Nearer to Vital Truth
[CORRECTION: The poem originally attributed to T.J. Anderson III in the print edition of the Winter 2023 issue (鈥淲est Fork of the Little鈥) was in fact written by Thorpe Moeckel and attributed to T.J. Anderson III in error. The two poems now included below (鈥渓ive lyre鈥 and 鈥渋nterview鈥) were written by T.J. Anderson III and are from his new book, t/here it is. We regret this error.]
Hollins has long been championed as a creative hub, and perhaps in no category is this better known than in its creative writing. Its online Hollins Authors (糖心传媒.edu/authors) database includes over 1,000 alumnae/i who have had works published across a wide range of topics and categories, with a sizeable portion of those in the areas of fiction and poetry.
Since October 2022, three current and former Hollins professors and one alumna have had books of poetry published, and we highlight a selection from each here in the closing 鈥淐reative Corner鈥 section of this issue. T.J. Anderson III recently published t/here it is in January 2023. Thorpe Moeckel published According to Sand: Poems in October 2022. Professor Emerita Cathryn Hankla 鈥80, M.A. 鈥82 published Immortal Stuff: Prose Poems in February 2023. Annie Woodford 鈥99, M.A. 鈥00 published Where You Come From is Gone: Poems in October 2022.

live lyre
Mr. Woodworth
the toupee
wearing choral
director
warned me
my 鈥減ower to
the people鈥
button was
too incendiary
interview
鈥渁nd you are so
补谤迟颈肠耻濒补迟别鈥
was the ass-end
of a backhanded
compliment dispensed
by a business man
who prided himself
on his ability to discern
my curriculum vitae
鈥擳.J. Anderson III

We Have Come
Through to the Grass
after James Still
All the little calves rising
all the mud all the sarvis berry
wild cherry the valentine tips
of maples and plum all
the lavender of unopened
oak velveting the mountainside
all the morel all the smell
of chicken shit spread on fields
all the suffering stink of it
lay me down beside your dying
my shame is that I wasn鈥檛 there
to hold you keep you clean
conjure lambs and measure
morphine moisten your lips
tell you the story you told me
how your father once
hid a case of moonshine
from the law that was knocking
on your door by tucking jars
all around your mama dog
and her new puppies suckling
on a pile of rags in the basement
and you knelt there tending
them while the men shined
flashlights over your mama鈥檚
canning the inside of her chest
freezer the wardrobe full
of clothes and found nothing
while the puppies whined
and struggled to draw closer
to their mother their eyes
still closed their bellies
still tender from their bitten
umbilical cords knotted blood
you could feel against your palm
as you lifted them to your cheek
their paws scrabbling the air
and they searched blindly
with their perfect snouts
trying to lift their heads
鈥擜nnie Woodford 鈥99, M.A. 鈥00

LITTLE REED CREEK
Here鈥檚 about to, the prepwork,
saprise & seepdrip. Here
is all there
isn鈥檛 to know.
*
Schisms in the soilsphere 鈥
toothwort, violet, cleaver.
*
Early April,
poplar鈥檚 green shiver,
visibility for glades.
*
This ridge Terrapin Mountain,
that one, White Oak Knob 鈥
no morels yet, many ferns still curled.
*
Plungepools & pocketwater 鈥
trillium there, & there, trillium.
*
Don鈥檛 call it work
what the boulders do,
but what they don鈥檛 do, the rest.
*
The punchbowls, the hollows in every hollow.
*
Here is lair, and the waterthrush
at evening piping up,
at morning, too.
*
Still a little bite in the air,
still a little gobbler scratch, & rue.
*
The duff a treatise on parchment,
weather鈥檚 imprint,
notes on the future,
the last next generation all at once.
*
Buckrub & split trunk, a tick in your flanksteak,
deadfall, more deadfall.
If zest, if spritz.
*
That it go on, the hellebore,
the black birch鈥檚 shelf life,
polypore & parasitic burls.
*
Anemone, anemone.
鈥擳horpe Moeckel
first published in Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review

HeLa
Henrietta Lacks was born Loretta Pleasant across the tracks in my
town in 1920. My mother was also born at home in the same
town in 1918 and named Joyce. After being dropped in Clover when
her mother died, Henrietta had to plant and harvest tobacco
until her hands were sticky and stained. Growing up, my mother
spent as much time as possible in the public library, turning
pages of books. In college, she got a summer job there. Joyce and
Henrietta both married in 1941, one couple in April, the other
in June. Henrietta already had two children and would have three
more. Ten years later, Henrietta Lacks died from cervical cancer
in Johns Hopkins hospital the year my mother gave birth to
her first child. Nothing touched the pain Henrietta endured.
Without her knowledge, her cells were harvested and cultured for
medical research. The HeLa immortal cell line is still doubling
and redoubling in test tubes around the world. Both of the
houses where Loretta/Henrietta lived in my town have been torn
down. The houses where my mother lived are still standing.
My mother died in 2016 of old age without any grandchildren.
I asked her to spit into a vial, so I could learn more about
my ancestry. She was skeptical but took the test for me. When her
results came back they revealed mostly what she鈥檇 said, British
Isles. I have no idea where I鈥檓 going with this. There鈥檚 really
no comparison to make between my mother and Henrietta Lacks.