KENNETH
NORMAN COOK
SHOULD HAVE BEEN
(Never Could Be)
The stale dry cake
starts to crumble,
the stiff plastic figures
on top leaning apart in
mute symbolism, while
the dusty white dress
begins to yellow
and droop as it
hangs in the closet
in silent mockery.
The lines on her long
sad face grow deeper
with the passing years
as she sits in the dark,
still parlor alone,
her eyes locked on
the empty photo album
and her mind trapped
in a place that should
have been, as she
continues reliving the
fantasy she’s created,
dwelling always in a world
that never could be.
~ Kenneth Norman Cook
ICE STORM
[Bangor, Maine - January, 1998)
Paralyzed city
The aftermath of the winter
devastation
vibrates through the crippled homes
and businesses,
over the ice-covered streets and
across the frozen river.
The angry white holocaust has
withdrawn its icy teeth
from the fragile, helpless town,
leaving an eerie silence in its
freezing wake.
The demon-storm arrived with a
crystalline scream,
hurling sheets of wet, infusing,
glassy shards of deadliness.
Now the re-emergent sun has created
a rainbow wonderland
of sparkling, eye-shocking,
ice-encrusted beauty:
a fairyland of deceptive, dazzling
death.
Paralyzed city
Now begins the recovery.
~ Kenneth Norman Cook
WOMAN
She shouts
into the darkness
and watches
as it dwindles
to dull
silent shadows.
She cries
into the fire
and feels
it morph
into a warm
pool of sunshine.
She marches
into the storm
and the rain
sings a melody
of her beauty
while the thunder
and lightning
crackle and explode
in a terrifying
anthem to
her endurance
and her strength.
KENNETH
NORMAN COOK
KENNETH
NORMAN COOK
is an American, born in the United States and raised in California in the
1960s. (English is his native language.) It was there in Southern California,
in grade school that he began to fall in love with words, through a sixth grade
English assignment to write a poem about Halloween. His entry was selected to
be published in the school newsletter and that started him on a lifetime
sojourn through the creative world known as poetry. After living away for many
years, Kenneth is back in California, where he continues to write daily. He is
a regular contributor to several magazines, including Wildfire Publications
Monthly Magazine, where he is a co-contributor for a section on tips for
writers. He has been featured in numerous poetry anthologies and has released a
newly revised edition of his poetry collection, Shadow Walk With Me. He is also
the author of a second book, This Side of Nothing, a third: a collection of
haiku and senryu poetry, titled Theater of the Absurd, and a fourth: From Dark
Corners and Dusty attics, which is a combination of older poems, both
previously published, as well as published for the first time. Kenneth has a
fifth book, featuring erotic poetry and limericks, due to be published this
coming summer (2018).
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