After 1970
My grandmother
switched from Schlitz to Michelob
from single pearl earrings to mod clip-ons,
from Pall Malls to long menthols
She drove Route 66 to Vegas
subscribed to B-movie mags
more Mamie Van Doren
than Marilyn Monroe, her curly blue-
rinsed hair flew like a swallow
traversing the Mississippi Flyway
She ditched pillbox hats
& tailored Jackie Kennedy suits
for polyester pants & permanent pressed
tops — geometric mazes, lava lamp swirls
neon bouquets, polka dots
the size of ping pong balls
She joined the Church of Velour
& never again ironed wrinkled shirts
wiggled into a Sunday dress
or confessed in a cloistered booth
Defined by her walk-in closets & rhinestones,
we buried her in a silk-lined knock-off
Valentino gold pantsuit and double
string of polished pink simulated pearls.
16 thoughts on "After 1970 "
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She was a bad ass. I love this.
I can picture her with a cigarette holder,
amazing image and music one after another. a dream to sink into
double-knit polyester!!
i hope everyword
of this is true.. 🙂
Those fine details — “geometric mazes, lava lamp swirls / neon bouquets, polka dots / the size of ping pong balls” really bring her to life. Love the first stanza, she went rad.
biography is in the details
and these details are 3D
Wow !!! You did it !!!
You got this one wrangled to the page …….
Wow this is good !!!
P.s. the thresholding of the title is perfection.
Such personality evoked through clothing! 4th stanza especially screams ’70s vibes.
you honored your mother with your choice of burial garb
Agree with Samantha. She was a glorious bad-ass! Glad you honored her with her-style burial attire!
I love this list and what each of those choices implies. Nicely done, Linda!
This is someone I wish I had known! Your insightful details paint a strong picture of the woman. Love Church of Velour! And, yes, agreed – bad-ass portrayal from a bad-ass poet!
Great characterization in this poem. Well done.
I, too, think I would have enjoyed her very much. You capture a vivid woman.
So much in this poem to love. I feel as if I have met your grandmother. Some of my favorite phrases/lines are:
her curly blue- /rinsed hair flew like a swallow /
traversing the Mississippi Flyway
polka dots / the size of ping pong balls
She joined the Church of Velour