Andrea Cohen, The Sorrow Apartments

Sheila Margaret Motton Book Prize Honorable Mention, selected by the NEPC Board

Andrea Cohen is the author of eight poetry collections, including, most recently, The Sorrow Apartments.Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Review of Books, The Threepenny Review, The Atlantic, and elsewhere. The recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and several fellowships at MacDowell, she directs the Blacksmith House Poetry Series and currently teaches at Boston University.

Selections from The Sorrow Apartments

Springfield
 
Get a room, the dude in the blue Camaro yells.
He’s made of rage and tinted glass, and we’re
made of desire and what if and what I want
to say is, Dude, we have a room, but we
got hungry. Every three days we have to eat
or get mimosas or get yelled at by you. Get
a room, he yells again, maybe because he thinks
we’re hard of hearing, or because it pains
him to see our affection. Maybe he thinks:
what a waste––two women who could have
loved him instead. Instead, we get sandwiches to
go and go back to the room we call our room, which
could be in any motel near any off-ramp in any
Springfield, with its anonymous white walls and towels,
with the empty drawers you love, and the flat-screen
TV that seems to keep getting bigger and flatter.
And since we’re taking inventory, let’s don’t
forget the bedside Bible and the red pen
tucked inside, as if we might be inspired to
make corrections. And come to think of it, I would
like to make some changes in how things turn
out, how they turn on a dime, or over time
crumble. Instead, I listen to you read aloud
from the pamphlets you found in the lobby.
Fun fact: basketball was invented in Springfield, Mass.,
as was vulcanized rubber.  The man who wrote
“The Cat in the Hat” was born here, and perhaps
most importantly, this is the birthplace
of interchangeable parts––or at least where
they first caught on. Think assembly
lines, think mass production. I’m thinking
about the fun fact of you, about how
much I love origin myths, about how people
aren’t things. We can’t be vulcanized, we
can’t, like faulty chains, be replaced. And  
I'm thinking about that guy in the Camaro,  
how what really drives him is loneliness,   
how we see iterations of him in all
the Springfields we find ourselves in,
because that’s your fantasy: you and me
in every Springfield in America, in Nebraska
and Ohio and North Dakota, in townships
in Jersey and Michigan, always in a motel
bar, pretending we’ve never met. And
after a while, after Idaho and Maine, 
after Springfields in Kentucky and East 
Texas, the myth rings true: it's old hat, old 
cat in the hat: the white walls and small 
bars of soap, the falling asleep in the middle
of a life, the waking to one place named
for another––not a fun fact exactly, 
just what the Russian novelist not 
immune to Springfields knew 
about unhappiness
 

Refusal to Mourn

 
In lieu of
flowers, send
him back.
 

Something

Something went wrong.
That’s what the machine
says when I call to say
my paper didn’t arrive.
Machines are trained
by people, so they’re
smart, they know a thing
or fifty trillion. Did you miss 
your Sunday delivery?
it asks. I did, I say. I 
miss everything, I say,
because it’s a machine and
it has to listen, or at least
it has to not hang up
without trying to understand
why I called, which means
trying to correct what
went wrong. Let me
see if I got this right,
the voice says, you missed 
your Sunday paper? 
Yes, I say, but also 
I miss my childhood 
and fairy tales, 
like Eden. I miss 
sweet Rob Roys 
with strangers, 
I miss fabric 
softener, and soft 
lighting. I’m sorry, 
the machine says. I’m
 having trouble understanding.
Did you miss today’s paper?
Yes, I say, but that’s not
the half of it. Sometimes 
I just feel like half
of me, and even that 
feels like too much. I’m
having trouble understanding,
the machine repeats, its
syllables halted, as if 
trying to mimic an empath.
I’m having trouble understanding
too, I say. I used to understand
so much: photosynthesis, the
human heart, I’d even 
memorized the Krebs cycle, 
but now all I remember 
is lifting the golden coil
of the kitchen phone to maneuver
under my mother’s conversations.
It was like lifting 
the horizon. There’s
a silence, and the machine
asks: Are you still there? In
a few words, please describe
your issue. Where do I begin
being a minimalist? Time,
I say, I’ve got a problem
with that. Also, loss, and
attachment. That’s pretty
much it, and the news in its sky-
blue sleeve is meant to be
a distraction, isn’t it? I ask.
More silence, and then:
You miss your mother?
a voice asks. It’s
a human voice.
Me too, she says.