About the Author
Sharon Charde, a family and marital therapist for the last twenty-four
years, has led writing workshops and weekend retreats for women
in Lakeville, Connecticut, and Block Island, Rhode Island, since
1992. She has taught a weekly creative writing workshop for female
juvenile offenders at Touchstone, a residential treatment facility
in Litchfield, Connecticut. She also has facilitated a monthly
workshop sponsored by the Empowering Young Women Project for local
teenagers and the Touchstone girls and currently does one one with
young women from the Hotchkiss School in Lakeville.
In 2002 she edited and published a chapbook anthology of poetry titled I Am Not A Juvenile Delinquent , and in 2004, a full length edition of that anthology, which won the 2005 Literature PASS Award (Prevention For A Safer Society) given by the National Council on Crime and Delinquency in California.
She has studied with Natalie Goldberg, Sharon Olds, and Brenda
Hillman. Her work has been published in Calyx, A Journal of
Art and Literature for Women, Crosscurrents, Poeticas , The
Women's Studies Quarterly, The White Pelican Review, and Voices
in Italian America. Another poem is published in Proposing
on the Brooklyn Bridge, an anthology on marriage. She was
chosen as a finalist in both the 2001 and 2004 Comstock Review contest,
the Bordighera Poetry Prize for a manuscript by an Italian-American,
and the 2003 Sunken Garden Poetry Competition.
She is mother to two sons and has lived in Lakeville for thirty-five years with her husband, John.
About the Chapbook
There is no artifice in these poems, no extra words, no lies. Reading this book, I felt as if the poet was offering me her most intimate desires and sharing her most profound losses with a wisdom and generosity that moved me deeply. As a nurse, I am used to dealing with death and grief, with hearing the confessions of saints and sinners. I thought I had nothing more to learn, then I read these poems. Sharon Charde is a wise teacher, not ignoring the permanency of grief, the assurance of death, nor the risk of love, yet able to lead us, gently and surely, beyond despair.
–Cortney Davis, author of Leopold's Maneuvers,
winner of the 2003 Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry
Sharon L. Charde's Bad Girl at the Altar Rail speaks
in a voice that is wry and unflinching, sometimes painfully raw.
This book traces the story of a woman's life from girlhood in the
fifties to middle age today. We see her struggling for identity
by rebelling sexually ("I have always lived from between my
legs"), and then coming to terms with being a wife ("Before
we married I was loose sky, you bound me in") and a mother
who must find a way to live with the loss of her son ("I drag
his death after me"), addressing the reader straightforwardly
but with a true writer's skill at shaping experience. These are
poems filled with the pain of loss and the resulting intense emotion
and vulnerability but also poems that create room for the ecstasy
of body and spirit. Through it all, the woman speaker affirms the
girl inside, her youthful passion and longing.
–Mary Crow, Poet Laureate of Colorado, author of I
Have Tasted the Apple
From the Chapbook
The Gift
my baby was dying as it was being born
I didn't listen when death was talking to me he stalked the flowers in my garden filled the ground with seed murmured at the celebrations
not yet not yet
he brought me two baskets
in one, he said, put what is already dying in the other, what is not yet dead
but they're both the same, I said
now I use one basket for what I don't know and the other, for all I have lost
Order the Chapbook
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Discounts:
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20+ copies – 40%
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Flume Press, CSU, Chico
400 W. First Street
Chico, CA 95929-0830
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