Richard Jones: of madeleines and a milk mustache (+ a summer blog break)

I’m a longtime fan of Illinois poet, editor and English Professor Richard Jones, having shared several of his poems here over the years, including “Blue Stars,” “The Nomenclature of Color,” and “The Diner.”

Prose-like, lyrical, elegant, and accessible, his poems — often about his day-to-day life, are truly a joy to read. Love how he establishes a natural intimacy with the reader, revealing profound insights in a way that seems effortless.

Recently I’ve been savoring his 2018 collection, Stranger on Earth (Copper Canyon Press). The poems are presented in seven sections — a nod to Marcel Proust’s 1913 seven-volume novel, Remembrance of Things Past (a.k.a. In Search of Lost Time). Jones reads Proust often, finding inspiration in the detailed stream-of-consciousness recollections transformed into a compelling art form.

Here’s a favorite poem from Stranger on Earth, a sweet moment shared by Jones and his daughter that’s perfect for Father’s Day.

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“Marcel Proust” by Nurit Spivak Kovarsky.
MADELEINES
by Richard Jones


I stay up all night reading Proust,
turning pages in the golden glow of a tall lamp,
happy in a little circle of light and dreaming of Paris.
It's like sitting up late with my closest friend
or listening to my own innermost thoughts.
There has awakened in me that anguish which,
later on in life, transfers itself to the passion of love,
and may even become its inseparable companion.


When the sun comes down the lane
with ten thousand French candles,
I climb the stairs and softly open the door
to find my seven-year-old daughter still sleeping.
I sit on the edge of her bed; she turns
and slowly wakes. After my wife's,
nothing is more beautiful than my daughter's eyes
opening in the morning, her green eyes catching the light.

"Let's have tea and madeleines," I say,
and we set out on a journey to taste in reality
what so charmed Proust's fancy.
Sarah finds the red mixing bowls.
I fill the kettle and tell her about the recluse
who spent his life in a cork-lined room
scented with camphor, happy to lie in bed
and write endless pages about his past,
revealing the essence of every moment.
Sarah breaks eggs; I measure sugar and whisk.
Together we practice French:
sucre, livre, roman, je t'aime.

Sarah pours the lemon-scented batter
into the heavy, scalloped pan.
"Would you write such a book?" she asks,
licking the spatula.
"Would my father go in search of lost time,
remembering the past so?"

I open the oven door and tell her
there is no place I'd rather be than here with her,
though I wonder, will she remember this years hence --
the lemon-scented batter, the morning light --
and, amid the ruins of everything else,
will the immense architecture of memory prove faithful?

The timer chimes.
Sarah arranges the madeleines
on a painted tole tray, sprinkles clouds
of powdered sugar, and carries the tray
to the terrace. Now we are in Paris
at her favorite café. I am
her solicitous white-aproned waiter,
attentive to mademoiselle's every need,
undone and unclosed
by how small and beautiful her hands are.
She tells me that instead of tea like Monsieur Proust,
she would prefer milk. Thin towel over my arm,
I hold the milk bottle, present the label;
she approves and I pour the milk.
"Merci avec bonté," she says,
lifting her glass to the sunlight.

"I'll always remember these madeleines,"
I say. "Will you?" I ask,
toasting her glass with my teacup.
"Certainly. And your books will remind me."
"All things find their way into a poem."
"Like madeleines do," she proclaims,
drinking down her tumbler of milk
until nothing is left but the line
of a thin mustache, like Proust's.

~ from Stranger on Earth (Copper Canyon Press, 2018).

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new york state of mind

“Where thou art, that is home.” ~ Emily Dickinson

They say you can’t go home again. I’m not so sure.

Hope you brought your umbrella. 🙂

“New York City Walking in the Rain” by Vishalandra M. Dakur.
HOME
by Natalie Goldberg


I am thinking of the rain in New York
the driving rain over the Metropolitan Museum
and the Guggenheim and the small delicatessen
down in the Village that sells flanken
I am thinking of the rain making rivers by the curb
near Ohrbach’s and Penn Station
the shop selling pita sandwiches
the grease and char of lamb
rotating slowly in the raining day

I am thinking of the fruit stands now
the five hundred fruit stands all over New York
I’m thinking mostly of the dark celery leaves
above the green stalks and the bright skins of oranges
I am thinking of Macy’s meat department
And the Nebraska cows
Of the hundred year old air in Macy’s
And the green cashmere sweaters on top of the glass counter
I am remembering the way pizza smells in the streets calling
hunger out of ourselves
I am thinking now of the Hudson River and the rain meeting it
The mist already rising over the George Washington Bridge
And the trees growing wildly on the other shore

~ from The Wonder of Small Things: Poems of Peace and Renewal, edited by James Crews (Storey Publishing, 2023).
George Washington Bridge mist, January 2024.

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to dye or not to dye?

“It is not by the gray of the hair that one knows the age of the heart.” ~ Edward G. Bulwer-Lytton

Here’s a little something to lighten the mood. 🙂

“Acropolis” by Mawra Tahreem.
GRECIAN TEMPLES
by George Bilgere


Because I'm getting pretty gray at the temples,
which negatively impacts my earning potential
and does not necessarily attract vibrant young women
with their perfumed bosoms to dally with me
on the green hillside,
I go out and buy some Grecian Hair Formula.

And after the whole process, which involves
rubber gloves, a tiny chemistry set,
and perfect timing, I look great.
I look very fresh and virile, full of earning potential.
But when I take my fifteen-year-old beagle
out for his evening walk, the contrast is unfortunate.
Next to me he doesn't look all that great,
with his graying snout, his sort of faded,
worn-out-dog look. It makes me feel old,
walking around with a dog like that.

It's not something a potential employer,
much less a vibrant young woman with a perfumed bosom
would necessarily go for. So I go out
and get some more Grecian Hair Formula—
Light Brown, my beagle's original color.
And after all the rigmarole he looks terrific.
I mean, he's not going to win any friskiness contests,
not at fifteen. But there's a definite visual improvement.
The two of us walk virilely around the block.

The next day a striking young woman at the bookstore
happens to ask me about my parents,
who are, in fact, long dead, due to the effects of age.
They were very old, which causes death.
But having dead old parents does not go
with my virile, intensely fresh new look.

So I say to the woman, my parents are fine.
They love their active lifestyle in San Diego.
You know, windsurfing, jai alai, a still-vibrant sex life.
And while this does not necessarily cause her
to come dally with me on the green hillside, I can tell
it doesn't hurt my chances.

I can see her imagining dinner
with my sparkly, young-seeming mom and dad
at some beachside restaurant
where we would announce our engagement.

Your son has great earning potential,
she'd say to dad, who would take
a gander at her perfumed bosom
and give me a wink, like he used to do
back when he was alive, and vibrant.

~ from The White Museum (Autumn House Press, 2010).
Vintage 1973 advertisement.

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Alice N. Persons: dipping into the future

“Skinny Dipping” by Stephanie Lambourne.
NEXT LIFE
by Alice N. Persons


I will be a lovely slim Asian woman
with a great metabolism
who tans
I will never get up at 5 AM to shovel snow
I will live in some place like Italy or France
where having all of August off is normal
and older women are still sexy
I will wear a bikini whenever possible
definitely pose for nude photos
and go skinny sipping, with and without friends,
in all seasons, day and night.
I will play at least one instrument
have a voice like k.d. lang
and never, ever wear pantyhose
have all-season good hair
I will not waste myself, body or spirit,
on any unworthy man
I'll win the lottery
build a huge animal shelter
always know how to end a poem

~ from Thank Your Lucky Stars: Collected Poems (Moon Pie Press, 2011).
“French Riviera” by Redina Tili (2018).

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[chat + recipe + giveaway] Lee Wardlaw on My Book of Firsts

Today we’re excited to chat with award-winning author, poet and cat-wrangler Lee Wardlaw about My Book of Firsts: Poems Celebrating a Baby’s Milestones (Red Comet Press, 2025), illustrated by Bruno Brogna.

Though this is her first poetry collection, it’s not the first time Lee has visited us. She was one of our Potluck Poets back in 2012, the same year she won the Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award for Won Ton: A Cat Tale Told in Haiku (Henry Holt, 2011). We loved her purrfect “Catku” and the recipe she shared for Kitty Litter Cake. Me-wow!

Because My Book of Firsts is written from a baby’s perspective, the poems are that much more endearing. This emotive hug of a book is a joy to read aloud with its playful, inventive rhymes, lively cadences, and rich vocabulary. Each precious milestone from baby’s first year is cause for wonder and celebration, whether a First Day, First Friend, First Outing, First Word or those magical First Steps — and Brogna’s adorable animal families add just the right touch of charm and tenderness.

With its padded cover and allotted pages for recording your own baby’s milestones, this delightful book is an appealing keepsake for new parents, making it the perfect baby shower or birthday gift that families will be proud to share.

We thank Lee for telling us more about her literary bundle of joy with wonderful personal photos and a yummy recipe. Enjoy!

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