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All Sins Forgiven
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01 March 2014

"Coe writes about his parents with warmth, insight, and grace . . . with celebration as well as regret. A collection that captures the tenderness and intimacy within the black family. His words construct a path from the innocence of childhood into the winter of aging. His book will outlive much of the poetry being written today."E. Ethelbert Miller
No relationship is more personal, yet universal, than that of parent and child. These richly detailed poems connect readers with their own experiences in that most fundamental of relationships, and are poignant reminders that the lives of those closest to us sometimes offer the deepest mysteries.
"domesticity"
pampered little girl
no crystal ball to warn you
of dirty laundry mountains.
From "How My Father Learned to Cook":
Because of the tomatoes in a neighbor's garden,
my father learned to cook. Because of late summer
home-grown Indiana tomatoes, drooping on the vine
my father learned to cook. Imagine him at twelve leaning
over the fence of the neighbor's garden curious but shy,
and the neighbor pointing to the open gate.
Imagine father digging in the soil, caught in the rhythm
of the gardener's dance
and later handing his surprised mother
the overstuffed paper bag.
A pretty story, but it never happened; here's what did:
Charles Coe's poetry and prose have appeared in numerous newspapers and magazines, and his poems have been set to music by composers Julia Carey, Beth Denisch, and Robert Moran. Coe also writes feature articles, book reviews, and interviews for Harvard Magazine, Northeastern University Law Review, and the Boston Phoenix. He is also a jazz vocalist, performing and recording throughout New England.
DNA
PART I
Evidence
A Meeting of Minds
A Symphony of Crickets
How My Father Learned to Cook
Five Haiku for My Father's Pot Roast
Day Labor
Steel
Sleep Cycles
domesticity
Riverside Park
Joan of Arc
No Return Policy
Comic Relief
Fort Bliss; El Paso, Texas; August 1951
Marksmanship
My Mother Cut My Hair
PART II
My Parents Never Saw the Ocean
Change of Menu
St. Christopher
Colossus
Second Mortgage
End Game
For the Young Surgeon Who Told My Mother
She Needed a Triple Bypass
Open Water
The Art of Conversation
Doppler Effect
Speaking in Tongues
drift
PART III
Requiem for Edith
The Things I Kept: My Mother’s Change Purse
This Little Grey House
Taking Down the Tree
Teaching My Imaginary Son to Fish
What He Left Behind
The Things I Kept: My Father’s Ash Tray
i am learning that absence
The Things I Kept: Droopy the Doggy Bank
The Geology of Grief
Dream
The Things I Kept: The Black Angel
A Poem for Happy Endings
All Sins Forgiven
Postscript
Christmas Night, 1957