Susanne Frischkorn
Suzanne Frischkorn is a Cuban-American poet and essayist. She is the author of four poetry books including Whipsaw (Anhinga Press, 2024), Fixed Star ( JackLeg Press, 2022), Girl on a Bridge, Lit Windowpane (both from Main Street Rag Press), and five chapbooks. She’s the recipient of The Writer’s Center Emerging Writers Fellowship for her book Lit Windowpane, the Aldrich Poetry Award for her chapbook Spring Tide, selected by Mary Oliver, an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, and a 2023 SWWIM Residency Award at The Betsy. She is an editor at $ –Poetry Is Currency, and serves on the Terrain.org editorial board. She lived and wrote in Connecticut for many years and currently resides in New York.
DEAR AMERICA
It’s time to teach my daughter how to shoot an arrow
How to use a knife
How to hit the center of a target
It’s bloody work, but she should know
It’s time to teach her how to win a debate
While applying lipstick without a mirror
And how to hold her keys between her fingers in a parking lot
It’s time for her to hit the weight room
Join the cross-country team
Cast a spell, literally and figuratively
And it’s time for her to develop telekinesis and clairvoyance
It’s time she knows to never leave her drink unattended
Never drink on an empty stomach
Never drink before her period
And maybe what I mean to say is—never drink alcohol period
It’s time to learn that one day she might switch grocery stores
because a guy on staff there gives her the creeps
And even if it’s less convenient to travel across town
It’s always best to trust her intuition
It’s time to teach her that when a grown man stares at her
New breasts, she is not the one who should feel ashamed
America, she’s her mother’s daughter
She’s got this
MUSEUM MILE, NYC
All the women wear summer dresses
& men play ping-pong in Bryant park.
Sun & sky in harmony.
We stroll & forget it’s all dire.
It’s the day the sex-trafficker pedophile
is found dead in his cell, perhaps that’s why
the city has all its outdoor umbrellas up
& everyone dines outside.
Beauty so bright I wear sunglasses. I wrap
my denim jacket around my waist
& leave my own prison—no service.
All I can do is let sun kiss my skin
& believe every day
on the Upper East Side must be this fine.
Later, when I see a dog sitting across his owner
on the train, I smile. Because who wouldn’t?