Joan Leotta
Joan Leotta and her son, Joey
Joan Leotta plays with words on page and stage. She writes about food, family, nature, and strong women. She is a poet, novelist, short story writer and a story performer who goes on stage and puts on a one-person show acting out all the characters in folk tales or personal stories. She has performed up and down the East Coast, in Italy and the UK, putting on one-woman shows at the Kennedy Center, Smithsonian and other museums, schools, libraries, festivals and for groups ranging from preschool to seniors.
After a very happy childhood in Pittsburgh seeing life through the lens of her extended Italian American family, she lived in the Washington DC Metro area where she met her husband Joe and became mother to Jennie and Joey and began her freelance writing and story performance careers. In 2004, Joan and Joe moved to Calabash, NC where she has been able to indulge her love of collecting seashells.
She has published poetry and fiction in Synkroniciti, Ekphrastic Review, Pinesong, The Sun, Brass Bell, Verse Visual, anti-heroin chic, Gargoyle, Silver Birch, Ovunquesiamo, Verse Virtual, Poetry in Plain Sight, Red Eft, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Yellow Mama, Crimeucopia, Mystery Tribune and others. She’s a 2021 Pushcart nominee, received Best of Micro Fiction, 2021 (Haunted Waters), nominee for Best of the Net, 2023, and 2022 runner up in Frost Foundation Poetry Competition.
She is the author of two chapbooks, Languid Lusciousness with Lemon (Finishing Line Press 2017) and Feathers on Stone, (Main Street Rag 2022). She has written four historical fiction novels, four children’s books, and short story collection, which are out of print, but she does have a few copies to sell. Joan is a member of the North Carolina Poetry Society (where she gave a talk on Story in Poetry in 2022), a member and area representative for North Carolina Writers Network and on the stage side of her work, member of, and as the coastal area representative for NC’s Tar Heel Tellers and coordinates Poetry Workshops/Readings online through her Brunswick County’s Arts Council.
Comments by Editor Sharon Waller Knutson
Joan Leotta came to mind when I selected the name, Storyteller Poetry Journal because she is the ultimate storyteller. Her poetry about family also makes her the perfect poet for Mother’s Day weekend.
“Story is at the heart of everything I write,” Joan said. ”Even the smallest poem can tell a story, even haiku. For in poetry, free verse (lineated and prose style) and form poems (sonnet et al.), story is not eclipsed by emotion, lyricism; rather, it is enhanced by those elements.”
I fell in love with Joan’s stories long before we met on Verse-Virtual in 2020 because I related to every one of them. When our son, Ben, died May 25, 2021, Joan shared with me that her son Joey was killed on his college campus of Virginia Tech, when he was struck by a car March 30, 2001 one month before his nineteenth birthday.
“Joey was a great writer and a wonderful son,” she told me. “He was into theatre, he acted in many plays in high school and did some acting in college but he majored in political science, which coincidentally was my major. “
“Every birthday, every holiday and every anniversary of his death is hard,” she warned me. “You never get over losing a child but you never forget him,” she said. “Joey is with me every day.”. She advised me to keep Ben’s memory alive by writing tribute poetry and to keep his pictures so I can look at him every day. I follow that advice which is comforting.
I am honored to share two tribute poems Joan wrote for Joey as well as other poems about family, food and the moon, her favorite subjects to write about.
Bottle Cap
We finally sold our
green and silver
Chevy Blazer,
our son's chariot of choice.
Together they galumped
over potholes, blared his music
screeched into parking lots;
arrived "just in time"
for his summer job.
At least once a week
in the days after he died,
I peered into the now
silent car, the
detritus of his last drives—
burger and candy
wrappers, notes, ticket stubs,
testifying to his former presence.
At last we decided to sell.
A shopvac would separate
our son's spirit, or at
least his trash
from his metal steed.
Whirr of the machine
cleared crumbs from
flooring and seats.
I held it above the wrapper-filled
cup holder and something
began to rattle
as the hose tried pull it out.
Off-switch.
I snatched at the offending
metal—a cap from Hanks,
a premium root beer.
"Nothing like the tang of sassafras and
sugar, " Joe once told me.
Squeezing the cap’s
crimped metal edges
tightly in my palm, I
dropped the cap into my Buick
sedan's cup holder where his
Hanks bottle cap now spins
and rattles--
Joe rides with me.
Kitty Hawk Hang Glider School
The glider school brochure
promised an adventure---
Da Vinci design
joined with Icarus’ spirit.
Such was the only recompense
we could offer our teenage son
when he traded time with friends
for time with parents
during senior year spring break.
Beach time, but with parents.
Out on Kitty Hawk’s dunes at last,
At the top of the highest one.
as his instructor watched,
Joe lay flat,
strapped into harness.
At the signal,
Joe began the course
plodding, then running
down that dune
building to flight speed.
Finally, glider’s ungainly
array of metal, canvas and Joe
caught a stray air current
whipping through the dunes.
Snatched up, Joe was above the sand!
As I watched, he hovered
between the earth and its shadow
skimming over the sand
in his own small, low bit of sky.
Airborne, though not yet soaring,
he was indeed, flying,
even for just a moment.
All alone.
Not Wilbur. Not Orville.
Just Joe.
A solo flight.
Just days after my birthday
January,1948,
they tell me,
super moon
slipped through
my bedroom window
to bless my sleeping baby
cheek with his
soft silver kiss.
So, when he returns
in full close glory
I watch for him
through my kitchen
window.
Tonight, his return’s predicted
While cooking supper, I hoped
for some lunar recognition or
at least to glimpse that rare beauty.
Rain and clouds barred
me from meeting moon—
Sunday, Monday.
Even Tuesday morn and eve
fog denied me moon
sighting joy
Tuesday morn,
I complained by phone
to my daughter, Jennie,
who commiserated –
fog had blocked her from
moon sighting too,
miles away in Washington.
On Tuesday night, however,
driving to a meeting,
fog cleared for her; Jennie
spied the moon!
She stopped, snapped—
emailed two photos to me.
So, against all celestial conspiring,
My daughter sent me
what fog tried to hide.
My daughter gave me the moon.
What I Found When I Lost My Earring
Settling into my window seat
after running to catch my connection,
I reached up remove my earrings.
Left ear's shiny metal clip-on daisy
easily slid into my hand.
Reaching for its twin,
my fingers found a bare lobe.
Immediately I realized the
probable moment of loss--
when I hastily slung my bag
hard over my shoulder as
I ran for the connecting gate.
I fretted over the loss on the flight,
upset far in disproportion to that
daisy's dollar cost.
That night a vivid dream roiled
my sleep, bringing up a memory
of how, against advice I had foolishly
worn and lost, my mom's aquamarine ring,
a ring her father had made for
her upon her graduation.
In the dream, she was so sad
repeating, "it’s all right."
On my way home,
I stopped at Lost and Found
The blue uniformed- woman
checked her list, shook her head.
I sighed, "Guess I should know
better than to wear something I like
when traveling."
She reached out, clasped my hand.
"Things are just things. If you like
something wear it; enjoy it.
Don’t blame yourself for
what you can’t control.”
That very night I dreamt again of my mother.
She was smiling. On her right hand
She wore her aquamarine ring.
In her left, she held my lost daisy clip-on.
On the Making of Pizzelle
"Please write your recipe for pizzelle,"
I demanded one winter afternoon,
"They are my favorite cookie."
"They are a lot of work,"
she warned reaching
for her red pen and an index card.
She wrote for a minute.
Then stopped.
"Words
are not enough.
You need to learn to feel
when the dough
has just enough flour."
That very afternoon, together,
we measured, stirred
and measured again,
matching the day’s humidity
with the correct amount of flour.
After her spoon declared
the mix "correct," she
watched me bring the spoon
round and round the bowl
until I could also "feel" the dough's
message—"I am thick enough."
We oiled her special press,
laughed, as I burned the first few,
efforts. Two hours later we
proudly set a plate of
finely
finished
specimens before my father and husband.
Only then, Mom wrote out the recipe.
Next, she took me to buy a pizzelle iron
from the man who sold one to her.
Twenty years later,
I trace the swirls of my mother’s
orthography
feeling her love
in each loop of ink,
on the yellowing three by five card.
Mom lives only in my heart,
but annually,
I revive her love as I
measure,
stir, and
press
out
crisp light
anise flavored stacks of
pizzelle.
Yesterday,
my daughter asked
me to email the recipe to her.
I sent a plane ticket instead.
"Mere words,
won't
work," I explained.
"Pizzelle making,
reveals its secrets only if
we work side by side.
Besides, I will need to
buy you a pizzelle iron
from the son of the man
who sold mine to me."
Publishing credits: “Bottle Cap” Snapdragon 2017 and Feathers on Stone, “My Daughter Gave Me the Moon”, Super Moon 2016, “Kitty Hawk Hang Glider School.” Languid Lusciousness with Lemon,
“What I Found When I Lost My Earring,” Silver Birch Press and Feathers on Stone and “On the Making of Pizzelle, Languid Lusciousness with Lemon.
These are so rich with love and history, so evocative I feel I know these folks, saw them fly, loved them lost and remembered all the blessings we shared.
ReplyDeleteIt's always hard on Mother's day for people who have losses, and thank you for these poignant and uplifting poems. I love the community Sharon is building here.
ReplyDeleteThough I know nothing of baking or gliding, I do know I, particularly, loved the poems about pizzelles and Kitty Hawk, daughters and sons. I'm so glad I finally caught up with them!
ReplyDelete