Serving House Journal continues to publish what we deem to be the strongest,
most memorable poems that are submitted to us. In addition, for this issue [#4, Fall 2011]
we solicited “American sentences,” 17-syllable sentences that have the luminous
and epiphanic charm of poetry. Invented by Allen Ginsberg, they are a sort of American
haiku—or perhaps, more accurately, American lowku.
Any 17-syllable sentence that is worth reading and rereading, worth saving and savoring
and showing to friends, is an American sentence we were after for this issue. And now,
we’re pleased to offer you the following delicacies...
Through her new cedar fence comes my neighbor’s harsh voice, scolding the workmen.
Turning my compost, I ignore the perfidy of provosts and deans.
October surprise: a pregnant jogger, shirt hiked, bares her belly-eye.
— Jan Clausen
Six little girls sit on a short brick wall eating egg salad sandwiches.
::
The cabinet hangs open reproachful, while I eat more chocolate.
— Colleen Dawson
Back to school shopping tugs at my guts like the last flume ride of summer.
::
In E.S.L. class where new friends can’t converse, they hold hands, beaming joy.
— J.C. Elkin
At night, cars with one burned out headlight pretend to be motorcycles.
— Ori Fienberg
Summer swimming in the neighbors’ pool while bees guard the honeysuckle.
::
Rustling leaves of our coral tree in night breeze became Freddy Krueger.
::
The trailers lined up in desert dirt were crooked rows of dirty teeth.
::
Grandfather takes his daily meds with Jack, fighting with each god-damned cap.
— Amanda Fuller
No one shot at me,
but everything I had was gone
when I came home.
— Terry Hertzler
I’d follow you if I could, across green air, through our last twenty years.
— Danielle Hunt
The yoga mat grins up, remembering the poses we showed it last night.
— Jen Lagedrost
My lawyer advised me to say nothing further on the Scofield case.
— Jake Oliver
I dropped my heart on the floor, face down, and outlined its corpse with chalk.
— Laura Praytor
When I wake up in the morning I like to congratulate myself.
— Sean T. Randolph
I once became an astronaut in my backyard, among the grass and snails.
— Scott Stewart