GIVING ROOM MAG
  • Home
  • Issues
    • ISSUE 1
    • ISSUE 2: QUEER NOSTALGIA
    • ISSUE 3: METAMORPHOSIS
    • ISSUE 4
    • ISSUE 5
  • Submit
  • Read
    • BLOG
  • Our Team
    • Staff
    • Work with us
  • Contact
  • About

The Entomologist

1/7/2023

0 Comments

 
By Kathryn Bratt-Pfotenhauer
 
            “Whose is that long white box in the grove, what have they
             accomplished, why am I cold?”
               - Sylvia Plath, The Bee Meeting
 
I was delirious by the time the plane touched down in New Orleans. As the plane descended over Lake Pontchartrain, I had the uncanny sensation that I would die here. The water was so close to the underbelly of the airplane that it wasn’t an unreasonable leap. It wouldn’t have taken much to glide downwards, to crash, to disappear under the swells. I wondered what they would say to my family, to the man I was meeting at the other end of this journey. I could imagine their faces collapsing into grief, even the man, who I hadn’t known for very long at all. There would be a kind of grief there, if only in passing. I would become a sad dinner party anecdote, or a reason to explain standoffishness to future girlfriends: The last time I let someone into my heart, she died in a plane crash. Maybe I was giving him too much credit. He wasn’t a poet. He was a scientist. More than likely, he would shrug it off, chalk it up to the nature of freak accidents. These things happen. He’d get over it. The dinner party would go on without mention of me. It would be like I never existed at all.

You might have thought me an impulsive creature: here I was, heading 1,400 odd miles south from Central New York, to have a second date with a man I had no knowledge of a month prior. But it was not purely impulsiveness: it was the summer after my first year of graduate school, and I was bored and hot, and the prospect of sex excited me. I liked it. I had liked it enough with the entomologist, in the area to visit family, and the entomologist had liked it enough with me to cover half my plane ticket. My mother had been understandably concerned. No parent wants to hear their child is traipsing across the country to hook up with a strange man, no matter how genteel. In response, I had talked him up to my father, getting him on my side. The entomologist was family oriented. I saw a long, happy future in the relationship. I wouldn’t do this without caution, I’d get myself a hotel a respectable distance away if things seemed off, or strange. Indeed, the man had offered to pay for half a hotel room if that would make me more comfortable. He was a good man, studying urban entomology at the local university, a university that paid him to go to conferences and talks, and do outreach and extension work. He talked to seniors about the social behaviors of butterflies. He was a good man.

And I was delirious. I hadn’t slept the night before the flight, terrified of waking up hours past the 3 a.m. alarm, missing my flight, and having to buy another plane ticket. I had savings, but the summer had blown a hole in them with rent and utilities, and a frosty silence from my own university, which did not provide a stipend for its students during the summer months. I barely slept; I barely ate. I went on dates, had unsatisfying sex, and then went back to my place to write poems about it. Everything was content. Everything was craft. And when the entomologist came into the picture, he did so as an inspiration, dinners, coffee, toast with blackberry walnut jam after a night wrapped in each other’s skins. He prompted a flood of new, bold work in celebration of that which I had rejected: the vulnerable body, the body enamored. Everything he did became a metaphor. Desire for him painted my world in shades of gold. And so, when, after weeks of talking, he invited me to come down to him, I didn’t hesitate. I bought the tickets and resigned myself to instant ramen for the rest of August. It was an equal trade.

He met me at arrivals, sticking a tongue down my throat and swallowing the words I had rehearsed the whole way down in greeting, making them superfluous. In my mind, I thought it was something romantic: being silenced. I was so used to being the one with all the words, it was a relief to know I didn’t have to speak. In his car, he kissed me at every stoplight, lectured me about the stunted bald cypress trees lining the route from New Orleans to Baton Rouge; I listened as one bewitched, my blood up, redding my face, sweat pooling under my arms. The heat outside was already swampy, an itch in constant need of scratching. His fingers massaged the back of my neck. I thought this was romantic, too, something that spoke to a type of possession: this person is mine, for a time, at least. I didn’t buy into jealousy, but there was something delicious in the gesture, something I couldn’t pinpoint other than in the locus of exclusivity. Yes, I was his, and he knew this. There wasn’t anywhere else for me to go.

In the hour that it took to reach Baton Rouge, I realized something: every landscape looked similar to me. The differences were imperceptible, minute: the gas cost less here than in New York, the restaurants differed, but the highways had the same monotonous drudgery. All that existed in that world was the blacktop and the mechanical bodies of cars. The exception was him: everything around him shimmered, grew marvelous. I couldn’t parse it. One of my friends, seeing his picture, had asked me why I found him so attractive. I couldn’t explain it, the way I couldn’t explain why I found certain English celebrities attractive. It wasn’t the appearance so much as the charisma, the magnetism of speech.

He brought me to the university, to the old musty buildings where the entomology department was housed. I noticed everything: the wood laced through with termite tracks, the gray clotted nests of mud daubers dotting the underbelly of the building’s awnings, the roaches scuttling the ground around his feet as he smoked a joint in the parking lot. He offered it to me. I took it. I sucked in and held it, held it as close to my chest as I could before expelling the smoke. He looked impressed. I wanted him desperately to be impressed. He finished it off, tossed it into the dirt, and we went inside.

As we passed, I saw a missing persons poster taped to a pole: a smiling undergrad with mousy brown hair stared out from the paper, which asked in screaming block letters: HAVE YOU SEEN ME? Her name was Claire. She looked wholesome in the way I didn’t know how to be. I looked around, and suddenly, as if in seeing her face the world had shifted, I saw the flyers taped to every pole, the same smiling eyes, the same brown hair. I turned away from them. I followed him into the building, my heels clicking on the cracked linoleum.

Before long, we were in a dusty lab, and he was snapping on a pair of latex gloves, fingering the interior of the glass tanks full of roaches, of beetles. He brought them out for us to examine. The type he studied ate dead things. Inside the tank, the skeletal remains of small, indistinguishable animals. I couldn’t look away from them. He touched my arm, pointing to a jar of termites suspended in liquid. I looked at their frozen, blind eyes, pressed a finger to the glass. It left a print, smudged residue: a declaration, of a kind. I was here once. I was here.

He led me back through the halls. He led me out of the building, stopping to grind a cockroach beneath his boot, and back into the car, and we drove back through the streets of Baton Rouge to his house, which was in the backyard of his landlady’s house on Lily Lane and not his at all. And when we tumbled into bed, we did so like rainwater; we spilled onto the sheets. Around him, full of him, and the lack of sleep, his fingers in my mouth, I lost myself, his mouth, my mouth, we lost ourselves in each other. I lost count of how many hours in the week we passed like this; certainly, it was the majority of them. Everywhere I went in the small house, he seemed to want me: against the kitchen counter with sugar in my hair from baking pie, in the shower, pressed against molding tile, my fingers clutching the curtain, on the sofa as we lay there stoned and naked, his head between my thighs.

The only place we didn’t fuck was in the garden, where he cultivated his precious insects. I had asked, and he had told me no, that it was too delicate to disrupt. It’s a whole ecosystem out there. You can’t imagine the work. I had to admit his garden was a thing of beauty, full of vegetables and flowers: Louisiana Iris mingled with okra, his squash plants butted up against yucca, and hanging over the fence was a beauty of a Southern live oak, shaggy with Spanish moss. The same beetles he had shown me in the lab congregated atop the mounds of dirt that striped the earth. I had asked him what they were, and he had waved me off, claiming flower plots. It fit. Out of more than one of the mounds sprouted heavy bunches of flowers: iris, camellia, Cherokee rose, black-eyed Susans, each marked with a corresponding state flag. I counted them: Louisiana. Alabama, Georgia, Maryland. There was one plot in the corner of the garden, with a rosebush awaiting installation. He told me he had ordered it before I arrived, that he would be planting it next. He took me back to bed. He covered my mouth.

We woke to sewage creeping up the pipes. The rain outside lashed the shutters of the small house, and after moving everything to the counters, off the floors, he kissed me and went to work, back to the university, back to his life. I went to the garden, even though the wind was blowing and the rain was coming down. I had seen something pale and white from the window; the rain had disturbed the dirt, the water sluicing off whatever lay underneath.

Looking closer, I saw sticking out of the soil a white hand with a single golden ring, wrought finely. You might have thought me frightened. But all I could feel was a pervading sense of calm as I took the shovel by the front door and began to dig. There was Claire, her face collapsed, her teeth removed. In the other mounds, once I had ripped apart the flower plots, there were three other women, in various stages of decay. I had no thought as to what I would do when he came back. I hadn’t thought that far. The mind tries to justify what it sees, but there was no justification for the beetle that scurried through one of the women’s eye sockets, no accounting for the smell.
 
Then, there were footsteps in the garden, and he was upon me, and the shovel was wrenched from my hands. I barely had time to react before it connected with the back of my head. I didn’t cry out. I don’t remember making a sound. A single thought, fleeting, and then nothing. I can’t remember what it was.

All I know is that the landscape sharpened: rain above me.

And I’ve lost count of the hours I’ve been down here. No one has come for me; my only company is the insects, and they have done their work. I am all but gone. But there are new footsteps in the garden now: lighter. Not him. The voice of a girl admiring the rose bushes, full, delicious, and red.

Kathryn Bratt-Pfotenhauer is the author of Bad Animal (Riot in Your Throat, July 2023) and Small Geometries (Ethel Zine & Micro Press, March/April 2023.) The recipient of a Pushcart Prize, their work has been published or is forthcoming in The Missouri Review, The Adroit Journal, Crazyhorse, Poet Lore, Beloit Poetry Journal, and others. They have received awards from the Ledbury Poetry Festival and Bryn Mawr College, as well as support from Tin House and The Seventh Wave. They attend Syracuse University’s MFA program.
0 Comments

Balloons in Waynesville

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Corrine
Picture

Corrine is a self-taught painter who grew up drawing and wanted to be an animator for a long time before falling in love with baking. Corrine wrote that, "No matter what I do though, I spread the love of art through color!"

You can follow them on Instagram at @thegroovyflowershop 
0 Comments

Sirin and masks. The phenomenon of another world

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Irina Tall (Novikova)
Picture
Sirin and masks. The phenomenon of another world
Materials: ink, gel pen, paper 
Size: 30x40 cm
Year: 2022 ​

Irina Tall (Novikova) is an artist, graphic artist, illustrator. She graduated from the State Academy of Slavic Cultures with a degree in art, and also has a bachelor's degree in design.

Tall's first personal exhibition "My soul is like a wild hawk" (2002) was held in the museum of Maxim Bagdanovich. In her works, she raises themes of ecology, in 2005 she devoted a series of works to the Chernobyl disaster, draws on anti-war topics. The first big series she drew was The Red Book, dedicated to rare and endangered species of animals and birds. Writes fairy tales and poems, illustrates short stories. She draws various fantastic creatures: unicorns, animals with human faces, she especially likes the image of a man - a bird - Siren. In 2020, she took part in Poznań Art Week.


0 Comments

Girl. When birds get their wings

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Irina Tall (Novikova) 
Picture
Girl. When birds get their wings 
Materials: gel pen, gouache, paper
Size: 30x40 cm
Year: 2022

Irina Tall (Novikova) is an artist, graphic artist, illustrator. She graduated from the State Academy of Slavic Cultures with a degree in art, and also has a bachelor's degree in design.

​
Tall's first personal exhibition "My soul is like a wild hawk" (2002) was held in the museum of Maxim Bagdanovich. In her works, she raises themes of ecology, in 2005 she devoted a series of works to the Chernobyl disaster, draws on anti-war topics. The first big series she drew was The Red Book, dedicated to rare and endangered species of animals and birds. Writes fairy tales and poems, illustrates short stories. She draws various fantastic creatures: unicorns, animals with human faces, she especially likes the image of a man - a bird - Siren. In 2020, she took part in Poznań Art Week.

0 Comments

What Man Made

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Max Kay

Has nature died in this ribcage man made
From plasticine, too perfect to be pure?
A mother’s love untouched can stay afloat—
I cut mine out a year ago to make
More space for violence like I’m meant to do.
Although machines may not be waterproof
At least I am my own creation too.
I understand why love means opening
The abdomen and hating what you see.
My innards tipped over the mouldy tile,
I stuffed the wound with cotton wool, no, steel,
For I have built my body to be best,
Not in the way that God had willed it though
My God, is it not human to be false?
And formed from copper wire, nuts and bolts?
Dear Mother, aren't I human to pollute?
With latex skin, and fishing line for veins,
And eyes that sparkle when I don't forget
To charge the battery pack before I feel
The type of thing that asks for smiling eyes?
And Mother, I made sure I still have tears
To water all my plants with when you cry
How could I render myself so profane?
Well Mother, you and I are not the same.
Look God, look Mother, I am what man made—
The apple of his ravenous design.
​The self-constructed sycophantic line.​

Max Kay (they/he) is a young creative living in Australia whose work is informed by their experiences as a mixed ethnicity and genderqueer person. They write about liminal spaces, caged animals, and feeling not-quite-human. When not trying to disappear into the wilderness to become a cryptid, Max can be reached on Instagram @whoismaxk
0 Comments

The Roadside Grave

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Jessica Mazur

Five sunflowers tied to a sign.

One shoe lace, 
wrapped four times.
Three big knots,
and two little bows.
Who lies sleeping in the earth below?
Could be yours and could be mine.
Five sunflowers
tied to a sign.

Jessica Mazur is a mid 20s poetry, and fiction writer desperately pursuing her career as an author before her mom can make her get a 'real job'. She can often be found in her Upstate NY backyard birdwatching, in the kitchen baking, or reading absolutely anything, absolutely anywhere. Her most recent project, a collection of haikus celebrating the everyday trivialities of life, is due for publication in 2024. Hopefully.
0 Comments

Stagger

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Mateo Perez Lara
I close my eyes and I imagine the pit. I imagined your lost mind, I imagined: the armaments supply cut off. I imagined screams; they rip through a California fantasy. I imagined a simple pleasure: I echo in halls of our lust. Tell me to hold your hand. I promise I won’t cry when it falls apart again. Your mind’s out, I ask why, when the asphalt-tinged paint drips down, rots our pretty color, how I wanted the pretty color, and did you remember how the floor creaked and was uneven, and could you remember how cold it was in the backseat of your car, did you light the cigarette or put it out on me? The sky is gray again and I’m waiting for my therapist to call back, the whole system is wretched and I’m retching in the bathroom, and you can’t believe me, I’m alone I’m alone I’m alone, but this smile has glinted golden, so you don’t believe me, I’m clawing at the wooden floor for someone to come and hold my hair and my hand, damn the truth this time. I just want to break in half then break free from this life, it’s not simple, but I dream about it every day. You put pressure down on the bleeding parts, stick a band-aid on and kiss it until I fall asleep in your sticky arms. We made this world now watch its destruction.

Mateo Perez Lara is a queer, non-binary, Latine poet from California. They received their M.F.A. in Poetry from Randolph College’s Creative Writing Program. They are an editor for Block Chronicles. They have a chapbook, Glitter Gods, published with Thirty West Publishing House. Their poems have been published in EOAGH, The Maine Review, PANK, and elsewhere.
0 Comments

I keep following you home / maybe this time we’ll be beautiful

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Sam Moe

We’re alone. The lambs and the dogs have gone
into lilac pastures where sticky circles and dried
mud lay undisrupted, your house feels hundreds
of miles away and each time I look back I see it
deflating until your dishes and kitchens and bedside
tables are nothing more than a puffy glowing
thing in the grass.

Next to me, you’re making bold claims about love
sweeping the air with your hands, trying to conjure
the woman of your dreams out of the last dewdrops
of June-dawn, I told the others I’d never trust you
again yet we’re out here, combing animal hair out
of our clothes at night, asking one another if we’d
like more milk heated on the stove, pouring coffee
shaving pale cheese into a bowl, digging viridescent
rose peaches out of their hiding places in the back
garden.

Your eyes, normally hazel hued, turn bright in setting
sun. Soon it will be dark, soon there will be dogs
with jaws and their soft friends come to lead us back
to the house, I don’t have the strength to tell you
I want to stay right here; I want to live on this patch
of weeds until my heart falls apart and I begin a final
unraveling. It wasn’t automatic. We walked horses
across streams and I hated your boots, your hands
the holes in your jeans, I went to bed frustrated by
simple human gestures which haunted me, woke up
twisted in sheets and your bird got into my room
again, now the animals are singing at four in the
morning, the moon has disappeared, I hear you
slow walk out of your room, knocking on her door
so you can feed the chickens together from slightly
rusted pails.

I know there’s a way out of this space, yet I want to
stay lost, I hate when you tell me to stop resisting
softness, I don’t believe you, don’t believe there is
an ending, I’m going to follow you back inside and
anyway, whoever knows what’s going on, who else
have you invited to witness your hungry thunder
longing, there are so many of us sitting, sleeping
talking in the field, I don’t know why I wake up
every day and crawl back to you, I’ll leave and you
won’t come with me, if I were to walk straight into
the setting sun you wouldn’t come with begs and
tears, you resist the paths I walk, I’m getting so sick
of this but I can’t give up.

Later, we eat dinner outside. Everyone laughs at
your jokes; you take turns twisting the knife into
a roast still coated in cooking strings. She told you
she wanted you back and now we have to suffer
through dinner-as-theatre, dinner-as-excuse, dinner
full of claws and fog, the red of the shed, I want
someone to take me out back and place me soft by
the half-broken horse ring, this isn’t about heels
or hearts or literally trust, I woke up crying again
and baby I want the pine trees with their permanent
leaves, I want navy-blue shivers, I wouldn’t mind
coffee grinds in a chipped mug, I want reasons to
take my heart to the waiting, jawed things, I could
toss the pulpy lattice off, play it cool like I have an
apple or a bundle of sweaty blueberries stuck together
in a drama, next thing you know the creatures are
biting at my tendons and I’m disappearing before
night, before longing, before velvet green grass
regrowing next spring.

Again, I stay. I say yes when someone asks to feed
me a spoonful of something hot and delicious. We
keep smiling at each other, I can hear my grandmother
asking me if I know the difference between gratitude
and gañir, gimotear and geraniums in her hair, I
accidentally push my wine glass onto the bricks, and
no one cares but you. In the kitchen, you kiss Cabernet
Sauvignon off my thighs and the others wave to me,
I pretend I’m washing a hand in the sink, covering my
mouth with my fingers, I fake-laugh and you take my
heart all the way out of its case.

Sam Moe is the first-place winner of Invisible City’s Blurred Genres contest in 2022. Her first chapbook, “Heart Weeds,” is out from Alien Buddha Press and her second chapbook, “Grief Birds,” is forthcoming from Bullshit Lit in April 2023. You can find her on Twitter and Instagram as @SamAnneMoe.
0 Comments

12th house moon: in earshot or not

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Dorothy Lune​
​I am disturbed by the knowing of not knowing that language
inside myself— / I aim to pick the wavelengths like ears &
rattle them, dance with them / a mountainous endeavor
leaning toward me to tease / I'm disturbed by watching the
wavelengths crest, not needing my body / I aim to pick them
up like artifacts / in each national museum of the United
kingdom / hiding behind security guards like traumatized
children / I ever so wonder what guards I have / what time
they have, what guards they have / what brevity that
mountainous bluebird has— / in all it's green glory, posing / I
have a camera out like an ear, looking through the stitches of
my pocket— / I'm going to shoot & kill you / that is the idea, I
will write & painting you / back home.

Dorothy Lune is a Yorta Yorta poet, born in Australia. Her work has appeared in Pinhole Poetry & more. She is compiling a manuscript entitled Lady Bug & can be found online @dorothylune.
0 Comments

Mercury inconjunct Neptune

1/6/2023

0 Comments

 
By Dorothy Lune

INT. MERCURY– NEPTUNE'S GLORY. NOON.
LADY BUG
Little music played for me / in a circle of people,
I withdrew / holding my hands together /

humming to every edge of a hexagon / I held a
candle to my eye, felt its warmth / & then

my arms bent backwards. Lighter fluid, a display
easel, burlap painted yellow, hexagonal

reality— / I am not my mind I am not my mind /
psychologically lodged in the lungs / &

then my arms bend backwards / & then I cough
& then relieve myself / & then, I read
​

a book on how to sing to hexagons. / The world
is much different then it was now.

Dorothy Lune is a Yorta Yorta poet, born in Australia. Her work has appeared in Pinhole Poetry & more. She is compiling a manuscript entitled Lady Bug & can be found online @dorothylune.
0 Comments
<<Previous
  • Home
  • Issues
    • ISSUE 1
    • ISSUE 2: QUEER NOSTALGIA
    • ISSUE 3: METAMORPHOSIS
    • ISSUE 4
    • ISSUE 5
  • Submit
  • Read
    • BLOG
  • Our Team
    • Staff
    • Work with us
  • Contact
  • About