Lace Curtain You Drape Over Every Mirror

Valerie Duff

Keep that smilebarbed, the wirethe horse leans against.Birds crack seedson the other side of your glassdoor. The body, blind, curvesits hedge down paths.Time's narrow microscope.A clump of cells, narrow threaderjuking the ground,reverberates.They say it's gone.It's gone.Everyone's handsshifting you gently,no knowingnot knowing (you knowthat now),their silent nods,stonecutter precision,your plea for the tool.

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Valerie Duff’s first book, To the New World, was published by Salmon Poetry (2010) and shortlisted for the 2011 Seamus Heaney First Collection Poetry Prize from Queens University, Belfast. Her second collection, Aquamarine, is also forthcoming from Salmon (2021). Valerie has received grants from the MCC and St Botolph Club Foundation. She’s held fellowships from the VCCA and Writer’s Room of Boston. Her poems have appeared in POETRY, Ploughshares, Mom Egg Review, AGNIThe Common, and elsewhere. She is a freelance writer, a writing coach at Hillside Writing, and a contributing editor to The Critical Flame.

#18

Amherst, Massachusetts

Amherst College

Editor in Chief
Jennifer Acker

Poetry Editor
John Hennessy

Managing Editor
Emily Everett

Finding the extraordinary in the common has long been the mission of literature. Inspired by this mission and the role of the town common, a public gathering place for the display and exchange of ideas, The Common seeks to recapture an old idea. The Common publishes fiction, essays, poetry, documentary vignettes, and images that embody particular times and places both real and imagined; from deserts to teeming ports; from Winnipeg to Beijing; from Earth to the Moon: literature and art powerful enough to reach from there to here. In short, we seek a modern sense of place.

In our hectic and sometimes alienating world, themes of place provoke us to reflect on our situations and both comfort and fascinate us. Sense of place is not provincial nor old fashioned. It is a characteristic of great literature from all ages around the world. It is, simply, the feeling of being transported, of “being there.” The Common fosters regional creative spirit while stitching together a national and international community through publishing literature and art from around the world, bringing readers into a common space.

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