MIDNIGHT COMES EARLY by Marcie Tentchoff
Marcie Lynn Tentchoff lives on the west coast of Canada, in a forest
of brambles and evergreens far too densely tangled to form the
setting for any but the darkest of fairy tales. She writes poetry and
stories that tiptoe worriedly along the border of speculation and
horror, and is an active member of both the Science Fiction & Fantasy
Poetry Association and the Horror Writers Association. Marcie is an
Aurora Award winner, and her work has been either nominated, short,
or long-listed for Stoker, Rhysling, and British Fantasy awards. She
is very much involved in middle grade and YA media, and edits
Spaceports & Spidersilk, a magazine aimed at readers from 8-9 up to
(and past!) 89. When she is not involved with the practice of placing
and editing words on a page, she teaches creative writing and acting
for a performing arts studio. Here's a sample of her work:
Bailey’s Bear
Bailey’s bear
was won at
her school carnival.
Daddy threw darts
to hit balloons,
over and over,
till Mrs. Stein,
who taught third grade,
winked and laughed,
and handed him down
to Bailey’s arms.
Bailey’s bear
is brown and gold,
with soft felt ears
and button eyes.
He’s stuffed
with all the secrets
Bailey whispers,
all the dreams
she’s scared to claim
when grownups hear...
and polyester.
Bailey’s bear
was there
when Kylie Jones
was mean and
called her names,
when Bailey
wiped out on her bike
and skinned her knee,
then some months later,
when full Midnight struck,
and when it stayed.
Bailey’s bear
watched when
her mother
first walked past
in pitch black clothes
and did not know her,
and when her father,
darts forgotten,
called Bailey by
a name that
was not hers.
Bailey’s bear,
as all bears do,
heard her whispers,
and sopped her tears
against his plush,
but as the Midnight Men
kept gliding through
the fear-filled streets,
his stillness changed;
he hugged her close
and whispered back.
Bailey’s bear
comforts her,
makes sure she’s fed,
takes her for walks,
and strains the
putrid pablum
of the Masters’ lessons
through the filter of
his fluff-stuffed brain,
then, when she is
tucked in, safe asleep…
Bailey’s bear
sheds his
daytime form,
and grows, and growls,
and sharpens his
red-dappled claws
on paving stones,
then licks his
stitched-on lips,
and lumbers off
to hunt her foes.
Bewertungen
Midnight Comes Early by Marcie Lynn Tentchoff is a hauntingly compelling, delightfully dark collection of poems that start strong and stay strong as they tell the story of the Midnight Men's invasion of a town. The first two poems leave no doubt that something is terribly wrong. From "Midnight": " the sound of the shadows / seems louder somehow". And from "Everything Changes in a Day":
. . . all the fears I never thought to fear
to crash down on top of me.
In a meaningful mix of free verse and rhyme, the poems build tension as they reveal the changes wrought by the newcomers who have "smiles just as trustworthy / as used car salesmen" (from "Door to Door").
The growing fright of the town's children is evident in "Questions – A Playground Rhyme":
Why, tell me why
do the Midnight Men stay?
They have their reasons,
so quick, run away!
And quick, keep turning the pages to learn how the town's young people learn to cope and improvise as the story builds to hope and action. Just be sure to put the book down before midnight!