Andino Styles

Artist and Writer

Filtering by Tag: National Poetry Month

Final Writing Artist Posting

Unveiled by Nia Andino

Today is the final day of National Poetry Month and is also Poem in Your Pocket Day! So be sure to carry a poem and share it with someone today.

It has been a wonderful learning experience to discover the art, poetry and backgrounds of so many different creative people. I hope you have enjoyed the experience as much as I did!

For my final post, I couldn’t think of one specific person I wanted to end this series with so I am ending with them ALL. That’s right ladies and gentlemen, this is the remix. I took on the challenge of creating five centos comprised of lines from each of the poems I‘ve posted throughout the month. Hope you enjoy them!

 

Rhythms

I remember

African new moon lying on her back

 

My soul features the beats of yesterday

Of coming old age

Up through the dark excuses

Always belonging to each other

 

When the merchants of language fail to bargain

I will take the sun in my mouth

The shimmering heat

Filled with the milk of mercy

Placing it right on my night stand

Among tamarindo and mango gardens

And God like geometry

And rest

 

 

Hopes

I come from a place where the bottom falls out the way the sun come up

Where your mouth has a thousand reviews

Then words won’t do: they’re words

Whose hopes are so low they are comfortable

 

 

Unspoken

It remains unchanged-

Like hail

In all the corners of my room

A quiet laugh below the thunder

Should it find a voice?

And leave us our bourbon and cigarettes

 

 

 

People

For, wash’d in life’s river

One creation matches another, in essence they are all alike

Since I was introduced to them in the very same manner

 

Reasonings

The time will come

 

That we know what?

 

One day I may not make sense

That, I will not follow you

 

 

 

~ Nia Andino ~

 

 

 

The Writing Artist- Sandra Maria Estevez

Boy With Glass by Sandra Maria Estevez

My writing artist choice for today is Dominican and Boricua poet, producer, teacher and painter Sandra Maria Estevez. She is known as the “Godmother of Nuyorican Poetry” and has authored several poetry collections, spoken word CD’s and plays. Estevez studied at Pratt Institute with majors in Creative Writing, Fine Art, Film and Art Education. Her involvement with the Nuyorican Poets Café in the 1970’s and 1980’s made her one of the few women poets there at the time. She has presented work at the Kennedy Center, The Public Theater and the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. Her poetry has been featured in numerous anthologies including The Afro- Latin@ Reader, History and Culture in the United States, Aloud, Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe and Breaking Ground Anthology of Puerto Rican Women Writers in New York. Estevez continues to give of her talents by teaching creative writing workshops in the New York City area. You can follow her work at www.sandraesteves.com.

Below is her poem titled On the Island Where I Find You

Waterplant by Window by Sandra Maria Estevez

 

On the Island Where I Find You

 

I didn’t think you’d be in Yauco

I began looking on the beaches in Joyuda

Healed myself in the charcos of Aguadilla

Watched waves splashing high against the sea wall

Harvested seaweed treasures in the shallows

Followed crabs into their wet rocky holes

Hoping you would appear somewhere to find me

Waited in the heights of Mayaguez

Toasting intellectual rum and cokes

Among tamarindo and mango gardens

Rushed the long Sunday drive to Boqueron

Plowed through miles of virgin beach

Could feel you in the water embracing my skin

Climbed El Faro’s lighthouse in Rincón

Bought expensive tourist trinkets

But what I really wanted wasn’t on the shelves

Worked my way back up the coast to Aguada

Stopped through island towns along the way

Sat under pana trees in their small plazas

As pitirres jumped across the branches

Ate swordfish cooked like sabroso bistec

Peered into faces driving compac cars

As if I had x-ray vision.

None of them were you

Each journey’s turn building anticipation

Wishing miracles would come true

At night, under canopy of a million starlights

I saw chickens roosting on thick guava branches

Listened to the cricket family symphony

Lull me into precious sleep

And in my dreams I saw you climbing stairs

Sharing stories about campo pueblo mountains

You held my empty hands I kissed your canela face

As you led me home into your house of light.

© Sandra María Esteves

Glass Vase White Flowers by Sandra Maria Estevez

~ Nia Andino ~

Andino Styles © 2016