Hugh Steinberg's poetry has appeared in or is forthcoming in Crowd, VeRT, Volt, Spork, Slope, Fence, No Tell Motel, and Forklift, Ohio. He is the author of two chapbooks, In the Attic of the House of the Dead (Chax Press, 2000) and While the Thunder Lasted I Felt Like God (Light & Dust, 1997). He received an MFA from the University of Arizona and was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University. A recipient of an NEA creative writing fellowship in poetry, Steinberg teaches at the California College of the Arts and is the editor of Freehand, a journal devoted to handwritten work. He lives in Berkeley
in pockets, is nothing in
itself, that asphalt, those letters,
says I remember, it swept through
...
The land is mowed of its names, feel bravery towards unusual things.
A risk for me. Risks are good. Symptoms flare. Get to arch
into your own body deep in its exile. Oh sparrow you say,
...
A nice shirt, drying on the line, describing shadows, cracks; earwigs
curl in the folds. We are dubious the poor will get one flannel waistcoat.
Or birds that hunt from the ground, flying up to capture prey a kind of nostalgia.
...