Louis Faber
Fruited Plains
As I was cutting up our breakfast
fruit this morning, the name Lynette
"Squeaky" Fromme came to mind.
I would have thought it would be
Cesar Chavez, given half the fruit
was from California, and I had no thought
of Gerald Ford or any Republican President,
never before at least one full cup of coffee
and generally not even then, but there she was.
There was no reason for it, nothing squeaked,
I hadn’t seen the new movie loosely
about Charles Manson, and I couldn’t
picture her face, which is just as well,
but there her name was and I have spent
the better part of the day musing on why,
in what is already an upside-down world,
a world where we have as much to fear
from our leaders as our enemies, and
it is ever harder to tell which is who,
yet she came to mind, and I have to conclude,
before the whole day is wasted in the effort,
that it had something to do with mangoes.
Louis Faber's work has previously appeared in South Shore Review (Canada), The Poet, Glimpse, Dreich (Scotland), The Alchemy Spoon (UK), Atlanta Review, Arena Magazine (Australia), Exquisite Corpse, Rattle, Eureka Literary Magazine, Borderlands: the Texas Poetry Review, Midnight Mind, Pearl, Midstream, European Judaism, Greens Magazine, The Amethyst Review, Afterthoughts, The South Carolina Review, and Worcester Review, and in small journals in India, Wales, Ireland, Pakistan, China and Japan, among many others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. He lives with his wife and their cat in Port St. Lucie, Florida.