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BIO

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Renee Matheny is a full-time homemaker, wife to Scott, and mother of a busy toddler. She is also a writer, a self-appointed food critic and speaker of three English languages. She is originally from Singapore (where an American grafitti-loving kid got caned). She has her BA(Hons) in English from Liverpool JMU, England, and now lives with her family in the foothills of North Carolina. Since living in the U.S., she has been converted to cheeseburgers and redneck jokes. Her hot buttons are languages, bible translation, home schooling, parenting, Europe, and things literary and edible.

LINKS

The Master's Artist

J. Mark Bertrand

Faith in Fiction

Hearts and Minds Books

Books and Culture
Language
Books

Poems from "the kind of person who will take the last cookie"

Sinners Welcome
by Mary Karr
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I have to share a poem from this collection. I got to hear Mary Karr speak at the Calvin Festival of Faith and Writing, at a session called “Writing and Praying Your Way to Truth”. At first, I had no desire to go, because I thought she must be this super-spiritual writer who only writes in some type of a prayer-trance. It turns out, she was a worse sinner than I ever was. She was brutal, charming, disarming, and almost scary all at the same time. She had us laughing like twits. And she’s beautiful.

If I had done my research, of course, I would have known that she wrote
The Liars’ Club, a raw, dark, funny memoir about her childhood - complete with an alcoholic bohemian artist mom, butcher knives, insanity and rape.

After her session and a recommendation by Brad Fruhauff, Poetry Editor of
Relief Journal, for this collection, I bought it. As an afterword is an essay she wrote at the request of Poetry magazine, “Facing Altars: Poetry and Prayer”. I wanted to copy it and send to everyone I knew.

In case you’re wondering, she does try to write while in a state of prayer, or what she describes as alertness to the movements of the Spirit. Does she do it all the time? No, she says, like she doesn’t floss her teeth every night.


DISGRACELAND

Before my first communion at 40, I clung
to doubt as Satan spider-like stalked
the orb of dark surrounding Eden
for a wormhole into paradise.

God had first formed me in the womb
small as a bite of burger.
Once my lungs were done
He sailed a soul like a lit arrow

to inflame me. Maybe that piercing
made me howl at birth,
or the masked creatures
whose scalpel cut a lightning bolt to free me—

I was hoisted by the heels and swatted, fed
and hauled through rooms. Time-lapse photos show
my fingers grew past crayon outlines,
my feet came to fill spike heels.

Eventually, I lurched out to kiss the wrong mouths,
get stewed, and sulk around. Christ always stood
to one side with a glass of water.
I swatted the sap away.

When my thirst got great enough
to ask, a stream welled up inside;
some jade wave buoyed me forward;
and I found myself upright

in the instant, with a garden
inside my own ribs aflourish. There, the arbor leafs.
The vines push out plump grapes.
You are loved, someone said. Take that

and eat it.