Super-sized Series
Thanksgiving by Joanne Durham
The sturdy mahogany table so long I could barely see who was at the head from the children’s folding table attached discreetly under the white laced cloth. China plates with rosebuds and silverware my sister and I were tasked to polish. My great grandmother’s remaining children and their children, all blended into a bond called aunts and uncles. My brain tries to run like a backwards clock, ticking off their names - Aunt Ida, Aunt Eva, Uncle Harry… And cousins, their last name was Weil, surely shortened at Ellis Island, with a wooden wheel with real spokes that turned on their mailbox. I envied them having a name with a double meaning. Maybe that’s why I loved poetry even then – if you can’t find exactly the right word, you can always work your way around the alphabet of your life and find another way to say it. Maybe I just want names to claim them, to know the thread between us still holds, like rope that holds an anchor steady, a way to pull yourself back when you aren’t sure where you’re headed, but at least you know where you came from.
First published in The Mackinaw
Grandma Talley’s Husband’s Cake by Mary Ellen Talley
blind date
future fella for a
WWII nurse
wash wounds
crisp linen
read love letters
marry the First Lieutenant
move to Spokane
raise three children
new 1950’s kitchen
Happy Thanksgiving
bake her mom’s spice cake
tomato soup, flour,
cinnamon, cloves,
dates and nuts
slather the cooled cake
with cream cheese icing
year after year
then comes Vietnam war,
mail the angel cake form
to stateside Navy son and his wife
next generation, Iraq war
son’s wife mails same cake
to daughter and Navy son-in-law
every Thanksgiving
it is a dense cake
and travels well
Grandma Talley’s Husband’s Cake
blind date
future fella for a
WWII nurse
wash wounds
crisp linen
read love letters
marry the First Lieutenant
move to Spokane
raise three children
new 1950’s kitchen
Happy Thanksgiving
bake her mom’s spice cake
tomato soup, flour,
cinnamon, cloves,
dates and nuts
slather the cooled cake
with cream cheese icing
year after year
then comes Vietnam war,
mail the angel cake form
to stateside Navy son and his wife
next generation, Iraq war
son’s wife mails same cake
to daughter and Navy son-in-law
every Thanksgiving
it is a dense cake
and travels well
Without a Recipe
I am my mother just now
boiling
the carcass
skimming the mixture
culling for bones
the large
the small
those pointy ones
I’d hate for someone
to swallow
I pour in a bit of vinegar
mom said would
leech calcium from the bones
remove gristle
and skin
chill broth and
remove the white layer of fat
drop loose
bits of meat
into the pot
simmer slow an hour
straining
and diving
for the last
sliver of bone
add carrots, celery,
homemade
Herbs de Provence
trying to recall
what tasted good
last year
the week after
being thankful.
Without a Recipe
I am my mother just now
boiling
the carcass
skimming the mixture
culling for bones
the large
the small
those pointy ones
I’d hate for someone
to swallow
I pour in a bit of vinegar
mom said would
leech calcium from the bones
remove gristle
and skin
chill broth and
remove the white layer of fat
drop loose
bits of meat
into the pot
simmer slow an hour
straining
and diving
for the last
sliver of bone
add carrots, celery,
homemade
Herbs de Provence
trying to recall
what tasted good
last year
the week after
being thankful.
Two poems By Lynn White
Talking Turkey
There is a rumour going around
as rumours do
in this community.
It is said
that a celebration is being planned
by humans.
Specifically
by those humans who feed and pet us.
It is being said
that we will be invited
to join them,
that we will be a part,
an important part
of the celebration.
So now we are waiting
wondering
what role we shall play,
wondering
if we will get drunk,
wondering
if we will enjoy it all
as much as our humans will enjoy
our presence.
First published in The Drabble
Fine Dining
Fellow Woodlanders be seated!
The hard work is done,
the best china set out,
the heads have rolled
and now we’re ready
to eat the rest
giving thanks and gratitude
for what we’re about to receive.
So fear not
let us enjoy our feast
no one is there to watch us eat.
All the rest are just dead meat.
First published in Ekphrastic Review, Jennifer Angus Challenge
Knutson grandchildren, Nicholas, 18, and Cameron, 5.
Thanksgiving for Our Family of Twenty-Six by Sharon Waller Knutson
In pelts once worn by animals,
they make the pilgrimage
not on the Mayflower
but in SUVs, pickup trucks
and RVs from Idaho, Utah
and Washington to Arizona.
Instead of shooting
wild turkeys with a cannon,
they stop at Wal-Mart.
While the youngest son
smokes the turkey, the oldest
son grills seafood and yams
as our daughter and daughter
in laws and granddaughters
make pumpkin and pecan
pies, cranberry sauce
and side dishes as the teens
and twenties ride their quad runners
up the dirt road. The youngest greats –
two toddlers and infant - nap.
But that was only a dream.
I wake up to an explosion
in the kitchen and my husband
removing a pot from a red hot
burner on the stove and cleaning up
shards of egg shells. So much
for boiled eggs stuffed with guacamole.
On a turkey table mat, the two of us
eat a lamb chop, green salad
and mashed potatoes. We had turkey
cranberries and yams last week.
But the house isn’t empty. It is filled
with the spirit of loved ones long gone.
And voices wishing us Happy Thanksgiving
on smart phones, land lines and email.
Thanksgiving—Freedom from Want by Joan Leotta
In these times when folks are
losing jobs, medical care and more,
I think about Rockwell’s four
poster/paintings from WWII
about the basic principles
we were fighting for.
Freedom from Want puts on display
a large family and food in abundance
laid out for Thanksgiving Day.
Looking ahead to November from
right now, July I wonder if I, if
we will celebrate in that same way
or will we be called upon to
simply give thanks for whatever
we have no matter how reduced
our company, our plates, our state.
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
Happy Thanksgiving
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Happy Thanksgiving
Super-sized Series Thanksgiving by Joanne Durham The sturdy mahogany table so long I could barely see who was at the head from the childr...
-
Jacqueline Jules and Husband Alan Jacqueline and Alan on their wedding day in 1995 . Loving Again After Loss By Jacqueline Jules ...
-
Jacqueline Jules Jacqueline Jules and her son Neal Jacqueline Jules is a former elementary school librarian who found herself intrigu...
-
Luanne Castle Luanne Castle opens her high school graduation gift: a new typewriter How I Became a Poet and Flash Fiction Writer...
No comments:
Post a Comment