Ellen Austin-Li

poet and writer
Ellen Austin-Li
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    • Weather, Then the Book Roll-Out

      Posted at 4:55 pm by Ellen Austin-Li, on December 1, 2024
      At Poetry Night at Sitwell’s in Cincinnati

      Weather

      In a year of extremes, the deepest
      losses and the sweetest touches, I am
      here, my eyes open every morning (against
      my wishes) clear blue until the dark

      sky moves in—the rain swift as a summer
      storm, turbulent air, and broken hair
      in high winds—just as suddenly, the weather
      passes and the statues of all I have lost stand

      in the clearing: my sister and brother
      in the next world, the beautiful words
      we chiseled at the end of their lives; and I
      remember how love once looked like eyes

      from across a crowded room, and my first-
      born son will soon join hands with his own
      beloved, and there is another first—my book
      of poems to usher in this spring, after some

      cold has passed—the work that circles grief, even
      as I see (perhaps) at last, this journey is all about
      weather, weathering the weather—warmth
      and the worst of it—in varying measures.


      The day has finally arrived: December 1st. Pre-sales are open for my first full-length poetry collection from Madville Publishing, Incidental Pollen. Sometimes, the universe gives us pain, and sometimes, beauty. I’m grateful this first book landed with Madville as the runner-up to the Arthur Smith Poetry Prize and that I received this good news at the beginning of a very painful year. I’ve lost two central people in my life this past year; someday, I’ll be able to write fully about these losses, but not yet. Today, I’m here to celebrate the collection dedicated to my father, my nephew, Jeffery, and my sister, Mary.

      RUNNER-UP FOR THE 2023 ARTHUR SMITH POETRY PRIZE

      Incidental pollen refers to pollen that collects on bees as they forage for nectar—like the cumulative life experiences we cannot help but carry. The hive serves as a thematic thread in this collection that explores the space between past and present, shame and redemption, grief and resilience. Poetic forms lend meaning—like the villanelle that captures the grief-driven magical thinking of the speaker. Are recurring red fox sightings visitations from her deceased father and nephew? Trauma and loss appear in these tonally rich and imagistic poems, but the arc ultimately centers on the search for belonging, the attempt to recreate home.

      I am most grateful to Madville Publishing’s founding director, Kim Davis, and poetry editor extraordinaire, Linda Parsons, for creating such a stunning final product. If you order Incidental Pollen, I hope it moves you and speaks to you. These poems were many years in the making.

      
      
      
      
      
      
      

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    • As If a Child

      Posted at 9:07 pm by Ellen Austin-Li, on March 10, 2024

      Moments, an announcement, and a dedication

      Photo by Chris Bair on Unsplash
      Eight Years Old in the Corn Rows

      Racing down the alley of August,
      I slow as I am alone
      among the rows, hidden
      in our game of hide-n-seek
      on Nana’s farm. Timeless
      summer. The stalks rustle
      and the breeze kisses my bare arms,
      fine hairs lift as my body cools.
      Silence as the in-between stillness
      settles. There, a monarch,
      russet and black-rimmed, lands. I swear
      I hear its wings flutter.
      Cicadas crescendo when the sun burns
      between cloud cover. I hear
      one of my brothers or sisters’
      footfalls nearby, then retreating. Hush‒‒
      the wind rushes around me.
      I will stay forever.

      *published in Of Rust and Glass, the Awakenings Issue No. 15, 2024
      Of Rust and Glass, the Awakenings Issue.

      I’m announcing that my first full-length poetry collection, Incidental Pollen—2023 Trio Award finalist, 2024 Wisconsin Poetry Series semi-finalist, and 2023 Arthur Smith Poetry Prize runner-up—is forthcoming from Madville Publishing in May 2025. I’m astonished and grateful to the contest poetry readers (Joshua Rogers & Darius Stewart) and contest judge Marilyn Kallet (Poet Laureate Emeritus of Knoxville, TN) for recognizing my manuscript in this way. I am also thrilled to work with a women-led press (Founding Director Kim Davis and Poetry Editor Linda Parsons). Mostly, though, I’m grateful to bring this particular collection of poems dedicated to my father and nephew into the world.

      Announcements have this nagging way of showing you how absent you have been from certain spaces. My intention to post a new blog entry every month has clearly fallen away. I have been hiding in these corn rows, brought back to those early years, as I navigate some difficult emotional territory. The formative years live so deeply in me that sometimes I believe I am back there, with all the people I love most in the world—especially my brothers and sisters—nearby. I know they’re there. I may not be able to see them, but I hear them so close I believe I can touch them. These moments are the most important to me. Composing poems is the closest I can come to capturing the ephemeral —sharing the sacred so I can fix it in time and space—and perhaps touch someone else at the same time.

      My family of origin lost our brilliant and gentle father in December 2017. At age 93, his death was expected and (thankfully) peaceful. Just three weeks later, we suddenly lost my talented and equally gentle nephew, Jeffery Cox—my sister’s son—under traumatic circumstances. These losses feel like a lifetime ago to me (I’m sure my experience of loss is different from others in the family), but they weren’t. In many ways, these first significant losses had an outsized impact on all of us. I’ve been carrying these poems around for several years; it’s finally time to let them go into the world with the dedication page that’s been fixed in place since the book’s inception.

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    • Author photo by Suz Fleming

    • Publication date May 21st, 2025. Click on image to order from Madville Publishing.
    • Books

      Publication date: August 6th, 2021. Click on image for Finishing Line Press's bookstore

    • Books

      artwork by Elaine Olund @ EEO Design

      Firefly is available for sale at Finishing Line Press or at Amazon.com

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