Cornville, AZ
Despite the drought and our sun-jerkied skin,
everyone’s feeling pretty tropical here
at the Grasshopper Grill listening to Rick belt out “Margaritaville”
while we wait for Millie to deliver our burgers
that come with haystack-high fries or a baked potato
the size of Idaho. Here
at the Grasshopper Grill we are curled inside a cozy ozone of booze,
as yet unburdened by tomorrow’s round of innocents
sprawled at the feet of someone’s bad chemistry or grudge,
our eyes tumbling blanks in our heads, our voices so much sand
in our throats. But tonight
it’s “half price on all well drinks before six” Tuesday
here at the Grasshopper Grill, and so everyone’s checked
their diagnosis, their deadbeat kid, their Vicodin habit,
failing knees, exes, final notices, their frayed and fading
Make America Great Again bumper stickers,
at the door where a chalkboard lists salted caramel cake
as tonight’s desert. And while some nursing a beer tonight
at the Grasshopper Grill are up to here
with a) Mueller and b) everything else
and everyone has hired an undocumented Mexican at one time
or another from the now-empty sidewalk
in front of the Rainbow Trailer Court
to spare themselves a menial/muscle-pummeling/soul-shredding job,
some do and some don’t want The Wall
meaning no one here is any more or less rational or hateful
than anyone else with or without the tattoos, piercings, bellies,
armpits, gigantic hair, and concealed carries which is to say—
we’re holding up.
Here’s to scooching over a seat when the plane gets crowded.
Here’s to being one table among many.
Excerpted from Dr. Richards recent release. Click image to order.
In memory of Dr. Marilee Richards.
I first met Marilee at a Berkeley Poets Coop meeting in the ‘80s when she showed up with the express desire to write poetry. She fit right in. Her poetic voice even at the beginning was clear and direct. No nonsense. As her work grew and matured and was published widely, and as her voice became clarified, I came to be one of her biggest fans.
As a social worker she had spent years understanding the flaws in our social fabric, and these insights powered her poems and sustained her through her older years in Sedona, Arizona, where she amassed a devoted following of poets who attended her classes. She taught from her own great appreciation of the quirky – poems that revealed something surprising and unexpected about their authors.
She put out a poetry newsletter choosing all the selections herself each week from the personal library of books and old issues of literary magazines she had accrued over many years, commenting on the context of each poem and sometimes offering a juicy bit on the life of the poet. These emails were always exciting and revelatory of what was most interesting about the work.
I learned to love and appreciate Marilee’s aesthetics and the radical honesty with which she understood the work she read. I will miss her and her poetry newsletter. She was one of a kind. — Charles Entrekin