Showing posts with label Shanna Germain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shanna Germain. Show all posts

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Kindle by Shanna Germain



Kindle


This is the story you like best of all:
How, my first year of fighting fires found me
naked in the bunk, Nick with one finger

against thigh, one at nipple. Station silent,
only tip of pipe into skin. Nick’s thrusts
a thing I might like if I didn’t fight fires.

In that silence—sirens—saved by the bell,
skins slipped separate, zippers zipped up,
Nick spit, “fuck!” to remind himself of where

we almost were. Me, I didn’t care where
we were, only where we were going
in that long red truck. At eighteen, flames

were finer than fucking. On scene, house burning
down to bone. I humped hose up stairs, gear heavy
as a body, breath hot kisses against the mask.

Hands and knees stigmata warm against wood,
sheets of heat torched derma to flush, flamed something
deep in the structure of center. At eighteen,

I could extinguish. Now I know how to ignite.
Fire tetrahedron of the senses:
oxygen, heat, fuel, chemical reaction.

Anything will learn to burn given
air and time and flammable liquid.
Now, you like the way I light thin wick

of candles before you come, watch when I strike
fingers to match your kindle. This sizzle
is true as it gets with you. Here is my secret:

It is better without you. Me on my knees,
one hand to center, one to candle, press and press,
heat and heat, and the burn the burn this burn.

© 2007 Shanna Germain 
previously published in Coming Together: Under Fire

____________________


1) What first sparked this poem?

I was a volunteer firefighter when I was in college, and I fell in love (and in lust) with the adrenaline, the excitement, the heat that came with fighting fires. I was barely 18, I was really just discovering my sexuality, and I was surrounded by all these fit, energetic men -- and yet, it was the fire that appealed more than any of them. I wanted to explore that idea, of what we find arousing and why. 

2) Tell us about this poem's life.

Typically, I write poems in one sitting and then go back and revise them once or twice. This poem, however, took forever for me to mold and shape. I started it when I was still fighting fires -- I knew what I wanted to touch on, but I didn't know how I wanted to say it. So I put it away. I just happened to find it about ten years later, long after I'd moved onto other things, which allowed the narrator to look back, just as I was doing so.

3) How long did it take to go from inspiration to published?

As soon as I finished it, and got the ending the way I liked it, I sent it out to Coming Together: Under Fire, an erotic anthology that donates all the proceeds to charity and it was accepted right away. Which, I have to admit, is typical for me when it comes to poetry. Usually poems get accepted on the first go-round or else it takes about six submissions before I get a yes. 

4) Are you satisfied with the poem?

Well, I'm not sure I'm ever satisfied with a poem, but I am mostly with this one. It has the sensuality that I was aiming for, some elements of firefighting, as well as an exploration of growing as a young, sexual woman.

5) What in particular do you, the poet, like about this poem and why?

I like the way it became a story told to someone else, presumably a current boyfriend, and how the narrator tells much, but not all of her secrets. I'm a fan of the way she reveals the information at the end. I worked with the sounds here too, using a lot of 's' sounds to simulate the hiss of smoke and skin, and other sounds to emulate the crackle of fire and wood. 


Shanna Germain is a leximaven and wanderluster. When she's not writing, she can be found traveling the world. Visit her at http://yearofthebooks.wordpress.com/ and at http://chptr37.wordpress.com/