Three poems

Anastacia-Renee will be reading in Cascadia Magazine’s Seattle Writers + Artists event at 6:30 pm Tues. December 10 at Vermillion in Seattle’s Capitol Hill neighborhood. More details here.

Snow Globe 

your smell a 

fragrance hanging       (a round)

in every happenstance 

a memory lurking 

underground 

like hip-hop

or a hobbled fence

of protection 

i

don’t 

smell you 

don’t 

smell you 

your history 

a copy out 

of print or

laying                                  ( a round) 
a burning building 

all the pages

in black 

& white 

.

.

.

Chefs Table (For Two)

he says nothing will go to waste not even a small bone, this is being a butcher i want to be a 5-knifed butcher (to myself) & spare no thing too small       cut around the fat & capture the quiet suck of my own marrow 

                who can know the joy i might slice just so i can          multiply (it) 

he holds a pigs snout like it is god/gold

as if the snout is the answer to 

every foul smell     i want to be a sweet smelling thing        golden statue of unforgivable lard 

fattening up an open    trough 

.

.

Before Being a Mother-Artist was so cool

1.

as it was (back then)

i was the only poet

popping safety pins

shut & breast shields in

her satchel trying to

smother the smell of

milky newborn &

poverty & my puns

perched so tight

around the audience

that the white university

begged to feed us

& they were so high

on our black us-ness

on us blackness

on us sweat

on us travel swag

on us youth

on us anger

that i was able

to take so much

money home i

could buy groceries

& that

was how i made a

dollar out of 15 cents

but—i did not party

like a rockstar

nor let my hair down

nor get low low low

too many backs to

burp & temperatures

to take

what I wouldn’t give

(back then)

to have

heard another black

mama say she had

to get back to her babies

what I wouldn’t give

(back then) to see

another mouth

on a tittie at a

midnight cipher


once at a reading i had to go across the street to a 7 eleven gas station to pee

while i held my baby in my left hand and wiped my ass with the other

so when you infer or even think for a moment i am weak or incapable

i want to ask you if you could? If you could pee & hold the future in your hands

then spit a poem so fire not even the devil could survive it

All illustrations by Carol Rashawnna Williams.

Publication of these poems and art was made possible by a generous grant from the Seattle Office of Arts & Culture.

Anastacia-Renee is a multi-genre writer, educator, TEDx Speaker and interdisciplinary artist. She is the recipient of the 2018 James W. Ray Distinguished Artist Award for Washington artists (Artist Trust), and has served as the Seattle Civic Poet from 2017-2019, and the 2015-2017 Poet-in-Residence at Hugo House. She is the 2019-2020 Jack Straw Curator and has received writing fellowships and residencies from Cave Canem, Hedgebrook, VONA, Artist Trust, Jack Straw, Ragdale, Whitely, Mineral School and Hypatia in the Woods.  She lives in Seattle, where she teaches poetry and multi-genre workshops at Hugo House in libraries and universities and her work has been published widely.

Carol Rashawnna Williams is a Seattle-based interdisciplinary artist who makes work that engages audiences in conversations about social, environmental and racial justice. While in residence at Seattle University, Williams  created two dynamic art installations that included prints, paintings and sculptures made of primarily recycled or reused materials. Carol has received  a 4Culture Conductive Garboil Award (2018), an Artist Residency AADK Spain (2018), a 4Culture Artist Community Grant Award (2017) and was accepted to Seattle Office of Arts & Culture’s Public Art Boot Camp (2018). She is the owner of K-Love 4 Art, co-founder of both Race & Climate Justice Art Collective and ARTifACTS, and the Co-Executive Director at Community Arts Create.

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