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Today's poem is "Jesus's Brother"
from Something an Atheist Might Bring Up at a Cocktail Party

Mayapple Press

Charles Rafferty's most recent collection of poems is The Smoke of Horses (BOA Editions, 2017). His poems have appeared in The New Yorker, O, Oprah Magazine, Prairie Schooner, and Ploughshares, and his stories have appeared in The Southern Review and Per Contra. His story collection is Saturday Night at Magellan's. He has won the 2016 NANO Fiction prize, as well as grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism. Currently, he directs the MFA program at Albertus Magnus College and teaches at the Westport Writers' Workshop.

Other poems by Charles Rafferty in Verse Daily:
December 25, 2017:   "Forecast" "Famous people have been dying all week and the Christmas tree just..."
January 16, 2016:   "Jesus's Brother" "It was difficult living..."
November 10, 2014:   "The Man With a Missing Dog" "One evening, while searching for a dog..."
June 27, 2011:   Two poems "It is cloudless and moonless and breezeless..."
November 7, 2006:   "Landslide" " Suddenly what loomed..."

Books by Charles Rafferty:

Other poems on the web by Charles Rafferty:
Three poems
"Ship Inside a Bottle"
"Insomnolence"
Five poems
Two poems
"After Seeing on Google Earth..."
"On Being Asked if I'd Ever Been To Georgia"
"Persistence"
Two poems
Four poems

Charles Rafferty's Website.

Charles Rafferty According to Wikipedia.

Charles Rafferty on Twitter.

Charles Rafferty on Facebook.

About Something an Atheist Might Bring Up at a Cocktail Party:

"I have followed Charles Rafferty's work for the better part of three decades now. His is an art driven by intelligence and passion, crafted in the best sense. He is a poet equally adept at working in strict form as out of it. More than simple execution, though, it's Rafferty's way of seeing that pushes his lines into rare territory. The poems in his most recent collection, Something an Atheist Might Bring Up at a Cocktail Party, certainly fit that bill. Whether he is writing about the bustle city and country share, a boy's exotic dreams of hummingbirds and kayaks, swimming in the Great Salt Lake, or the pain of growing up Jesus's brother, there is a harmony of truth to Rafferty's poems that cannot be ignored. These are poems, and a poet, at full voice, necessary in all ways."
—Jack B. Bedell

"In Something an Atheist Might Bring Up at a Cocktail Party, Charles Rafferty continues his exploration of the biggest subjects, those for which there are no easy answers, in a voice that could be your next door neighbor's. Rafferty's speakers are plainspoken and surprisingly vulnerable, having been tossed about by daily agitations which have left them 'a little bit happy,/a little bit used.' They are often fathers who are carefully balancing the desire to guide with the growing understanding that acceptance may be the more lasting virtue. They find wisdom in the death of a pet bird ('Eat what you are/given, shit when you have to,/sing for the world beyond your reach'). They rely on love and connection to family. They are comfortable with knowing 'we revolve/around something more/beautiful than ourselves.' Charles Rafferty's poems have always cut through much of poetry's noisy distractions; the work he is writing now is even more distilled, more valuable to readers like you and me."
—Leslie McGrath



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