Sunday, October 16, 2022

STELIOS MORMORIS—"BARLEY" (Issue 21)

BARLEY


  Tournedos of barley

    crammed into thick honey 

laced with thyme, stubborn


  in the roof of your mouth

    and how it grows on you, 

after penitent flows of salad 


  of cucumber and olive oil.

    And how its crumble like sand 

reminds you of the 


  arid blanched cliffs

    of the Cyclades of your parents—

A few slippery kernels


  drop back to the paper plate. 

    And it's always the barley, 

nimble as beads


  from a snapped necklace, 

    whose misgivings you scoop 

in your hand under the sermon 


  for the dead at mass, 

    a palmful of religion

you raise your wanting mouth, 


  the barley graced 

    with powdered sugar 

to soften the blow 


  she was dead 

    while we ate in the pew 

together, children again, 


  crying and swallowing

    at the same time, 

while the altar boys 


  presided over a parade 

    of more tins of barley 

from chapel turned kitchen 


  stirring this mixture

    the sugar binding the barley 

brown to white, dirt 


  to dreams, consuming it down

    with red wine slipping 

from the gold spoon 


  along the cheek, worse

    than tears, whose trails

you still follow. 




ABOUT THE POET 


Stelios Mormoris is a resident of Boston and Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts, 
and formerly lived in Paris most of his life, working as an executive in the 
beauty industry. Stelios is currently Chief Executive Officer of Scent Beauty, Inc. 
He studied architecture at Princeton University, where he received his BA, and he 
received his MBA from INSEAD (Institut d’EuropĂ©en d’Administration des 
Affaires) in Fontainebleau, France. He has held positions on the boards of the 
French Cultural Center of Boston, ACT-UP, Historic New England, and The 
Fragrance Foundation. Stelios is also a contemporary artist, specializing in abstract 
oil painting: www.steliosmormoris.com. His interests range from rugby to sailing 
to gardening, while continuing his passion for reading and writing poetry. 
The Oculus is his debut collection of poetry.



ABOUT SUGAR HOUSE REVIEW 

We loved reading the work that we’ve published (clearly), and we want an 
opportunity to better hear our contributors. We're featuring audio recordings of 
poems from our pages, read by the poet. This an open invitation to all contributors 
from any of our issues, we were delighted to print your work, now we’re eager to 
hear it.

Sunday, October 2, 2022

LAURA RUBY—"WHAT TO SAY AFTER A CERTAIN KIND OF MAN BEGS FOR HIS LIFE" (Issue 24)

WHAT TO SAY AFTER A CERTAIN KIND OF MAN BEGS FOR HIS LIFE


“Mantids are sometimes called praying mantids or soothsayers
(Greek, manti = soothsayer) because their forelegs are held in
a supplicatory position resembling prayer. Nearly 2,000 species
have been described.”
 
—Timothy J. Gibb, Contemporary Insect Diagnostics
 
When I tell you you’re a snack I mean
for real. Look at you. You got the motion,
that roll and roll swagger. The way you swivel
your head and track me with those big red eyes—
you see what I’m not: the petal-limbed orchid,
the dancing devil’s flower, hands up. No unicorns
here, either; I’m just like other girls. And I’m not
a leaf or a ghost, I couldn’t hide if I wanted to.
I pray out in the open. I can leap like a cat, adapt

in mid-air. I can tear a hummingbird right out
of the blue, a different kind of honeyeater. Isn’t
that what you came for? You already lost your
head for me, though you’ll tell yourself it’s all
for the thrill, all for the kids. And when I turn
back for that first kiss, you’ll ignore every
warning, even the last: My God, look at you.
Look at what you made me do. 




ABOUT THE POET 


Laura Ruby is primarily a novelist with eleven books published, including 
Bone Gap (Balzer & Bray, HarperCollins, 2015) and Thirteen Doorways, 
Wolves Behind Them All (Balzer & Bray, HarperCollins, 2019), both National 
Book Award Finalists. Her short fiction has appeared in The Florida Review
Pleiades, and Beloit Fiction Journal, among other magazines, and she has 
poetry in Clockhouse Vol. 8 and forthcoming in Poetry Online. Currently, 
Laura teaches writing at Hamline University and is an MFA candidate in 
poetry at Queens University.



ABOUT SUGAR HOUSE REVIEW 

We loved reading the work that we’ve published (clearly), and we want an 
opportunity to better hear our contributors. We're featuring audio recordings of 
poems from our pages, read by the poet. This an open invitation to all contributors 
from any of our issues, we were delighted to print your work, now we’re eager to 
hear it.