Cast

By Ruth Nolan

Many bones have been broken here
in the tricky Mojave River quicksand,
huge Cottonwood trees taken down,
gnawed low to the marrow by beavers.

Behind me, the shadow of a man, his
fishing pole slung across his shoulder.
He tells me he will catch crawdads first,
skin and fry a trout or two for dinner.

He asks me to read a fat brown worm
onto his rusty hook. He is ready to fish.
My hands are strong, my fingers shake.

He casts his lure and waits for the first bite.
I snap fat twigs, break branches, build a fire.

 

 


A note from Ruth: If you enjoy knowing that Writers Resist exists, please consider a small contribution, so we can continue to give our writers and artists a little something. Contributions are gratefully accept here. Thanks for reading!


Ruth Nolan, a poetry editor at Writers Resist, is a professor of English and Creative Writing at College of the Desert in Palm Desert, California, and an author, lecturer and editor. She worked with the international, United Nations-sponsored literary program Dialogue Through Poetry / Rattapallax Press, from 2001 through 2004, and is now involved with many desert environment organizations as a writer and advocate for environmental justice. She’s the author of the poetry book Ruby Mountain (Finishing Line Press 2016). Her short story, “Palimpsest,” published in LA Fiction: Southland Writing by Southland Writers (Red Hen Press 2016), received an Honorable Mention in Sequestrum Magazine’s 2016 Editor’s Reprint contest and was also nominated for a 2016 PEN Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers.

Ruth’s writing has also been published in James Franco Review; Angels Flight LA/Literary West; Rattling WallKCET/Artbound Los Angeles; Lumen; Desert Oracle; Women’s Studies Quarterly; News from Native California; Sierra Club Desert Report, Lumen; The Desert Sun/USA Today and Inlandia Literary Journeys.

Photo credit: Born1945 via a Creative Commons license.

By | 2017-12-12T22:31:03-08:00 December 14th, 2017|Categories: Issue 51: 14 Dec 2017|Tags: , , |0 Comments

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