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Starlings

Page 20

by Jo Walton


  Flocking all over, rising up at a sudden alarm

  to settle back in a flutter of wings,

  unafraid, beautiful, ubiquitous.

  Grey, barred, or brown,

  with a preen of glorious pink,

  bright-eyed, head cocked, bold.

  Descend into the interstices of our lives,

  peck round our park benches, strut past our summits,

  nest on our ledges, circle our rooftops.

  Billing and cooing, pouting and searching,

  come down to the hearts of our cities

  and be everywhere taken for granted.

  —June 24, 2016

  Translated from the Original

  When they came down to the

  Water/shore/spaceport/edge

  They embarked and took ship for

  The lagoon/lacuna/Lagos/the ledge

  The/a sun was occluded/eclipsed

  Glinting

  There was no doubt, none any more,

  Hinting

  . . .

  In the archipelago/far settlement/sea-carved land,

  Only their footprints, dissolving in sand.

  —December 15, 2014

  Sleepless in New Orleans

  The moon has set

  and the fucking Pleiades

  and I have to be on a train at seven o’clock this morning

  but here I am

  writing poetry under the covers

  as if I am twelve.

  I have to tell you that last June

  in the front row of a Fringe performance

  of Euripides’ Hippolytos

  I accepted a blood red cherry from the manicured hand

  of a drag queen Aphrodite.

  I thought “Take, eat . . .”

  and my soul said “You have always been good to me,

  Foam-born Peleia

  but seriously? Have you noticed I am menopausal

  and suited as things are?

  You really would surprise me.”

  Wouldn’t you think I’d know better?

  Clearly, this is her votive city

  she must get tired of the pap she is offered

  the same masks over and over.

  We are from different shores

  of the same planet

  and speak the same language

  and I am here. I do not ask anything

  but let’s go to Venice

  and Constantinople

  and keep talking the stars into a new sky

  where maybe words reach.

  —February 25, 2013

  The Godzilla Sonnets

  i) Godzilla vs Shakespeare

  Up on the ramparts all await their time

  Each heroine, the fools and knaves, each king,

  Ready to catch our hearts, the play’s the thing

  A cockpit where they arm themselves with rhyme.

  The monster tries to hide, but shows through plain,

  Behind a frond ripped up with giant claws

  We see his scaly hide and gaping jaws

  As Birnam tropics come to Dunsinane.

  All rally to defend now, each with each,

  Juliet with dagger, Richard on a horse,

  Dear Hamlet with his poisoned foil of course,

  Harry with swords and longbows, at the breach.

  Godzilla, shuffling closer, knows what’s what.

  Size matters. But then so do prose and plot.

  ii) Godzilla in Shakespeare

  She was too big to sneak, she couldn’t hide,

  She did well at Harfleur, the wall went down,

  If Bardolph then got splatted in the town

  All well and good, Flewellyn got to ride.

  Verona fell out differently, no feud

  Of family could stand against those feet

  She could go nowhere that required a street

  Dancing or love-making, too big, too crude.

  When troops were needed, she advanced before,

  She sheltered Lear on the blasted heath

  She stood outside, or waited underneath,

  And lurked before the walls of Elsinore.

  She couldn’t seem sincere as Romeo.

  As Caliban she really stole the show.

  iii) Godzilla Weeps for Baldur

  A little Viking boat, with tattered sail,

  Frigg, by the curved carved prow, bids everyone

  To weep for Baldur, her lost murdered son

  To bring him back from Hel, she cannot fail.

  She’s what, a radioactive dinosaur?

  Destruction manifest, and Japanese?

  Frigg begged her, even deigning to say please

  And left her sitting weeping by the shore.

  Aesir and monsters close beneath the skin

  Berserk rampager—Frigg could work with that

  She told her what they’d lost, and as they sat

  Godzilla wept for Baldur, as for kin.

  So what was Baldur that Godzilla cared?

  Each cherry-blossom petal that she’d spared.

  iv) Godzilla in Love

  It is the nightingale and monsters all

  Come tripping through the glades of some strange wood

  Godzilla sulking, trying to be good

  All balconies inevitably fall.

  (All right, she stomped Verona really flat.)

  But this is different, this is fairy-time,

  With transformations, turning on a dime

  The size of others, and she longs for that.

  Or failing that, some great iambic man,

  Scaled up to her and talking like the Bard

  They’d stomp together, would that be so hard?

  Uncertain, frightened, questions if she can—

  Does love change when it alteration find?

  She wants someone to love her for her mind.

  v) Godzilla at Colonos

  Alive she is destruction, people flee

  Mouths opened wide in screams before her tread

  But that great body when it falls will be

  A benediction after she is dead.

  She raged and roared, but failed at family,

  Her sons wreak devastation, fight and fall,

  Her daughters seek to bury them, but see,

  One destiny to perish over all.

  But once there was an answer she could give

  People and monster met in what they knew,

  That time’s inexorable, but people live,

  And grow and change and die, and monsters too.

  So though she threatened life and home and city

  The faces hold not terror now, but pity.

  —2015

  Not a Bio for Wiscon

  Jo Walton has run out of eggs and needs to go buy some,

  she has no time to write a bio

  as she wants to make spanakopita today.

  She also wants to write a new chapter

  and fix the last one.

  Oh yes, she writes stuff,

  when people leave her alone to get on with it

  and don’t demand bios

  and proofreading and interviews

  and dinner.

  Despite constant interruptions

  she has published nine novels

  in the last forty-eight years

  and started lots of others.

  She won the Campbell for Best New Writer in 2002

  when she was 38.

  She has also written half a ton of poetry

  which isn’t surprising as she finds poetry

  considerably easier to write

  than short bios listing her accomplishments.

  She is married, with one (grown up, awesome) son

  who lives nearby with his girlfriend and two cats.

  She also has lots of friends

  who live all over the planet

  who she doesn’t see often enough.

  She remains confused by punctuation,

  “who” and “whom”

>   and “that” and “which.”

  She cannot sing and has trouble with arithmetic

  also, despite living ten years in Montreal

  her French still sucks.

  Nevertheless her novel Among Others

  won a Hugo and a Nebula

  so she must be doing something right

  at least way back when she wrote it

  it’ll probably never work again.

  She also won a World Fantasy Award in 2004

  for an odd book called Tooth and Claw

  in which everyone is dragons.

  She comes from South Wales

  and identifies ethnically as a Romano-Briton

  but she emigrated to Canada in 2002

  because it seemed a better place

  to stand to build the future.

  She blogs about old books on Tor.com

  and posts poetry, recipes, and wordcount on her LJ

  and is trying to find something to bribe herself with

  as a reward for writing a bio

  that isn’t chocolate.

  Update, February 2016

  Since then she has written another four novels

  And the one she was interrupted writing a chapter of

  My Real Children

  won the Tiptree Award,

  she also won the Locus Best Non-Fiction for her collection of

  blog posts

  and her son has broken up with his girlfriend.

  She knows it’s a cliché, but tonight’s dinner will be stew,

  followed by blackcurrant crumble,

  because

  she has run out of eggs.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Jo Walton has published thirteen novels, most recently Necessity. A fourteenth, Lent, is due out in 2018. She has also published three poetry collections and an essay collection. Walton won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 2002; the World Fantasy Award for Tooth and Claw in 2004; the Hugo and Nebula awards for Among Others in 2012; and in 2014, the Tiptree Award for My Real Children and the Locus Award for What Makes This Book So Great.

  Walton comes from Wales but lives in Montreal, where the food and books are much better. She plans to live to be ninety-nine and to write a book every year.

 

 

 


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