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Joanna Nissel

wave

5

spring

2021

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the poet

Joanna’s debut pamphlet, Guerrilla Brightenings, is forthcoming with Against the Grain Press. She was the runner up for the Poetry Business 2018 International New Poets Prize, was Pick of the Month for Ink, Sweat, and Tears in July 2020, and won the Bangor Literary Journal 2020 Ekphrastic competition. In her day role, you will find Joanna organising and facilitating online literary events, including the Stay-at-Home! Literature Festival, Tears in the Fence Festival, and a variety of events with Paper Nations.

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the poems

Thoughts on

Mothers’ Day 2020

00:00 / 01:23

This is not my first poem

about washing hands

 

Dad learned the spell    of lipid-based soaps

alcohol gel      cracked knuckle-skin

to enter Dave’s hospice room

festooned with cards   balloons

 

Did you know flower-water is so germ-ridden

it can be lethal?

 

Twenty years earlier      the diagnosis

then the fall down the stairs    cracked

his skull      The friend who found him

scrubbed her hands of his blood

 

The ritual of it     clutch of talismans

worn around the neck

 

without knowing if it would protect her

For Mother’s Day    I sketched a bouquet

of spring     daffodils   bluebells   roses

hibiscus in biro      The last time I saw Dave

 

The grooms declaring

wickedness      laziness

 

his wedding     my 11th birthday

Buddha-bar-bling-themed ­   golds     fuchsia

lighting rigs from the boys at the Old Vic

They stopped the ensuing rave

 

February frost melting

against steamed windows

 

to bring me a cake with candles

that    when I blew on them    

relit themselves     never went out.

Delicious

00:00 / 00:43

She drops the word into conversation,

sprawling and red like unfurling fire lilies.

 

The audacity of it makes me stutter,

and she, comfortable and languid-limbed,

 

moves on to the next topic as if she hasn’t just

released the scent of raspberries and honeysuckle

 

into a rainy afternoon catch up. Afterwards I wonder

if I’ve just seen a glimpse of the world as she sees it,

 

life in all its mundanities rippling across her taste buds:

simply delicious. I find myself mouthing the word,

 

revelling in the sibilance

so petal-soft it burns.

It’s the Only Time

I See Them

On coming out – Hove Lawns

00:00 / 01:08

the lesbian couple, joining me to amble the pebbles at dawn,

meandering the artery between one pier and the other.

 

They’re gone by the time the light proliferates, turns the world

from fragile pinks, pale blues to brash cerulean and shamrock lawns,

 

and the promenade has filled with clots of joggers,

children with training wheels, shirtless beer bellies.

 

I can’t blame them, when sunrise offers us a clear stretch

of saturated sands, which shift underfoot like the texture of damp biscuits,

 

which thrum with ancient energies and offer fragments of shells,

whole ecosystems on the groynes, encrusted with mussels

 

until the walls resemble the puffed wings of preening crows

and the bright shallows under 7am sun overlap like scales.

 

This morning, three women waded in and, as the water broke

against their stomachs, they were Leo standing on the prow,

 

the horizon building in them, building,

until they released their screams.

Publishing credits

All poems: exclusive first publication by iamb

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