Tuesday, April 22, 2025

I’m From Chicago Poet Asserts Elizabeth Marino—National Poetry Month 2025

 

Elizabeth Marino.

Elizabeth Marino may have been born into a Puerto Rican family in Chicago but the circumstances of her unique childhood and upbringing made her more creature of her city than an ethnic. Chicago was and is a town where neighborhoods can be little realms of their own and where travel between them often seems like it should require passports and stamped visas. A keen memoirist, she recalls that world and as an adult dared to adventure even wider while honoring her roots. 
 
Marino was born to a Puerto Rican couple in Chicago’s old Hyde Park barrio and was raised in an Italian/German American family in the southwest Chicago suburbs, famed for musicians and gangsters. She holds a Master of Art from the University of Illinois at Chicagos Writers Program and a BA from Barat College in addition to studying English literature and history at Oxford University. She works as an itinerant adjunct instructor of English at various Chicago area colleges preferring to stay in the city than pursue possibly more secure employment elsewhere. 
 
She is also an actor/director, working under her stage—and birth name, Micaela Mastierra. She published her first poem at the age of fifteen in the Illinois English Bulletin. Marino’s poetry has appeared in the anthologies Between the Heart and the Land/Entre el corezon y la tierra: Latina Poets in the Midwest published by MARCH/Abrazo Press in 2001, Breaking Mirrors/Raw Images by 4:30 Poets and College Poetry Review, and Dark Waters Speaking from La Onda Negra Press. Non-verse and Non-fiction anthology collections include Building Socialism. Magazine publications include Moon Journal, After Hours, Strong Coffee, Nit & Wit, Envisage in the United Kingdom, and the NAB Gallery Pamphlet Series she also has appeared on the spoken word CD Elements of Life, Love & Action with the improve troupe She Laughs. She has published creative non-fiction, interviews, and articles in The Chicago Journal and S.H.E. Her collections include the chapbooks Debris: Poems and Memoir issued by The Puddin’head Press in 2011 and Ceremonies from dancing girl press in 2016. Her full-length collection Asylum was published by Vagabond in 2020. 
 
 
                                      Many of Marino's Chicago memoir poems appeared in the chapbook Debris: Poems and Memoir
 
Where Are You From? 
 
I am a poet from Chicago. 
If music can be carried place to place 
and one constantly moves, it’s hard 
to hold what is needed. Objects drop 
from my hands. I am from the Americas. 
You say you have people here? 
 
Home to home, each time something 
 is lost and almost replaced. A drumbeat continues. 
Things gathered up and held to the bosom 
slip through fingers as you set down 
objects. Everything does fall away 
in spite of holding tight and a long reach. 
 
Music can be carried place to place 
a melody holding a footfall, a half- 
remembered lyric re-asserts itself 
differently each time. Learn to mix 
adobo at home. A drumbeat continues. 
You say you have people here? 
 
Music can be carried place to place 
Yellow shock of forsythia bush 
irrupts in front of the red brick two-flat. 
A cobblestone stamped Illinois Brick 
under your feet. I am from the Americas. 
 
Music can be carried place to place 
a last full blossom on the peony bush 
the blink of spring, the shock 
of stillness on the edge of Eternity 
that carousel, the turning called a revolution 
of the lost musical cake server. 
 
 —Elizabeth Marino  


A '47 Harley like Marino's father had. 

My Father’s Last Harley 
 
 A yellow photo curls in my hand: 
my dad, 
leaning against his ’47 Harley 
muscular arms across white T-shirt
 brass Golden Gloves belt buckle 
catches the sun 
crossed ankles and sharp grey pants--
no trace of Interstate mud at 17 
or Army drab—trousers nearly fit 
for a married man. 
 
I’d remembered him as always looking for his red truck. 
His shadow, I’d walk endless used car lots with him 
and witness his haggling with salesmen. Always, the 
perfect red pickup would be just on the next lot, 
further north or south on Western Avenue. 
 
“Don’t you never volunteer for nothin’,” he’d say 
Ex Cathedra, rising from in front of the TV 
and shuffling off toward the bedroom; and I, at 16, would walk 
all 30 miles of the Hunger Hike. After: 
“That’s one tough kid I’ve got.” 
 
 He didn’t say much 
when I left the South Side for the North Shore—but that winter 
when he saw Tevye wave 
his eldest daughter off to Siberian exile, 
Mom said he cried in his popcorn. 
 
 —Elizabeth Marino 
A Cal-Sag barge tow at Blue Island.  Marino and friends waved to the bargemen from the shore. 
East of Ashland 
 
There, just east of Ashland 
with its potholes, busted Budweiser bottles, 
rusted stop signs, and Augie’s two-pump gas station, 
I lead the caravan of bicycles 
down towards the docks of the Calumet-
Saginaw Canal. We stopped, and mapped out 
other journeys for ourselves. 
 
We named them angels—those bargemen 
who waved and kept going. 
We each kept one eye cocked, 
meaning to leave Blue Island far behind. 
 
We lived further west than Ashland, 
among the south bank of the Canal— 
where our teacher said 
you could still find Indian arrowheads— 
but east of Gypsy Town and the trailer park 
lit up like a dime store Bethlehem by Clark Refinery. 
 
Cheryl headed out first, and went south--
Southern Illinois University—and I trailed her overland 
to visit, no seats on an overbooked “City of New Orleans.” 
Her college friends gathered, showed us 
the rock formations of Granite City National Park 
the white and green river town of Cape Girardeau. 
 
 Both of us really weren’t surprised by the sites;
 we’d always known they’d be there 
when we’d dreamed on the banks of the Cal-Sag Canal 
\down there, east of Ashland. 
 
Elizabeth Marino

3 comments:

  1. Although I'm from Chicago, I'm now in Seattle. I miss my former haunts and friends in the Windy City. Thanks for this!

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  2. Thank you for your interest, Patrick. I had to smile a bit at "not an ethnic," as what does that even mean? It is indeed from a position of privilege to get to name what is or is what isn't in terms of color and class, rather than respecting self-representation.

    It should be noted that the bulk of this was sourced from two published older pieces. One was an April 2002 introduction to a chapter in his Book of Voices project by Kurt Eric Heintz (https://voices.e-poets.net/MarinoE/).

    The other was an interview by Lisa Alvarado in the Chicano/a blog LaBloga posted August 26, 2017. https://labloga.blogspot.com/2017/08/elizabeth-marino-poetry-and-poet.html.

    Writers often mine their origin stories; adoptees have additional layers. Meeting my birth mother in July 2019, and hearing her experience as a single professional mixed Black mother of a premature infant on the South Side, two weeks before the Emmitt Till funeral, (and who confirmed my father's birthplace in Puerto Rico), certainly firmly places me as a Chicago writer.

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  3. Wow. As the La Bloga editor that did the piece on Liz, I'm stunned at the lack of attribution. Who needs AI to scrape, when the blogosphere is full of these "thoughtful" pieces? Also, referring to Liz as an "itinerant" scholar and educator, clearly reflects a lack of understanding of what it means to be a WOC, working-class, intersectional educator.

    Liz isn't asserting her roots, her identity. She fully occupies her space, her vision, her educational commitment.


    Hit me up at http://lisaalvarado.net is you need more schooling or lack s rate material.

    ReplyDelete