Four poems by Simone Muench and Phillip Jenks

Simone Muench

Simone Muench

Simone Muench was raised in Louisiana and Arkansas and lives in Chicago, Illinois. She is the author of three books: The Air Lost in Breathing (Marianne Moore Prize for Poetry; Helicon Nine, 2000), Lampblack & Ash (Kathryn A. Morton Prize for Poetry; Sarabande, 2005), and Orange Crush (Sarabande, forthcoming in 2010). Her latest chapbooks are Orange Girl (dancing girl press, 2007) and Sonoluminescence written with Bill Allegrezza (Dusie Press, 2007). She is a recipient of numerous awards and received her Ph.D from the University of Illinois at Chicago and is director of the Writing Program at Lewis University where she teaches creative writing and film studies.

Dear Michael Myers—

Witness the difference between kissing 
& asphyxiation, between diagnosis & prognosis.
If you find it, you can cut us in—

we'll play at the hedges & wait for you. 
Or sit inside writing on a slightly steamed window, 
the schism between cram & quell, steel

& bone.  The loud undulating plunge 
of one body into two. Multiplier 
of streetlights. Inside, housewives wonder

why a girl's writhing in the backseat of a Buick 
that doesn't belong on their street.
Further inside, housewives do not wonder

at what they know men do, then refuse to move 
from the window as a cardinal explodes, leaving in its wake 
a litter of crushed balloons that once held

some hopeful breath. Blood-spackled ecstasies 
or choked up prosaic partner.  A mask not a man, 
a blue uniform that moves its emptiness towards happiness,

only to smash it with its own insistence, 
sickening regiment & forked blue brute force,
you absorb fear until it fleshes you out, stuck

on the buzz of butchery. Your eyes 
winter trees stark & amazing. Flashed out 
by such nothings whose lives were built expressly

for your kind of surgery, where a blade 
becomes horizon & a dozen dead husbands 
hang in your half forgotten dream.

 

 

 

Dear Ed Gein—

Farmyard special of the week: hillbilly headless 
stuffed with your sick absence, you slit a sliver 
in my jumpsuit that says sweet tea. You artifice me
into defaced goat; you sell me at your little 
Wisconsin grocery adorned with a sign: Eat the wicked 
& leave the mild-mannered to rest in mother's 
tupperware garden. Skulk around with razor or cleave. 

How strange the smell of your own reflection, 
your face a cipher with sliding doors,
peer-afflicted sunspot or sunburnt bloodspot 
on your pants. You once played operation, but lost 
to the buzz of your multiple errors, you angered 
into adulthood & pulled a little bone from an innocent chin.

Weird smile glittering over the horizon 
of a lock-jawed mouth, gambling to be under 
sane sheets of an organized surprise, you let investigators 
lead you from the guidance of Gray's Anatomy 
in your cellar to a rubber cell carved from the hellish 
real of the banal being of your truth.

Invite us to breakfast…where you serve us to ourselves 
& even in incarcerated dreams we are dancing, dead. 
We've finally made some plan of escape, etched in dirt 
or brain - consumed in your body & what is called mind, 
where all is ripe as you re-write your mother's recipes 
adding nothing & deleting everything, leaving 
this illness not unwritten in the margin.

 

 

 

Dear Film Noir—

We got you all wrong. You weren't the redhot rendezvous 
or the bloody handprint, but the ambulance, white 
in black rain, pressed against algid armors 
of your electric flight.

You weren't declamation just a voice-over of a widow 
speaking into a dictaphone, taking notes 
for a dream from scratched heads 
& penciled-in threat.

Zoom to an arachnid-savvy femme fatale undressing 
in a Packard, all campfire hot with her detective, 
inventing the opposite 
of ambiance.

A furnace-filter voice. A muddy boot arrival.

Sirens hail wet against you & where you might 
have been, thrust of an echo, as you offer 
a collection plate for alienation
& machine guns.

Something discrete falls to the street at your periphery, 
as if to suggest an inclusion or a confession 
behind Venetian blinds. What's left
in your oneiric rain

is not gunfire but the glint of a gold anklet, shot of the possible
held behind its purchase & gift. The clasp's been damaged 
by an insistence on a link that doesn't exist; as 
a row of snow globes glistening unveil  

your blackened window cracks.

 

 

 

Dear Suicide—

How long have you been standing in the doorway 
holding a fretsaw & dreaming of indentations?

You said the body was furniture, was fixture        
but we couldn't fix it. Sometimes, you the only one 
talking, though neither of us narrate the way we used to;

we can't locate the colloquial phrase
to measure your presence is is-not inside of us.

You move from oven to lovers, saving the date, 
alive but not enunciating essence, you piledrive 
a girl into ether. Ensnare a spouse in argument—

one takes car, gas, garage, & cats too.  
If the sound of you is snow & the color of you

is yet to be determined, then your syntax 
is parasitic gap. All talk is syllable as dynamited 
sparse demarcated. Your face breaking into nickels

& stars, past tense next to an overdue library book.  
Spread of the eye glassing back at the fortunate friend

who found you, lived to tell a tale of half endings, 
witness to the limits of shadows which hide 
in the nicked & stained couch where once we both lay.