THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK
   PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
   Copyright © 2011 by Middlemarsh, Inc.
   All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and in Canada by Random House of Canada, Limited, Toronto.
   www.aaknopf.com
   Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
   Most of the poems in this collection originally appeared in the following works:
   Stone, Paper, Knife, copyright © 1983 by Marge Piercy (Alfred A. Knopf)
   My Mother’s Body, copyright © 1985 by Marge Piercy (Alfred A. Knopf)
   Available Light, copyright © 1988 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   Mars and Her Children, copyright © 1992 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   What Are Big Girls Made Of?, copyright © 1997 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   Early Grrrl, copyright © 1999 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (The Leapfrog Press)
   The Art of Blessing the Day, copyright © 1999 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   Colors Passing Through Us, copyright © 2003 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   The Crooked Inheritance, copyright © 2006 by Middlemarsh, Inc. (Alfred A. Knopf)
   Some new poems in this collection were previously published in the following periodicals: Blue Fifth, Fifth Wednesday, 5 AM, Basalt, Poesis, The Arava Review, Rattle, Tryst, Midstream, Jewish Women’s Literary Annual, Ibbetson Street Magazine, and Contemporary World Literature.
   Library of Congress Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
   Piercy, Marge.
   The hunger moon : new and selected poems, 1980–2010 / by Marge Piercy.—1st ed.
   p. cm.
   eISBN: 978-0-307-59981-0
   I. Title.
   PS 3566.I4H86 2011
   811′.54—dc22 2010030987
   Cover photograph by Oliver Wasow/Gallery Stock
   Cover design by Abby Weintraub
   v3.1_r1
   For Ira aka Woody because of his love,
   his help and his willingness to put his shoulder to the great wheel
   CONTENTS
   Cover
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Dedication
   Introduction
   from STONE, PAPER, KNIFE
   A key to common lethal fungi
   The common living dirt
   Toad dreams
   Down at the bottom of things
   A story wet as tears
   Absolute zero in the brain
   Eating my tail
   It breaks
   What’s that smell in the kitchen?
   The weight
   Very late July
   Mornings in various years
   Digging in
   The working writer
   The back pockets of love
   Snow, snow
   In which she begs (like everybody else) that love may last
   Let us gather at the river
   Ashes, ashes, all fall down
   from MY MOTHER’S BODY
   Putting the good things away
   They inhabit me
   Unbuttoning
   Out of the rubbish
   My mother’s body
   How grey, how wet, how cold
   Taking a hot bath
   Sleeping with cats
   The place where everything changed
   The chuppah
   House built of breath
   Nailing up the mezuzah
   The faithless
   And whose creature am I?
   Magic mama
   Does the light fail us, or do we fail the light?
   from AVAILABLE LIGHT
   Available light
   Joy Road and Livernois
   Daughter of the African evolution
   The answer to all problems
   After the corn moon
   Perfect weather
   Moon of the mother turtle
   Baboons in the perennial bed
   Something to look forward to
   Litter
   The bottom line
   Morning love song
   Implications of one plus one
   Sun-day poacher
   Burial by salt
   Eat fruit
   Dead Waters
   The housing project at Drancy
   Black Mountain
   The ram’s horn sounding
   from MARS AND HER CHILDREN
   The ark of consequence
   The ex in the supermarket
   Your eyes recall old fantasies
   Getting it back
   How the full moon wakes you
   The cat’s song
   The hunger moon
   For Mars and her children returning in March
   Sexual selection among birds
   Shad blow
   Report of the 14th Subcommittee on Convening a Discussion Group
   True romance
   Woman in the bushes
   Apple sauce for Eve
   The Book of Ruth and Naomi
   Of the patience called forth by transition
   I have always been poor at flirting
   It ain’t heavy, it’s my purse
   Your father’s fourth heart attack
   Up and out
   The task never completed
   from WHAT ARE BIG GIRLS MADE OF?
   What are big girls made of?
   Elegy in rock, for Audre Lorde
   All systems are up
   For two women shot to death in Brookline, Massachusetts
   A day in the life
   The grey flannel sexual harassment suit
   On guard
   The thief
   Belly good
   The flying Jew
   My rich uncle, whom I only met three times
   Your standard midlife crisis
   The visitation
   Half vulture, half eagle
   The level
   The negative ion dance
   The voice of the grackle
   Salt in the afternoon
   Brotherless one: Sun god
   Brotherless two: Palimpsest
   Brotherless three: Never good enough
   Brotherless four: Liars dance
   Brotherless five: Truth as a cloud of moths
   Brotherless six: Unconversation
   Brotherless seven: Endless end
   from EARLY GRRRL
   The correct method of worshipping cats
   The well preserved man
   Nightcrawler
   I vow to sleep through it
   Midsummer night’s stroll
   The name of that country is lonesome
   Always unsuitable
   from THE ART OF BLESSING THE DAY
   The art of blessing the day
   Learning to read
   Snowflakes, my mother called them
   On Shabbat she dances in the candle flame
   In the grip of the solstice
   Woman in a shoe
   Growing up haunted
   At the well
   For each age, its amulet
   Returning to the cemetery in the old Prague ghetto
   The fundamental truth
   Amidah: on our feet we speak to you
   Kaddish
   Wellfleet Shabbat
   The head of the year
   Breadcrumbs
   The New Year of the Trees
   Charoset
   Lamb Shank: Z’roah
   Matzoh
   Maggid
   Coming up on September
   Nishmat
   from COLORS PASSING THROUGH US
   No one came home
					     					 			/>   Photograph of my mother sitting on the steps
   One reason I like opera
   My mother gives me her recipe
   The good old days at home sweet home
   The day my mother died
   Love has certain limited powers
   Little lights
   Gifts that keep on giving
   The yellow light
   The new era, c. 1946
   Winter promises
   The gardener’s litany
   Eclipse at the solstice
   The rain as wine
   Taconic at midnight
   The equinox rush
   Seder with comet
   The cameo
   Miriam’s cup
   Dignity
   Old cat crying
   Traveling dream
   Kamasutra for dummies
   The first time I tasted you
   Colors passing through us
   from THE CROOKED INHERITANCE
   Tracks
   The crooked inheritance
   Talking with my mother
   Swear it
   Motown, Arsenal of Democracy
   Tanks in the streets
   The Hollywood haircut
   The good, the bad and the inconvenient
   Intense
   How to make pesto
   The moon as cat as peach
   August like lint in the lungs
   Metamorphosis
   Choose a color
   Deadlocked wedlock
   Money is one of those things
   In our name
   Bashert
   The lived in look
   Mated
   My grandmother’s song
   The birthday of the world
   N’eilah
   In the sukkah
   The full moon of Nisan
   Peace in a time of war
   The cup of Eliyahu
   The wind of saying
   Some NEW POEMS
   The low road
   The curse of Wonder Woman
   July Sunday at 10 a.m.
   Football for dummies
   Murder, unincorporated
   The happy man
   Collectors
   First sown
   Away with all that
   All that remains
   What comes next
   Where dreams come from
   The tao of touch
   End of days
   Dates of composition
   A Note About the Author
   Other Books by This Author
   INTRODUCTION
   What’s the difference between the poetry in Circles on the Water, which summarized my first seven books, and this volume, which pulls some poems from the last nine? A lot has changed in almost thirty years. In 1982, I had already moved to Cape Cod and the natural world had begun to provide me with new, rich sources of imagery and experience. I am still politically engaged, as a feminist, as one concerned with environmental issues, with problems of health and aging, with equality and rights for all, with economic oppression, with various local issues—although perhaps a little more relaxed about politics in my social life. Nonetheless, my anger against those who consider themselves entitled to rights that they would deny to others has not diminished and I doubt ever will. Nor does my rage against those who use power to belittle, injure, or kill others whom they consider inferior to themselves.
   In 1981, the first night of Hanukkah, my mother died, and for the next year I said Kaddish for her daily, as I do every year on her yahrzeit. I was saying gibberish because I had never been bat mitzvahed and knew no Hebrew. Needing to understand what I was saying for my mother, I began to learn at least enough to read and comprehend prayers. This began my reemergence into Judaism. I had begun to host seders for Pesach after the divorce from my second husband and to study the origins, history, and meaning of Pesach. Shortly afterward I entered into the never-ending process of writing my own haggadah, one poem, one passage at a time. [It’s still ongoing, for in spite of my writing Pesach for the Rest of Us, it will never be finished.] I was one of the founders of a havurah Am haYam, people of the sea, on the Outer Cape, a Jewish lay group, and one of the people who ran it for ten years. All of that brought new elements into my poetry. Through Kabbalah, I began to meditate. It keeps me from imploding.
   The death of my mother dug a hole in my life and I have written about her suffering and hard life ever since. In some ways, hers is the face of the women I have fought for and written about. She is a frequent presence in my imagination and my memory. I have also returned frequently to my warm memories of my grandmother Hannah, who gave me my religious education and unconditional love. As I age, I have become aware of how much they gave me.
   I married Ira Wood in 1982 after being in a relationship with him since 1976. While I had written considerable love poetry before, it was mostly poems of unhappy love, rocky affairs, longings unsatisfied. I began to write poems of fulfilled love and about the ongoing joys and problems of living monogamously through the years. I don’t believe I had ever before been happy in any intimate relationship for longer than a matter of days or weeks. I have never regretted my many experiences and adventures when I was in an open relationship, but it is certainly simpler and less demanding to be monogamous on those rare occasions when it actually works out. For us, it has. I think we are each other’s bashert. I cannot imagine being truly mated with anyone else over time. We still prefer talking with each other to anybody else.
   As I grow older, I have had trouble with my eyes—cataracts and glaucoma and extreme myopia inherited from my parents—and my knees. I explore what aging means to me, how it actually happens to me. I have experienced the death of not only my parents and my brother but many friends. My own death has become far more real to me. That also has influenced my poetry. Death is not a sometime visitor but a kind of shadow.
   Everything I learn and experience enriches my poetry, whatever its source.
   I am an intellectually curious person. I do a great deal of research for my novels and my nonfiction works. Out of every epoch of history I study, out of every life and career I explore, poems issue—not from the narrative itself but from what I observe and learn. Whether it’s the French Revolution, appeals court, roses, herring, the origins of dates and almonds, my storehouse of imagery grows wider and deeper.
   I first learned how American I am when I lived in France with my first husband. Since then I have continued to explore what this means, when I am so often at odds with the choices my government makes in this country and in the world outside of us. So often we are dangerous and destructive, and this consciousness is something that also informs my poetry.
   I have explored my own childhood and adolescence far more as I age than I did when I was younger. In all of my last nine books, there are poems that deal with my formative years in Detroit, in my family, in the hood, among the friends and enemies I had then. Writing my memoir, Sleeping with Cats, forced me to return to many eras in my life that I had not entered in decades. It made my life far more vivid to me.
   Ira, cats and the garden and local wildlife and the ocean and the seasons and the weather are part of the daily web of my life. As I write this, we have been snowed in for two days and cannot get out of our driveway. Hurricanes, nor’easters, ice storms, thunder and lightning, prolonged drought are events that impact us powerfully. My life is very different from that of most poets now because I do not have an affiliation with any college or university. I live as I can off my writing and gigs—readings, workshops, speeches, contests I judge, mini-residencies. I live in a village up close with nature in benign and hostile forms—my imposition of value on what simply is and what we have through our greed and carelessness caused. I live not with academics and writers as friends, although I have some of each, but in a locality where my friends are oystermen, a retired homicide detective, a retired OR nurse, carpenters, artists, a librarian, actors, a bank manager, a lawyer, a boat captain, a plumber. Ira Wood has been a selectman, one of the five people who run the town, for a  
					     					 			number of years. That also brings us into contact with a wide range of people, both local and summer people. All of this feeds into my poetry, and I believe it’s one of the reasons so many people can relate to what I write, as I hope you can. My poems read well aloud. I like to perform them. So do others. Naturally, I think I do it best.