 Kevin Goodan is the author of four collections of poetry, including Let The Voices.  Currently, he is Associate Professor at Lewis-Clark State College, and on faculty  for the Rainier Writers Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University. Click here to read Sean Thomas Dougherty's review of Let The Voices, featured in this month’s issue of Connotation Press.
Kevin Goodan is the author of four collections of poetry, including Let The Voices.  Currently, he is Associate Professor at Lewis-Clark State College, and on faculty  for the Rainier Writers Workshop at Pacific Lutheran University. Click here to read Sean Thomas Dougherty's review of Let The Voices, featured in this month’s issue of Connotation Press. ---------
 From ANAPHORA: AN ELEGY
 We who have our flourishings
 our little moments of shine
 here, where the roaring is
 the purge of what is granted
 when heat is the translation
 of some common god, when we
 sway grateful for flame
 in the way we yearn to hold
 it all, feel it all, good
 because I am something that will
 burn in the violence of the 
 beginning of tomorrow
 which embers down the home
 we are calling to it is
 November the bright book says
 we belong
 Sway November watertower bright
 where Rosabelle believed 
 fuck Joe Grady fuck your dog
 dead as the Houdini you rode in on
 goodbye Scott goodbye Doug
 How clean it all how sweet it all
 burns in the call-sign Kilo
 where my cousin Jimmy hangs
 yearning for the word: belong
 can’t pick the locks goodbye
 Harry the book the flames bid
 singing fuck singing home
 see my Houdini flies
 Drop-zone November this is Houdini
 believe Joe Grady picks the locks
 that echo tomorrow dog where Jimmy
 belongs god not no watertower flame
 that will burn because we roar
 with violence granted we fuck and hang
 because we are so good I am Charlie 
 I am Rosabelle call-sign Kilo goodbye
 someone cut my cousin down please
 goodbye goodbye cut him the fuck down
 My cousin ain’t no Belle
 I said he’s just a flame
 likes a good rose I said
 Jimmy took out his knife
 cut a hunk of rope said
 you can’t get out of this one
 Houdini someone’s gonna pay
 tomorrow I can feel it good
 well I said beginning to ember
 violence is how we belong
 when we have no home
 quit your roaring he said
 here is where I flourish
 but your cousin is gonna sway
 I need a call-sign says Jimmy
 so you know it’s me trying
 to get in touch I might be
 out of range for a while
 how about Fuck Dog I say
 and he says something official
 like for airplanes and rocketships
 what about Marshall he says
 and I say Jimmy you ain’t never
 going that far this is where
 you and I belong home he says
 making a loop of rope and
 throwing it over a beam here
 he says get up on that chair
 and let’s test this all out
 Some die and some
 want to die those
 are the facts 
 Jimmy says tossing
 the rope from the
 watertower none of 
 us are but a flame
 fuck off says Mary
 God’s on my side
 not if you keep
 screwing those breeds
 says Jimmy shut up
 says Annette you’re 
 half a one Jimmy
 I say which half
 you gonna hang?
 Falling snow begins to shine
 November Jimmy tucked into 
 the ground Joe Grady flame
 I take a selfie at the watertower
 the warning light strobbing
 and I think about god how 
 untranslatable his actions are
 to the yearnings of our
 little moments when we sway
 grateful to feel it all
 tomorrow and when we return to the 
 beginning of our calling
 and remember the flourishings
 and write them in a book
 we say home is what is granted
 and yet I am here 
 in the methed-out ghost-town
 to which our childhoods
 will always belong
	