• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Writers of Kern

Everything Writers Need | Writers of Kern

  • About Us
    • History
    • Membership
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Officers & Chairs
    • Overview
  • Upcoming Events
  • Jump In
    • Attend a Workshop
    • Become a Member
    • Get the Guide: The Best Places to Write in Bakersfield
    • See Upcoming Events
    • Submit a Speaker Proposal
  • Blog
  • Members
    • Books by Members
    • Join a Critique Group
    • Pay Dues
    • Request a Sunshine Card
  • Become a Member
  • WOK Press
  • Contact
    • Stay Connected
  • Donate
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Poetry

15 April 2019 | National Poetry Month WebPoetrySlam

April 15, 2019 By Annis Cassells

ALONE  ~  TOGETHER
 
Here we are, together  ~  alone…
Sitting at opposite sides of the room.
You, head in hand, on the rocking chair;
Me, wondering how to reach you there.
Or wondering whether I should.
Or should I just leave you alone?
 
All I can hear is the cuckoo clock
Beating a steady pace: “TICK  ~  TOCK,”
Keeping time with the kitchen clock:
A nervous “tic-tic-tic-tic-tic”  ~  STOP!!
 
This deafening silence  ~  I could scream!
I just want to call out your name,
Or say something just to reach you.
But I wonder if you want me to.
And I don’t even know what I’d say
That could really matter anyway.
And I honestly wonder whether
We know what we’re doing here
                                               
Alone  ~  together…

~ Shelley Evans

Named after poet Percy Shelley, nature inspires Shelley Evans; several poems are published, and she’ll publish a book soon. Shelley’s a wife, mother, secretary, WOK member, participates in open mic nights at Dagnys, CSUB’s poetry readings, and has entered poetry in the Kern County Fair. Rhyming is breathing to Shelley.

14 April 2019 | National Poetry Month WebPoetrySlam

April 14, 2019 By Annis Cassells

En Passant
            For papa
 
In passing, I shift my own weight
Adjust my eyes to shadow.
Defiant against rule.
How long before we get caught in our minds                 
My dad would say each part of life
Is equating to profit and loss
Hands spinning & weaving web through a city
Overtaken by terror of commitment or the self.
 
I refuse dictators & false commitments
I keep the structure of myself, gazing
& grazing weapons of my identity
trying to adhere to certain standards, but those don’t make me
I am immune in the transgression, immune to whoever
Forsakes this city we’ve built.
 
I see new light flooding memories, blind
I want to appreciate pieces of life, savor it
Attune every thought to darkness.
 
~ Shawn Anto

Shawn Anto is from Delano, California. He’s originally from Kerala, India. He currently studies at Cal State Bakersfield looking to receive his B.A. in English & Theatre. He was last seen on stage in Dreamers: Aqui y Alla. Past theatre credits include The Profane, “Gasoline”, and SubUrbia. His writing has been featured or are forthcoming in Reed Magazine, O:JA&L, Genre: Urban Arts, Mojave Heart Review, and elsewhere. He currently lives in Bakersfield with his mini-rex rabbit, Elio.

13 April 2019 | National Poetry Month WebPoetrySlam

April 13, 2019 By Annis Cassells

The Broken Girl
 
The broken girl
Has the perfect smile
She warms your heart
So you stay awhile
 
The laughs and the grins
Hide the searing pain
The jokes and the jests
Mask the falling rain
 
The broken girl
Seems brave and strong
But self-hate and shame
Haunt her shattered song
 
Sorrow swims beneath
The gloomy night sky
The waves of darkness
You can see, but deny
 
The broken girl
Has nothing left inside
But superficial joy
That shines on the outside
 
When suffering wins
The affliction overcomes
Her life she finally ends
And death she becomes
 
The broken girl
Conveys a dejected tale
She may chuckle and beam
But her soul is in hell
 
Though she smiled and grinned
Inside she’s broken
Though she laughed out loud
Her pain wasn’t spoken.
 
~ Donnée Harris

Donnée Harris is a reporter turned novelist. She owns First Draft Publishing, a self-publishing consultation company. She writes Erotic Romance and has published six books. She writes while she takes care of her three daughters. She has a BA in Journalism and is currently Vice President of Writers of Kern.

12 April 2019 | National Poetry Month WebPoetrySlam

April 12, 2019 By Annis Cassells

Eclipse
 
This eclipse was a slow concealing
Of the light of the moon.
Gradual but deliberate,
It darkened the night sky.
 
I suppose the eclipse of the human happens
With the same gradual intentionality.
I wonder if the sky thought it had ended too,
When the light went out, leaving only blackness.
 
I wonder if it kept checking,
Looking for the moon in the place
Where she once shined; not finding her,
Pondering what happened.
 
Even the clouds rushed the skies for their
Nightly game of peek-a-boo with the moon’s light.
Unable to find her hidden glow, the clouds
Were reduced to indistinguishable obscurity.
 
As slowly as she disappeared, though,
The moon peered ever so slightly
From behind the shroud. As deliberately
As Earth’s shadow hid her Luna,
 
She gently shifted, graciously exposing
A sliver of moonlight. The slice of brilliance
Gradually widening revealed a radiance brighter
Than the nighttime remembered.
 
Just as there are darker darks than the night sky ever
Knew before the eclipse, there are also brighter lights
Before unseen, eager to be revealed, silently beckoning us
To hold on through our darkest moments.


~ Pam Reeves

Pam Reeves, an active member of Writers of Kern (WoK), writes memoir and non-fiction and dabbles at poetry. She has been published in The Edge Holistic magazine and WoK’s 2018 Anthology, Reaching for the Sky. You can reach her at [email protected].

11 April 2019 | National Poetry Month WebPoetrySlam

April 11, 2019 By Annis Cassells

Nostalgia
 
 
I shimmied into threadbare denim
worn soft as a lady’s hanky
And a red shirt embroidered with fish
that once belonged to Kay
the one her daughters gave me, after she died
I wrapped myself in the pashmina
Lynne brought me years ago, before she moved
I scrambled two eggs in butter
like my mama always did
ate from her delicate porcelain plate,
a gift  from me one Mother’s Day
When nostalgia calls, I surrender.

~ Annis Cassells

Annis Cassells is a poet, blogger, teacher, life coach, and a member of Writers of Kern. Her work has been published in professional journals, hobbyist magazines, and local publications. She’s had stories and poems published in online and print journals and magazines. “Nostalgia” was published her first book of poems, You Can’t Have It All, 2019.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 21
  • Page 22
  • Page 23
  • Page 24
  • Page 25
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 44
  • Go to Next Page »

Copyright © 2025 · Writers of Kern · Website by Hypist

  • Advertise
  • Submissions
  • Speakers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Policies & Procedures
  • Contact