Poetry Interview with Melissa McKinstry by Jane Newkirk

Melissa McKinstry holds an MFA in poetry from Pacific University. Her poems have been nominated for Best of the Net, a Pushcart Prize, and Orison’s Best Spiritual Literature, and appear in Rattle, Alaska Quarterly Review, Rust & Moth, December, Tahoma Literary Review, SWWIM, Nimrod International, and Beloit Poetry Journal. Find her at her website: https://www.melissamckinstry.com/

Jane Newkirk is the poetry editor at Medmic. Her poems have appeared in Empty House Press, The Shore, Naugatuck River Review, The Night Heron Barks, Intima, and others. In 2019, her creative nonfiction was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is an occupational therapist in Jackson, Mississippi.

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Interview with Melissa McKinstry by Jane Newkirk

Click to view: https://medmic.com/wp-content/uploads/interview-with-Melissa-McKinstry-2.mp4

Melissa’s reads her poem “Showering My Son,” originally posted in Medmic on May 27, 2023.

Jane reads an exerpt from Melissa’s poem “Ghost Writer,” which originally appeared in the Tahoma Literary Review, Issue 23, Summer 2022

Ghost Writer

                        –after Dorianne Laux

My son sleeps in his bed

or upright in his chair, a curve in his spine

from his neck to his hips, his legs akimbo

while he drools, Phenobarbital and Ativan

flowing, pushed and pumped inside him, his face

shaped from dough, a tear leaking slowly

from the blue of his eye. My son

is often a ghost above this world. Sometimes

he’s paled to gray beside me, in my arms,

beyond my reach. Now I feel his soft hand

near my hand late afternoons, oxygen

pinking his skin as I write every poem,

whispering, Will this ever end? I want it to end.

I remember every time

he’s risen or sunk, twitched

before a seizure, and now

I see how his whole life has been a visitation,

one he didn’t choose for himself–

my son, and me like a Ouija board, occult

tool to keep calling him back, a tension

much like loose syntax, but vibrating

with live implications, an unspooling spring

of subordinate clauses. I hold him here,

like he holds me here. He is my author,

poet, and lyricist, penning me in

word by word, the paragraph

that introduced my theme,

my style, my tone, my voice.

He offered himself as a mentor–his genes

snapped, his DNA cracked, his eyes and brow,

crooked nose and tiny mouth, and when my body

from which his was made

slips into a pale silence, he’ll still

too. He’ll wind up the long lines,

the slant-rhymed couplets, last elegy

for our duet, write only in the ink

of invisibility, the consonants disappearing him

with their ascenders and descenders, the memoir

we wrote together, our tangle of phonemes

stopped, just sibilant echoes

of letters and scripture remaining, the deepest

chapters, the heavy tomes splayed wide

so the story we were might find tongue.

For Further Reading, Other Poets Who Parent Children with Complex Medical Conditions, Disability, or Neurodiversity:

Burwick, Kimberly. Brightword. Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2019.

de la Paz, Oliver. The Boy in the Labyrinth. University of Akron Press, 2019.

Dempster, Brian Komei. Seize. Four Way Books, 2020.

Franklin, Jennifer. No Small Gift. Four Way Books, 2018.

Laméris, Danusha. The Moons of August. Autumn House, 2014.

McPherson, Sandra. The Space Between Birds. Wesleyan University Press, 1996.

Shaughnessy, Brenda. Our Andromeda. Copper Canyon Press, 2012.

Teicher, Craig Morgan. The Trembling Answers. BOA Editions, Ltd., 2017.

Melissa McKinstry holds an MFA in poetry from Pacific University. Her poems have been nominated for Best of the Net, a Pushcart Prize, and Orison’s Best Spiritual Literature, and appear in Rattle, Alaska Quarterly Review, Rust & Moth, December, Tahoma Literary Review, SWWIM, Nimrod International, and Beloit Poetry Journal. Find her at her website: https://www.melissamckinstry.com/

Jane Newkirk is the poetry editor at Medmic. Her poems have appeared in Empty House Press, The Shore, Naugatuck River Review, The Night Heron Barks, Intima, and others. In 2019, her creative nonfiction was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is an occupational therapist in Jackson, Mississippi.

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