Leavings From My Table by Charlene Stegman Moskal

$14.99

 

Beautifully lyrical and deeply elegiac, Charlene Stegman Moskal’s  Leavings from My Table is an exquisite exploration of the body as vessel and emotion.  These poems remind us that grief is an excruciating – as “imaginary spaces shimmer, / fade in a moment’s breath” – yet brilliant form of palpable love: “the empty passenger seat  of my car / that still bears your shadow,” “the twigs of abandoned birds’ nests,” a gentle note that “None of us are the sun.” Moskal reminds us that our bodies, our hearts, and our minds are radiant and failing, substantial but never quite decipherable. They might be best understood as living verbs and imagistic metaphors, “neurotic pieces” hanging “marionette-like on nerve strings, on loose raw tendons,” which can become strong and steady – solid as “cinder block,” “fierce and protective,”  “insulated by structure and hope” – when we allow ourselves to exist within the conditions of profound and time-tested love, that of one’s self, one’s friend, one’s partner.

–Heather Lang-Cassera, author of Gathering Broken Light, Clark County, Nevada Poet Laureate Emeritus

 

Charlene Stegman Moskal explores the fraught territory of grief in images both vivid and physical. “There is a hairline crack / in the bone o my heart,” she writes; “my palm is an empty cavity.” She mourns the loss of permanence, “an improbable house sitting in a field of sand.” She knows the moments when the simplest actions become ambushes: “I open a drawer/ and my heart falls into it.” Anyone who has experienced loss – and that is all of us – will find resonance in these poems.

–Deborah L. Fruchey, author of Three Kinds of Dark Editor, Our Lady of Telegraph Avenue: A Tribute o Julia Vinograd

 

These Leavings aren’t castoffs or scraps as much as they are farewells.  In these poems, Charlene Stegman Moskal speaks to that part of us that wonders how to keep going when so much of us – and those we’ve loved – have been left behind.

–Will Everett, Author of We’ll Live Tomorrow NPR Documentarian and Journalist

 

 

 

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Leavings From My Table

by Charlene Stegman Moskal

$14.99, paper

979-8-88838-012-3

This chapbook is intended to share the aftermath that attends the departure of loved ones.  There are poems that speak to memory as well as those that address the immediacy of grief and the affirmation that love is resilient, precious, brave and permanent. I hope that this book of poetry resonates with the readers as it pays tribute and honors those who have left.  In order to heal there must be the acceptance of life, death and love in all its manifestations.

Charlene Stegman Moskal is a Teaching Artist with The Alzheimer’s Poetry Project under the auspices of the Poetry Promise Organization of Las Vegas. She is a visual artist, a performer, a voice for NPR’s Theme and Variations as well as a writer.

Charlene has been published in Humana Obscura, Connecticut River Review, The Pensive Journal, Southwestern American Literature, Dash, TAB and numerous other anthologies, magazines, and online. Her first chapbook is “One Bare Foot”, (Zeitgeist Press, 2018). This chapbook has been written as a memorial to those loved and who have left her life table.

She can be found mostly at home in her studio, or with friends in coffee shops and on Zoom workshops sharing writing and stories.

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