparrows
off a branch, then curling them
back into safety.
Southern-Fried Mama
At age six or so, my world expanded
to the kitchens of friends. Chef Boyardee
spaghetti that looked like red worms
we used for fishing. Macaroni
and cheese – more worms swimming
in orange water. Iced tea soured
by saccharine. Because I was Mama’s
Daughter, I politely ate what was served.
Although she worked full time, Mama
was a queen of Southern cuisine.
Hail to Duke’s mayo, bacon drippings,
Smithfield ham, and Crisco!
How could tiny Mama wield a massive
cast iron skillet like she did a fly swatter?
Or stay tiny, for that matter? After fixing
supper, she’d insist the back was her favorite
piece of fried chicken, while the rest of us
gorged on all we could eat.
Since it would be years before I was tall
enough to tend a skillet of popping
oil, she did all the work. I set the table
and kept her company. It was time
for our girl talks.
I was proud when she asked me
to shape the salmon cakes,
because my tiny hands made them
extra crispy.
No wonder cooking is the only
housework I don’t hate. I cook
lighter and more exotic meals
than Mama, but I often think of her
as I stir and wish I could make
her chicken and dumplings.
Alone at the Diner
Thinking coffee.
Thinking wheat toast thinly spread
with raspberry jam over a pond of butter.
Thinking two eggs, yolks running away,
corralled by a fence of bacon.
Thinking, “I’m the only customer,”
but feeling you lean across the table.
Knowing you want a taste.
Dear Toaster,
You deserve a morning person,
someone who bounces out of bed
like, well…you know how you do.
I can’t even look at your shiny
morning face without seeing
my sheet wrinkles, bed head,
and pre-coffee frown. I need to ease
into day with Debussy. You’re
the cymbals in a Sousa march.
I’m the cat in a You Tube video
who falls off the counter
when you erupt.
Poetry 101
Let’s jump right into this. Please
take out some paper and write
a jellyfish.
You mean a poem? asks Ms. Front
of the Class. No, I never confuse
a jellyfish with a poem. Do you?
I mean make me see, feel, want
to be a jellyfish. Say I’m an alien
from Planet Xanax
or someone who’s always lived
in the mountains of Tibet. Introduce
me to your jellyfish.
Maybe you can tell me why it’s easy
to tell a jellyfish from a poem –
or why is that hard?
Because you can see through
a jellyfish to what lies behind it,
suggests Mr. Loves to Talk. Like
in a poem, he adds. They move
like they were spilled into the ocean,
suggests another guy in the back.
Ms. Worried says, I’ve never seen
a jellyfish. You’re lucky, I say.
You can write the confessions
of an imaginary jellyfish. While talking,
my eyes go to the girl in the red cashmere
sweater and the guy who just rolled
out of bed. Both are writing furiously,
already out to deep sea,
not looking back.
Alarie thanks all the journals that showcase her work. “Ballroom Dance School” was first published in I-70 Review, “Southern Fried Mama” in Your Daily Poem, “Alone at the Diner” in Deep South Magazine, “Dear Toaster” and “Poetry 101” in Wild Goose Poetry Review, which the author wishes would make a comeback.
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These are lovely, both lighthearted and wise. I love those ballet trained girls with their hands...releasing and sheltering imaginary birds!!
ReplyDeleteI loved these, but especially "Poetry 101." As someone who spent too many hours trying to wring poems out of adolescents, I know so many of the tests and the occasional triumphs of doing so. Here's to the ones who didn't put up much of a fight.
ReplyDelete