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Sweet Connections: Brian Baumgart

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Several times a month we connect with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Brian Baumgart
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet: Rules for Loving Right (chapbook); “What Happened on the Nine O’ Clock News,” “Rules for Loving Right,” “49th Mailing to Colin Firth- A Sestina,” and “Incomplete Metamorphosis
Issue: 1.1, 5.1, 8.1, ad 12.3

You can find Brian in Minnesota, both teaching at North Hennepin Community College and going to as many Timberwolves games as time and money allow. Find out more about Brian on his website and be sure to check out this fantastic interview.

Find Him
Blue Sky

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

While I’ve completed a pair of (unpublished) full-length manuscripts, I’ve continued to publish in literary magazines, and in Dec 2024, my newest chapbook, Cold Is Cold Is Cold was published by Bottlecap Press.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

One of my manuscripts-in-progress that keeps me up at night is a collection of epistolary semi-sonnets called Songs [Sonnets] for Terrorists, a number of which have been published and can be found out in the wild. I’m also pumped that this poem was published: How to Teach English Composition at a Community College Near Minneapolis, or How I Teach English Composition at a Community College Near Minneapolis, or How I Imagine I Teach English Composition at a Community College Near Minneapolis, or How I Dream I Teach English Composition at a Community College Near Minneapolis 

Who is your favorite author?

This is tough, but I’ll read anything Hanif Abdurraqib writes.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

Kiese Laymon’s Heavy

What inspires you to write?

Sounds and life.

What are you reading right now?

A number of things (I’m an overlapping reader), but today I just began Zoe Schlanger’s The Light Eaters

What is your favorite sweet?

This is too much pressure!

Challenge accepted! How about a sweet you can make in your Instant Pot (pressure cooker)? This New York Cheesecake is just one of the desserts you can make.

Thank you, Brian, for taking the time to reconnect with us again! It’s always great to hear from you. Congratulations on your chap book. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Are you a contributor who wants to be a part of Sweet Connections?  Come fill out our form!

If This Were Fiction: A Love Story in Essays by Jill Christman

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Dear Jill Christman,

Nestled into the space between mountains and fields in England’s Lake District, a group of undergraduate English students from central Ohio and I sat gingerly upon metal and plastic folding chairs. We scribbled our recollections from the day’s hike around glassy Grasmere before passing our pages around, our notes spread at random to each other.

Our advisor — and this publication’s co-founder — Ira Sukrungruang, spoke first when our cohort was asked to speak on the observations we’d been given.

“This writer has a strong voice,” he said.

The writing was mine. I became worried — worried that I’d put too much of myself onto the page — in my writing of the water lapping against pebbles and waterproof sneakers, of the little boy skipping stones at the lake’s shore. Did I write myself into the bride and groom’s photography session at the lake, where the woman’s gown became stained brown with mud and silt? It appeared I did.

The pieces in your collection If This Were Fiction: A Love Story in Essays have taught me that creative nonfiction necessitates a strong sense of self. Even if the writer is unsure of themself, they still write about this confusion in a way that describes who they believe, or question themselves to be.

I am captivated by your piece “Going Back to Plum Island,” as I have a similar feeling returning to a place in which I forged memories with someone who wound up hurting me. I see your personality clear as day in all of your writings, but especially this piece. It is as if I can hear you speak the following excerpt, like we’re sitting in the Kenyon College Bookstore on a frigid day all over again:
“I felt like I was going to throw up, and I was so mad. I thought I was done with all this. I really did… These intrusive fucking nightmares didn’t fit into the recovery narrative I’d crafted for myself” (6).

I find “voice” to be a term ripe with interpretation. Not only does it feel as though these words are being spoken aloud, but with your writing — your admission of feeling  as though you don’t align with the stereotypical narrative of recovery — of moving past and through something quickly — you are vocalizing a thought that many of us who have experienced sexual violence have at the tips of our tongues, but may not be ready to say. You speak for yourself, with your own cadence, but I cannot help but feel that your latter sentences speak for many others.

As a creative nonfiction student, I find myself wondering whether I’ve written everything truthfully — if when I do “write the hard stuff,” as you once said to me, I am remembering correctly. I am taken by the following passage, of your conception of “truth”

“I thought, Actually, veritaserum extracts the truth as the teller understands it. That’s not the same thing. Truth is complicated, and we all know that facts can lie. There is always a level more true: true, truer, truest—and then something beyond that we will never reach. How true is true enough?” (11).

We can write what we know, and we can write about the things we don’t think we know yet, so what we write is true… I wonder if there will be a point in my writing where I feel one hundred percent confident that everything I write happened the way I wrote it. I assume that I will not, but I can feel comfortable with the fact that I am writing from my limited perspective… and this is, in some way, a form of truth.

While I was embarrassed at the time — soaked from the sideways rain in Northern England — to have such a strong personality on the page. I believed I had failed at the task of observing the world around me, but the fact of the matter was that I was the one perceiving the world around me. It has since become clear to me that the personality imbued in my work is not something to shy away from. After all, creative nonfiction is about the I, about the me, and the way we see it. 

I wish I could go back in time and stop the beet-red blush from rising to my face from embarrassment, but I can’t. Instead, I can make sure I don’t shy away from the pen. Thank you.

Very sincerely,

Carlin Steere

Samantha Sorenson

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While Attempting to Write about My Sister

I think of how our dad enlisted us in yard work—nonoptional—and the weight of moving rocks from one end of the property to the other while he trenched the rock-infested clay to lay sprinklers in the vermillion earth.

When wet, the russet-running clay molded to me, clogging my tennis shoes and mucking up each step. I started noticing small things while slogging through the mud and dirt and time and credit those countless hours pushing a wheelbarrow up and down that hill to the eventual breaking open of my mind to beautiful mundanities.

One of the beauties that struck me first: the diving of black and yellow mud dauber wasps who gathered liquid clay from my shins while my sister ran inside. Looking back, the pattern is clear: her fear taught her to flee while mine taught me to freeze, to watch and wait.

Perhaps I should have seen my sister’s abandonment coming. Perhaps it shouldn’t have been surprising when her perinatal psychosis, and the hallucinations it conjured, overwhelmed her with fear and she fled. She didn’t feel safe and her mind convinced her that the people who loved her most were to blame. She had to protect her babies. She had to create a safe environment for them. One by one she cut us off and left us behind.

As an adult I learned that the slip collected from my shins was most likely being gathered by solitary mud dauber mothers trying to build shelters, one room at a time, to fill with her larvae. That after the completion of each room, she would paralyze a couple dozen spiders to be consumed by her offspring when they hatched, sealing them up in the larval chambers. I think of each chamber as a birthing tomb, fully enclosed, each larva completely cut off from its family and the realities of the world around it—it knows only closed walls, preserved spiders, and the feeling of being alone.

I struggle to find grace in my sister’s leaving. I feel myself crumpling to the ground. I weep and watch my phone and wait, not knowing if she’ll ever return. And when I feel inclined to write about her—about us—I remember dad hosing down the mud dauber nests from the eaves and the way they flaked to the ground in layered clods. I didn’t know about the chambers then, or the spiders hidden inside, but when I think of them now, I wonder where my sister was when they hit the ground. I wonder where she is today and why she never calls.

I wonder if she wishes we could go back there, to that rocky clay yard before all the sod was lain and we grew up. I wonder if she remembers the weight of the wheelbarrow on our path through the flowering wildrye and valley sedge. Perhaps more than anything, I wonder if she remembers passing dad as he glued pipe junctions with plastic solvent cement—can she conjure the combined smell of red clay and all-purpose purple PVC primer in summer heat? Does she long for that trench? Does she long for me?


Samantha M. Sorenson is currently finishing her MFA in creative nonfiction at Brigham Young University. She is the managing editor for Fourth Genre and her work has appeared in Under the Sun, Water~Stone, and on Poets.org. She was a winner of the 2024 Academy of American Poets Prize and her current favorite sweet treat is Cara Cara orange slices paired with dark chocolate covered pretzels.

Catherine DeNunzio

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At the Dairy Queen, 1972

It happened as we sat with melting cones
in the shade of an aging oak, talking about
the boys we had been meeting after dark.

Not far away, a woman shrieked,
waving her arms wildly at something
black hovering, then diving at her head.

Over and over, it hovered and dove.
We watched from a distance: You worked
that summer counting shore bird eggs

along the Hammonasset marshes; I was
a counselor at the local nature camp. We knew
this with certainty: Her attacker was a bat.

Your hair is white now, mine gray. Back then,
we had not yet known predacious men
or the anguish of losing loved ones,

nor had we foreseen failed pregnancies,
malignant cells, a deadly virus circling the earth.
At sixteen, we could see but could not

know that woman’s terror, how
powerless she was over something
so intentional, scythe-like, relentless.


Catherine DeNunzio’s poems have appeared in a variety of journals and anthologies, including The Breath of Parted Lips: Voices from The Robert Frost Place, Connecticut Literary Anthology, Connecticut River Review, Delmarva Review, Italian Americana, Marin Poetry Center Anthology, Scapegoat Review, and Waking Up to the Earth: Connecticut Poets in a Time of Global Climate Crisis. DeNunzio is the author of Enough Like Bone to Build On (Antrim House, 2022). She lives in Connecticut, where she loves eating vanilla, coconut, or mocha chunk ice cream.

Sweet Connections: Emily Patterson

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Several times a month we connect with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Emily Patterson
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet: Uninhabited; After Two Years, the Midwife Explains
Issue: 2024 Poetry Contest; 16

You can find Emily in Columbus, Ohio where she a curriculum designer and editor. Find out more about Emily on her website.

Find Her
Instagram

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

My debut full-length collection, The Birth of Undoing, will be published by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions later this year! It includes the poems “Uninhabited” and “After Two Years, the Midwife Explains,” both published in Sweet. It explores infertility and parenthood, and the lasting effects of infertility after becoming a parent.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’m currently working on a second poetry collection. Its themes include nature and climate, as well as spirituality and motherhood.

Who is your favorite author?

Some of my favorites are Mary Oliver, Jhumpa Lahiri, Ada Limón, Ann Patchett, and Colm Tóibín.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

If I had to choose one poem, it would be Rainer Maria Rilke’s “Go to the Limits of Your Longing.”

What inspires you to write?

My daughter, traveling, and being in nature.

What are you reading right now?

The Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry and Go as a River by Shelley Read

What is your favorite sweet?

I love fruit scones! I recently made this recipe from the NY Times.

Thank you, Emily, for taking the time to reconnect with us again! Congratulations on your forthcoming book. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Are you a contributor who wants to be a part of Sweet Connections?  Come fill out our form!

Gabriel Blackmann

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Little Knife

 After Keorapetse Kgositsile

All childlike tenderness, and slender flesh
worked to a toughness like stone. Muscles
like rolling hills, scenes

Schumann could find
no solace in. We made sing the body, the way it
sings echoes, a past like whiplash to memory.

The griot says
that places have scars, which is to say
they echo the body, which I have since learned
is a feathered thing, not set free, but knowing not
the concept of a cage.

And that’s what love is,
in the end. You balanced me in your hands, called
me your little knife. You are the maker, and I
am beautifully wrought,

the blade that returns
home, in your stomach, opportune
like a thing portended.


Gabriel Blackmann (He/him) is a poet from Trinidad and Tobago. His work is concerned with trauma, personal mythology and belonging. His poems have been featured in Remington Review and Thimble Literary Magazine. He is the second runner up for the PRISM International Pacific Spirit Poetry Prize 2023. He loves coconut fudge.

Flash Contest Results 2024

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We apologize for the delay in announcing the winners of this contest. While notifying the winners, we learned that our winner, Karen Kao passed away on March 16th. Karen was also a contributor to Sweet in the past. We are deeply saddened by the news. We have been in communication with her family, and the editors of Sweet would like to honor Karen with more than just the contest. Starting next year, the contest will be known as the Karen Kao Creative Nonfiction Flash Essay Prize. Plans are being made for more ways that we will be recognizing and memorializing this amazingly Sweet writer, so stay tuned.

The editors of Sweet are so pleased to announce the winner for 2024 Creative Nonfiction Flash Essay contest. Many thanks to Jill Christman, Editor of River Teeth and just an all around amazingly sweet human being, for judging our contest!

Winner

Karen Kao for “And Before That”

“And Before That” is the story of how we experience the world through our bodies, in sickness and health, and a shifting market of foods, expectations, and appetites. Some version of each of us has been that solitary child standing on a chair to prepare the instant mashed potatoes to sate a gnawing desire to be full and seen and loved. “And Before That” feeds a shared desire to be less alone in our hunger.

-Jill Christman

Honorable Mentions

Natasha Moni for “I’m Sorry I Accidentally Super Liked You on Bumble, but Now That I Have Your Attention When Does a Hill Become a Mountain?” 

I’m Sorry I Accidentally Super Liked You on Bumble. . .”: There’s something so compelling about the way in which this essay takes us through the busy mind, trying to live a life with constant access to the internet, and the way we’ve been invaded. It’s weird and wonderful and in the moment when we imagine the possibility of the ewe making “whatever command necessary to reset the peat neatly over [their] trapped body,” well: this makes the most perfect sense.

-Jill Christman

Congratulations to these fine writers and we hope you are looking forward to reading these pieces soon on sweetlit.org!

Allen Means

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harvest

my father stops calling me honey
because boys are not sweet

they are gravel spilling out of open mouths
on the playground

and when i start looking more and more
like a man, he begins to trip

over the gravel
that he imagines

has grown into bigger
and more dangerous rocks

that if he comes too close
may crush something inside him instead

but i was never the kind of boy
that ate gravel or threw rocks

i watched
how honeysuckle grew

on backyard fences
and the brick walls of public pool houses

and in the summer i would sit
in the shade and pluck them

tuck them into mickey mouse beach towels
tied into baskets

or leave them for safe-keeping
in another kid’s hair

like presents or secrets
but now that i am

a man—
when i kiss someone

i imagine pressing them
into a surface like water

picking a honeysuckle
from above their head

and pressing the wet end
into their mouth like a cigarette

assuring them that they can also
be gentle and sweet

in case no one ever did.


Allen Means (Twitter: @allenWhy) is a queer, trans poet from Boulder, CO, currently living in Philadelphia. He holds an MFA from the University of Miami, where he was James A. Michener Fellow. His work appears in South Florida Poetry Journal, Voicemail Poems, Nimrod International, and elsewhere.

Shannon Dale

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What I Understand

I dreamed of a man with a gun in a food store and how he brought me with him to a corner. What he wanted was to sleep, I needed to be unscared enough to take a gun. I smelled it out, that he had to be disarmed, for his own damn good. I laid it close for him to see and he wrapped his large arms around himself on the ground while I stood watch, careful. Don’t touch that gun, I told the sweeper, the man with lettuce leaves in his broom. We need it close.

I knew this even in a dream because in the day, the small ones, the ones who can’t speak and are running from me or running at me are asking to be disarmed, to be cradled on the ground or somewhere equally steady enough to hold all of them, every blessed part. They cannot say this and so I interpret it this way, my hunch that works every time, the disarmament of quiet unafraid. One boy who can speak said once that he is shut in a room if he is asking too hard for love. He told me this, in a way, or I understood it that way, like I came to understand I had to take the gun, pluck it like a flower. He doesn’t like the picture on the wall of our classroom of the closed door. I hate you, he hears.

I understand now what pleonastic means, the way that words can be too much and clunk around unnecessary like a set of dumbbells in a suitcase. The way that if we can get pleonastic enough, the sting of the truth can be lessened, the shit we have to say to get away won’t smart, and we may even fool ourselves that it isn’t really sleep and the ground we want, something steady enough to cradle us. The boy who fears closed doors and the man with the gun, at least they speak the simple truth, same as the other boys who wail and run, so very small and no words at all. The one in the dress, I know he has no house. He loves this dress, the blue green one with light layers of tulle and swirled roses on top and a sash. I would have loved it too, at 4, like him, would have asked nicely for a turn to wear it every day, a chance to swish it against my legs like a princess.

Other things I understand now: why the princess must be locked in the tower, how for worship, she has to stay in one damn place. The way the rest of the world demands that she become a serpent and a shape-shifter, a healer and a cradle, a real efficient witch. A prince’s muscular forearms or a dragon’s shiny claws, does it matter which is which if all she does in the clutch of both is get carried, high above the earth, dress swishing against her pleonastic legs?

I am taking curious stock of other ways to get through: look she is the one who drinks and he the one who stays. Look, he is the one who sucks in saving the world like a drug and she the one who picks up the dirty pieces. Look, I am the one who lives off the smell of your admiration and you the one who waits around for it to take.


Shannon Dale is the pen name for someone else, someone very cool of course, who lives in Missoula, Montana. She works in a public preschool classroom for children with special needs during the school year and farms with teenagers from therapeutic group homes in the summer. Both of these jobs are less challenging than her previous career of stay-at-home mom. Shannon has three young boys, a buff husband, and a very messy house. Her favorite sweet treat is a handful of pink Starbursts from the gas station, stuffed in her mouth while driving kids to sports practice. She writes anonymous advice essays for other beleaguered parents as the insightful Mediocre Mother on Substack.

Audrey Blanco

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Living Alone in a Duplex

In a dream I have your handwriting,
I dream I cannot stop writing close.

At night in bed I listen for my name: Close.
I rename myself over and over—

Closer. Closest. Girl-You-Can’t-Get-Over.
Girl I can’t get over you. Your name:

Further. Farther. Lose the r and your name
is Father. You feel more than far away

you feel gone. Like him you have gone away
and like my mother I wait. In the distance

a column of rain. The rain creates distance
between me and your voice. How would you say:

Close? What would you do if I say
in a dream I have your handwriting?

Notes:
“You feel more than far away you feel gone” is borrowed from Tyree Daye’s poem “Don’t Say Love Just Signal”.
“In the distance a column of rain” is borrowed from Julia Koets’ poem “On Distance”.


Audrey Rose earned her BA in Mathematics and completed her MFA in Creative Writing at the University of South Florida (USF). When it comes to sweets, she enjoys cookie dough more than actual cookies, but to maintain a balanced diet, she eats both. She has guest lectured at USF and served as an editor for Saw Palm: Florida Literature and Art. Currently, she reads for Epiphany magazine. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and was selected for the 2024 Best New Poets anthology. More of her poetry appears in SLABSweet LitArts CoastHalfway Down the StairsGood River ReviewEpiphanywildness, and Poetry.
The duplex is a poetic form created by Jericho Brown. “You feel more than far away you feel gone” is borrowed from Tyree Daye’s poem “Don’t Say Love Just Signal.” “In the distance a column of rain” is borrowed from Julia Koets’ poem “On Distance.”