Continued from Page 8 “It was such an interesting challenge,” said Carlsen, winner in the college cate- gory, who wrote “Trailers” describing her north Nevada homeland. “How do we get used to feeling pain? How to accept it? “I wrote about those painful feelings as a queer kid in cowboy country,” Carlsen said. “How you get stuck in a place. I’ve made my own way for more than 15 years in the Northwest, but I’ve been shaped by how I grew up. Every time I visit home I swear I’m never coming back, yet all that sun and blue sky, the vast expanse, the amaz- ing quiet. It’s bittersweet. Beautiful. Heart- breaking. The Northwest is soft and com- forting, but no matter how much you love someplace else, home always calls you home.” Ransdell, whose poetry has been fea- tured in the “American Life in Poetry” web series and is the coordinator of the Manza- nita PoetryFest, said it was difficult to fig- ure out what to write that would fit the tradi- tion theme. “I’m an older white woman,” she explained. “What do I have in common with Jericho Brown’s perceptions and back- ground? But as I read his work, he’s so rooted in his own origins. He knows where he comes from. I like poetry when it’s talking about real experience. His poems are so personal, I started thinking about that. My poems are rooted in my own Midwest- ern past.” Ransdell said her poem, “By Way of Introduction” sprung from an exercise during a Manzanita Writers’ Series work- shop with poet Wendy Willis. Rub, the high school winner, isn’t who some people would expect. He spends most of his time on the football field, playing as as quarterback for Astoria High School. “I’ve always been kind of writing poetry, I just didn’t know it,” said Rub. “Even when I was little I had this notebook and I’d write down things that would pop into my head. Nothing deepor even sentences. It wasn’t until last year’s poetry unit in (literature class) that my teacher encouraged me to keep writing poems and I thought, ‘Oh, this is poetry.’ “I don’t know why, but I always had this image of poetry being old fashioned — French men in dim cafes with cigarettes and weird hats,” Rub said. “I didn’t know how modern and universal poetry could be. Once I understood that, I started writing with intent.” When asked about his poem, “tradition, curses,” that has some very dark notes, Rub admits, “Yeah. I read it to my parents and they were, ‘Are you OK? Are you good?’ I was. I am, I feel like definitely I’m OK. The biggest thing is, writing poetry helps me ‘Trailers’ by Elisa Carlsen walk to the back door aluminum, powder coated, hollow open it and look outside — down to a yard of leftovers, corrugated fields, and fixers up to a backyard of stars in velve- teen range and colors that call you home, and hold you to this basin, like you never had a chance. I swear, every time I leave will be the last. I get as far as the rain sometimes. Emily Ransdell is the community winner of The Writer’s Guild of Astoria poetry contest. ‘By Way of Introduction’ by Emily Ransdell my mother calls me Petunia though hers never bloom. I am part empty flower pot, part lead paint. she is thumbed-through, a magazine of do-it-yourself projects left unfinished, a cotton housedress worn unhemmed. she drinks Jack daniels from a juice glass, ashtray on her knees, lawnchair under backyard peach trees in the swelter of summer nights. That’s where she was when her water broke. Four weeks early, drunken bees careening, all the peaches left unpicked. Elisa Carlsen is the college winner of The Writer’s Guide of Astoria poetry contest. open up. It brings up these feelings and then it’s letting them go. It’s a kind of therapy. “What’s critical to this poem is the jump from idea to idea,” added Rub. “I really wanted people to fill in the pieces and make their own sense of it. I like that. That some- times the thoughts aren’t exactly connected. I’ll continue writing poetry and I hope I will never stop.” The three are eagerly anticipating Friday and the opportunity to meet Brown and to read their poems on stage. “I don’t know how to feel,” Carlsen said. “I don’t usually win anything. It’s shocking, I honestly can’t believe it. It might be the coolest thing that may happen. Just to talk to him (Brown). He’s such a beautiful person.” “I just can’t believe it,” said Ransdell. “I’m so thrilled. I can’t think about being in the same room with him.” Rub’s participation, however, may be up in air. He may have to pre-record his read- ing and appear by video. The event could conflict with a football game, so he’s got a pretty big dilemma. “I’m not sure how that’s going to work out,” Rub said. I shoulda named you alberta, she says. all my life I’ve had to hear that. sometimes she calls me sweetie pie. says you can tell a lot about a person by the kind of pie they like. Take you, she said one night, a little juiced. you’re the blackberry type. your perfume alone is praise. you’re what I’d say if I prayed. Thursday, November 4, 2021 // 9