http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975

A journal for poetry, criticism, reviews, stories and essays published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
This  raw-boned word
      was born to Brunhilde
      and Richard Wagner
      in Bear Dance, Montana,
  where it still lives.
It has the  gruesome smile
      of Ivan the Terrible.
      Its scowl makes floor tiles
  curl and smoke.
Its voice is
      a slow certain rumble.
      It has the starlight eyes
      of a prophet.
This word  was born
in Coffee Creek, California
to Charles Lindbergh
and Anne Frank.
This word is  a mirror
  made of memory.
This word is 
	    constantly in search of
	    the connection between
  honesty and magic.
This word is  lost
  in linear thought.
This word is a
miserable old zucchini 
left to rot on the vine.
This word  has a face
        like a bowl of angry corn flakes.
        Its eyes are the color
  of split-pea soup.
It watches  and smiles 
        as angels are beaten
        to the sidewalk.
  Its heart is made of concrete.
This word is  frequently found
  smoking cigarettes in snowstorms.
This word is
a silken cloud
in a sullen sky.
This word’s  lips
        are made of silly putty.
        It has the lopsided grin
  of a hungover hamster.
Its eyes  bite like horseflies.
        It has the laughter of
  a small cretinous monkey.
This word is  a truth
  known by our bones.
This word  was born during the time
of the wandering stars.
Every morning, it lifts its
eyes towards heaven.
It lives in  Burracho Beach, California.
        Its mother is Emma Bovary.
  Its father is Ebenezer Scrooge.
This word is  a cool remove
        from the language of the heart.
  Its mouth is small,cold, and bitter.
Its heart is  buried
        beneath a pile of pennies.
        Its soul is a gilded cage
  holding two confused doves.
Every  evening this word
  buries its face in its hands.
David Kowalczyk lives in the small cannery town of Oakfield, New York. His poetry and fiction have appeared in seven anthologies and over one hundred magazines and journals scattered across the globe from Canada to Wales to Turkey to India. His most "accessible" anthologies (in terms of being able to find them in libraries) are "Bless Me, Father: Stories of Catholic Childhood", edited by Amber Coverdale Sumrall and Patrice Vecchione, Plume Books, New York, 1994, and "Hunger Enough: Living Spiritually in a Consumer Society", edited by Nita Penfold, Pudding House, Columbus, Ohio, 2004). Other more obscure anthologies include "Still Waters" by Penhaligon Page, Wales, 1999, "Waging Words for Peace", Niagara River Press, Buffalo, 2004, and "The Maynard Anthology", Toronto, 2008. David's body of poetry can be viewed at www.poemhunter.com by typing in the name "David Kowalczyk" and clicking on the option, "search by poet". Feel free to contact him at dvdkowalczyk@yahoo.com .
David's work has appeared in Offcourse #35, Six Poems and in Offcourse #40, Five New Poems.