ISSUE 41
November 2008

Muriel Harris Weinstein


THE CORTLAND REVIEW

INTERVIEW
Ross Gay
 

POETRY
C. Wade Bentley This marks an author's first online publication
Bonnie Bolling
Gabriel DeCrease
Pamela Hart
Roger Jones
Robert Lesman This marks an author's first online publication
James B. Nicola
Chad Prevost
Mark Prudowsky
Cassandra Robison
Michael Shorb
Avery Slater This marks an author's first online publication
Josh Stewart
Elisabeth von Uhl This marks an author's first online publication
Muriel Harris
     Weinstein
This marks an author's first online publication
 

FICTION
Paul Blaney This marks an author's first online publication
Neil Grimmett
 

BOOK REVIEWS
David Rigsbee
reviews All of It Singing: New and Selected Poems by Linda Gregg

David Rigsbee

reviews Heat Lightning: New and Selected Poems 1986—2006 by Judith Skillman

 

This marks an author's first online publication Muriel Harris Weinstein's poems have appeared in The Comstock Review, Nassau Review, Kent State Review, Nexus, and in many anthologies. Her children's picture book, When Louis Armstrong Taught Me Scat, in a jazzy poetic form, by Chronicle Books, will be out February 2009 and the biography of Louis Armstrong, Play Louis, Play! (Bloomsbury Press), will be out Winter 2009.

Upon Seeing Themselves in the Floral Paintings of O'Keeffe    


Women's eyes flash like neon
absorbing O'Keeffe's oceanic flowers
which hang like billboards across skies,
or marquees on mountain tops.

Paint on her fiery canvasses drips,
turns into waterfalls of poppy reds and black iris blues
splashing down to form a pool.

Drawn to these mountain tops
women dive from rocky crevices into the Pool
of a Hundred Colors.  As colors ooze into skin,
they feel a sudden ease
float on backs with a new buoyancy.

They swim and glide,
arms arc like herons' necks,
or roll over like dolphins at play.
Gone the tension from hips and legs
or from that cave of deepest sighs.
Legs flutter like fishtail fans. Faces flushed,
dip and rise in wet radiance.

Heat floods the swimmers.
They shed jeans. dresses, bras.
Breasts, colors of salt, coal, copper, clay, creamy quartz
nipples ringed with Egyptian blue,
they sing of swelling labia.
Legs open, silken waters enter
and soothe, their bodies turn eloquent.                                                                                    
Swimming in the Pool of A Hundred Colors
they see their caves fill with the wild
throb of color; blatant flame of poppies,
magenta tinged lust of black lilies  
orange orgasm with red in tropical cannas.

 

 

Muriel Harris Weinstein: Poetry
Copyright ©2008 The Cortland Review Issue 41The Cortland Review