Poems for a Cartoon Mouse
By Andrew Burt
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About this ebook
While the poems in this collection are inspired by the story of Fievel Mousekewitz, the cartoon mouse of the author’s childhood, they are gut-wrenching in their examination of the American dream. Fievel’s family history—and the author’s—is one of a Jewish family immigrating from the Old World to the New and eventually being pulled across the plains: “When migrant boys looked west in leather hats, their slang pierced with Polish accents.” Even though “tomorrow is made of rocks and time; is the draft that sweeps sleepily through the fallen branches,” it is also where immigrants “watch their dreams decompose on plywood” as they search “for whatever it is that makes men free.”
Using the story of Fievel, Burt plays masterfully with the ambivalence of hope and cynicism, as if he had traversed the ocean and the continent westwards himself: “I am the hope that has not been forgotten, because I declare myself welcome here, as if there is nothing in history I will not make mine.”
“Andrew Burt's poetry magnifies the vanishingly small line between danger and safety. This collection asks whether order is an illusion that veils chaos, or vice-versa, travelling the world and bridging time and tone, juxtaposing images from the Bible with animated films. The poems search for answers—from nature, from dreams, from human connection—and often conclude that the only answer is to surrender to forces beyond anyone’s control . . . I stopped underlining lines in this poetry collection when I realized that I was underlining every page.”
—Ari Shapiro, host of NPR's All Things Considered
“Andrew Burt’s Poems for a Cartoon Mouse gives voice to the underside of the American-Jewish symbiosis in a light and playful style, worthy of Ecclesiastes. His poetry softens no edges, sweetens no puzzles, dispels no darkness, and yet it dazzles.”
—Rabbi James E. Ponet, Howard M. Holtzmann Jewish Chaplain, Emeritus, Yale University
Andrew Burt
Dr. Andrew Burt (www.aburt.com) has lots of published science fiction and is a former Vice President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association. He's been a computer science professor (specializing in AI, networking, security, privacy, and social issues); founder of Nyx.net, the world's first free internet service provider; CEO of custom software developer TechSoft, and a technology consultant/author/speaker. For a hobby, he constructs solutions to the world's problems. Fortunately, nobody listens.
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Poems for a Cartoon Mouse - Andrew Burt
Departing Shostka, Russia
It would be foolish to leave in this
Storm, where one can’t even see where
One is going—but I will.
Take Lot
Walking. Take Lot walking with his
Back turned to the world, and his eyes
Forward.
Now, take
The snow moving down to earth, and
The silence as it falls, slowly,
For falling’s sake.
The Ship
Here on this boat
Darkness settles:
Ten thousand immigrants
Stand on swollen legs
Their hopes like wooden
Puzzle pieces stacked
To fall: each one built atop
The other: as if distinct:
When really not at all.
Passing By A Weeping Willow On The Riverbank
I.
There is grace to your failure,
Or perhaps it is simply your pride:
Your leaves like clumps of
Pulled hair, pitted against gravity’s tug.
II.
You will be forgotten. But so