Our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy have changed. We think you'll like them better this way.

Jim Rioux

  • Broadcast in Poetry
The Jane Crown Show

The Jane Crown Show

×  

Follow This Show

If you liked this show, you should follow The Jane Crown Show.
h:13222
s:1333645
archived
Press Bio: I received my MFA from Georgia State University, where I received the Gerard Manley Hopkins Award. My poetry has appeared widely in magazines including Five Points, Prairie schooner, The North American Review, The Cortland Review, Agenda, and Ars Interpres. In 2009, my work was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. I teach writing at the University of New Hampshire and live with my wife and dog in Exeter, NH. "Blackberries" It may in the end come to this: memory the tongue will not abandon to fact, the dark fruit bobbing in sugared cream. . . We made our shirts into baskets, dawn hung dew-luminous on branches, cricket-thick glade abuzz with rising heat, our young hands among thorns. It is enough, perhaps, to have lived this, to have known the summer air stung ripe, to hold up against all that is leaving us these berry-stained t-shirts, fingers purpled sticky-sweet, the warm cream dribbling our chins, and this mouth still bruised with what it can’t say. — James Rioux

Facebook comments

Available when logged-in to Facebook and if Targeting Cookies are enabled