Two poems by Jessie Janeshek

A Beautiful Imagination
by Christine Sloan Stoddard

What’s the Fever, Big Star?

So much pressure, a plunder, it just keeps adding up.

            He says time is circular 

but I don’t get time        I keep falling and failing

            same publicity stunt

I spend all my time in the basement

            trying to get a screw loose

or I spend all my time in my ghost car

on the bridge with a mini-stroke of my dreams

            wondering if that’s the north star

            or the result of my accident, please.

He says if you weren’t trapped your writing would change

            graphic eyeliner  gratified Poconos honeymoon phase

but I spend all my time in brogues

            refusing to walk in the wet

            crow a song every other day

the black lips, the incest, the chocolates

            the blonde waves, the white negligee.

I drink the two-day-old coffee with scotch

I watch the snake-coffin scene

            or I watch the weepy      when it should be zany

not quite bone clean.

            He said you’re just in a mood

you’re playing a scene with yourself

            the 8-ball is concentrate

the Palm Springs cactus an omen, a saint. 


Little Ways to Know This Made Sense at the Time

More rain or it’s the case of not letting summer taste you

but if it were me I would keep crying

            one bird, one stone, a quiet storm yin-yang

or a fly in this heart-shaped         two-by-two movie

            where mushrooms grow quick    on my candle-print dress.

If it were me I would sit on the pink couch

            where pillows are seashells

my dead sister in daisies with larvae or fleas

            but I don’t give myself time

for the noir introduction or I make up the sister

            with a plastic clock in the treehouse

or a broken wrist in the river rock trying to run from the rapist

            run from the ritz or the watchdog, it’s money 

of my own making         

            and another bad man is pounding the steering wheel

letting lightning fly         and I’m in my bathing suit

            on my strawberry skates  and up the street

an ambulance starts        and stops at some July Xmas lights

            and you can’t escape bacteria       and you can’t snag a man

and this scene is familiar

            but you can snag a man if you keep your past in the past

and I can’t wait for the scene       leading up to the dinner

            where I make a wish on the enchanted statue

where he shoves me so hard feathers drop off my robe

where if your lover’s a suicide come and forget

            pretend you never knew him

keep doing your makeup dark lips and placid publicity

            or lucidity          since no one’s dragging you to the graveyard.


Jessie Janeshek‘s full-length collections are MADCAP (Stalking Horse Press, 2019), The Shaky Phase (Stalking Horse Press, 2017), and Invisible Mink (Iris Press, 2010). Her chapbooks include Spanish Donkey/Pear of Anguish (Grey Book Press, 2016), Rah-Rah Nostalgia (dancing girl press, 2016), Supernoir (Grey Book Press, 2017), Auto-Harlow (Shirt Pocket Press, 2018), and Channel U (Grey Book Press, 2020). Read more at jessiejaneshek.net.


Christine Sloan Stoddard is a Salvadoran-American author and interdisciplinary artist who lives in Brooklyn. Her books include Force FedDesert Fox by the SeaBelladonna MagicWater for the Cactus Woman, and other titles. She co-edited Her Plumage: An Anthology of Women’s Writings by Quail Bell Magazine for Quail Bell, the art and literary journal she founded. In 2019, she became the first-ever artist-in-residence at Lenox Hill Neighborhood House and earned her MFA from The City College of New York in Manhattan. Later that year, Christine became the artist-in-residence at Heartshare Human Services of New York, where she leads art workshops for adults with disabilities and creates artwork for display. Continuing in the direction of her poetry films like Jaguar in the Cotton FieldDone, and Marine Encounters, Christine has been selected to collaborate with poet Teri Elam for the 2020 Visible Poetry Project. 2020 will mark the release of Christine’s books Naomi & the Reckoning (Finishing Line Press) and Heaven Is A Photograph (CLASH Books).