Tuscaloosa to Tupelo
poems by Jessica Sampley
ISBN 1-59948-063, 52 pages, $11
**DUE FOR RELEASE MARCH 22, ***Advance Discount Price will be good until March 22 and only applies to online purchases through the Main Street Rag Online Bookstore.***
This manuscript was selected for publication after finishing as a finalist in the 2006 MSR Poetry Book Award.
Samples / Author bio / Comments
Alabama Story
The only story I know
is thick wisteria in my mommas backyard
and honeysuckle blooming beside dirt roads.Leave, but carry these forty acres where you go.
Staying away shouldnt be too hard.
The only story I knowcreeps barefoot then hides between rows
of corn and Tommy-toes with a hand-me-down knife, tarnished
and blunt. Honeysuckle blooms sweeter beside dirt roadsto ease the stinking pastures of cows.
Fifty hay-bales stacked high in the barn.
The only story I know.Here, luck falls too late in desperate hands, and eyes grow
weary from searching past backyards
for honeysuckle blooming beside dirt roads.Mawmaw swore that our ancestors are still here. Their names echo
off these ridges and rivers, so even the dead dont stray too far.
These are the only stories I know,
sweet as honeysuckle blooms beside dirt roads.
Catfish Aspirations
Barefoot, bare-chested, I stood in thick grass
around the edge of our pond while Daddy
strung fresh chicken liver on fishhooks
and cast his line into the middle.Up the hill, I filled a three-pound
barn bucket with fish feed
so Daddy could lure the fish
from their muddy beds.
He told me the catfish sleep
in the deepest darkest water,
burrowed down in the muck.
Daddy, I wish I was a catfish, I said.I wanted to soak in the mud in water so murky
I couldnt see the large-mouth bass
pass an inch in front of my eyes.He baited my hook and let me cast the line out,
the liver flew off mid-flight
and I stood in tangles of fishing line,
thinking of hunkering down there forever,
wanting to be just like him.
Heaven, 1986
My momma would get her babies
and off theyd go to the garden,
feather-legged Miss Cochie,
Miss Dommer with her stripes black and white,
and the blue-egg layer, Miss Banty
Mommas pest control.
They left their chicks to follow her,
begging, pecking her feet
till shed feed them bugs
and worms she found in her harvest
of snap beans and purple-hull peas.Id see them through the kitchen window
and take my cueslipping out the sliding glass door,
full speed to the coop
on my eight-year-old legs.
No moody brood of hens to fly at meflogging, squawking, pulling
plugs of flesh from my legs and arms.
Only yellow, brown, black
fuzzies swarming my boots,
falling, stepping
over each other to get closer.
Id scoop each cheeper
up to my bared teeth
and theyd peck,
chicken kisses.When Id hear Momma
and them babies coming back,
Id hide out and wait,
my fingernails caked with poop.
Shed always find me,
tell me again about the old house place,
her first pet Banty rooster,
then wed walk back to the pen
to watch the mommas flap their wings,
gathering their chicks for the night.
Jessica Sampley was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and grew up in the small town of Arley, in north Alabama. She recently moved back to Alabama after spending several years in Louisiana and North Carolina, where she received her MFA in Creative Writing from North Carolina State University in 2005. She currently teaches English/Language Arts at Carbon Hill High School, where she also coaches basketball and volleyball.
Tuscaloosa to Tupelo is a fine first book of sophisticated lyricism, set in the backroads, farmyards, and swimming holes of Arley, Alabama, and haunted by its family ghosts. Even in her apparently effortless villanelles and sestinas, Sampley remains true to the speech and the heart of the place.
John Balaban
Jessica Sampley knows how to put words together so they become invisible, and rural Alabama rises everywhere. These are poems to, for and about others. The senses are the key. Love is the door. Rich in narrative pleasures, informed by a lyric sensibility and guided by verbal mastery, Sampleys Tuscaloosa to Tupelo offers voices from the lost past and disappearing present to carry us into the timeless world of now.
Tom Lisk