Jonathan Cooper's poems and essays have appeared in various publications including New Plains Review, Houseboat Literary Magazine, Tower Journal, The Statesman Journal, and The Commonline Journal. Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, he studied in Oregon and Toronto, and now lives Vancouver, BC.
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Jonathan Cooper |
Community Garden
Someone cuts the grass,places chairs here and
there, wheelbarrows,
hoses, shovels, neatly
stacked in the lockless
shed. On the way here
he passed a meth-
addled teen sprawled
in fetid doorway sleep,
and flicking through his
phone, saw that last night
a refugee boat filled
with children flipped
over in the Med. And
this morning—every morning—
no cigarette butts or broken
bottles between the neatly
boxed flower beds. As the
sun nudges over the apartment
buildings, he reclines on a
weathered Adirondack, feels the
pages of his journal between
his fingers, the blades of grass
between his bare toes.
Forest Grove
A mile outside Forest Grove, our cars idled next to a wheatfield. The RV in front switched off its engine, and its
grey t-shirted owners set up beach chairs on the gravel
shoulder. No cars came the other way. I stretched my arm
out the window, rolled my hand back and forth in the sun. As
the breeze rustled the stalks, something caught my eye—twenty
yards off, a fireman in long coat and helmet waded noiselessly
through the knee-high wheat. Suddenly, the RV owners were
hustling their bright beach chairs, and we began to roll forward.
We passed a police car, an ambulance, a pickup truck flipped-
over, cab flattened into the field. The alluvium of glass pebbles
spread to the edge of the road, and two bald thoughts stepped
into my mind: It is a beautiful day. And I am still alive.
June playground
Quick footsteps, deathless shouts, on thebridge between
full green trees. Nearby, my daughter
spades the sand,
I recline, feel the sun on my knees. As I
inhale early summer
filtered through shadowed boughs, I fail
not to notice
that even in June, some leaves turn from
green to brown.
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