See Blog and picts of Jan and Oola's winter road trip wherein Oola befriends a Texas Ranger.

Mojave Mother

My mother's scaling bones
are the roosting place of ravens
in the livid sky.
My mother covers the bruised sky.
My mother is the roosting place
of black winged mares.
She is the craggy access to the night.
My mother is the place of night truth foaling.
My mother is a bird shrill bone pipe,
A desert siren,
a stone bell.
My mother is a jazz singer
of igneous honky-tonk fame.
My mother stomps her foot on the frozen desert.
Air snaps.
River dances to her beat.
My mother's face is in the hard rock,
the holy one of petrous hair.
Santana blasted,
my mother is the nun
wailing for her children,
and she will not be comforted.
My mother murmurs in the creosote,
she savages with light.
My mother grunts Joshua into tree.
Hairy, toothstump witch,
she watches me over coffee
checks me through the cream.
My mother sees herself.
My mother reads the paper.
My mother sees herself
I am fullest most of my mother.
I am pregnant of my mother.
Hairless horse skin.
My mother is judgeless
She cures her skins on barbed wire fences,
stretches them with wind.
Newspaper.
Horseskin paper.
My mother dries it in the wind.
My mother gave me fifteen dollars
for leather gloves
to warm my hands against her fearsome breath.
Another poem