Sailing Around Cape Horn: Poetry Night, 25 Jan. 2026

a scenic view of the ocean from cape horn

It’s another night for poetry around here.

It’s a bit cold outside for the past couple of days. That might have been on my mind when I wrote these.

Sorry if I’m not profound tonight


Modern Igloos

Fort Madison, Iowa, 24 January 2026

Frost paint windows off white

The cold invades where you’re closest to the outdoors

Only stone, wood, electrified heat sources, and a cup of tea

Hold off the entropy.

You think back to the old cartoons

Inuit chilling both ways in igloos

And being thankful for civilization

Because you know you couldn’t answer the Call of the Wild.


Didn’t want to do another winter poem, so I combined the cold weather with one of my recent obsessions, the ocean. It’s a weird obsession considering I only lived near the ocean for a very short time in my childhood and for most of my life I’ve never lived closer than 850 miles than the nearest part of the ocean (Gulf of Mexico). But maybe living near the Mississippi River sparked something like it with me. Apologies are likely in order for my parents who once had a catamaran for sailing on the the lakes in Iowa but I was not as enthusiastic about it back in those days like I should have been.

I started thinking about the old sailors who make the trip around Cape Horn in southern Chile. I’ve long heard legends about how challenging the trip was. This is me picturing what it might be like.


Cape Horn Days

24 January 2026, Fort Madison, Iowa

On the bridge, morning watch,

Sealed coffee mug fastened in the holder

Protection from the fifty-foot waves

And the blows of the Horn’s gales.

It’s not like it was with the old clipper sailors.

We have a restaurant-level galley and temperature-controlled cabins,

They had a fire pit, iron kettle, swaddled in wool to keep cold and water away.

We have electronic GPS navigation and radar, WiFi and satellite radio,

They had compass and charts if lucky, the stars and waves if they weren’t.

Steel and polymer vessels are far stronger than

Their wooden clipper ancestors.

But they both had to dodge typhoons and icebergs alike.

The Horn looms in the distance through his binoculars

Its waters wild, beautiful, and treacherous.


Now for a quick commercial break, lol.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.


Hope 2026 is going all right, all things considered. Take care everyone.

-30-


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


A Rainy Night in Iowa: Poetry Night, 28 Dec. 2025

a rainy street with a motorcycle and a street light

All right, one more batch of poems for 2025.

I had thought I hadn’t been doing this series for too long, but a quick review of past posts indicated I’ve been doing this now for at least two years. It’s wild I’ve been doing this for that long.

In a glance at the file I’ve been using to store this year’s poems, I counted 29 poems I’ve written, both published and unpublished, since the start of the year. Considering I only ever wrote poetry once in a blue moon for nearly all my life, this is a massive increase in productivity.

Hopefully, I can keep this up. I have to say I’ve never put as much attention into my poetry as I have my fiction work, but I do hope putting in the time and work pays off in the end, if not financially then at least artistically.


I’m glad it’s becoming late fall/early winter now. I’ve always felt I did better in colder climates than warmer ones – maybe some heritage from my Wisconsinite parents and grandparents. But I also wonder if it would be everything I’d hope for, so this poem grew out of these thoughts.


photo of windshield during rainy weather
Photo by Lukas Rychvalsky on Pexels.com

Rainy Night in Iowa

Fort Madison, Iowa, 28 December 2025

Skies uniform gray

Mist and wet saturate the ground

Seep into your hoodie and cap

Streetlights reflect onto wet pavement.

Fog gray shades and fades everything,

Convert hi-beams to decorative lights

Left with the fear of Iowa wildlife

Jumping into your path.


It’s getting close to the end of the year and I’m trying to race to reach my word count goal before New Year’s Day 2026. The possibility of me making the deadline can be described as possible but with no more time to lose. However, ever since my journalism days, a tight deadline has always inspired me – as well as this next poem.


skeleton on a laptop
Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com

Immovable Deadline

Fort Madison, Iowa, 28 December 2025

In the end, it comes down to math:

Number of words yet to write

Number of days, hours, and minutes to write,

And a formula you hope will total the right number at Deadline.

No more hemming and hawing

As the numbers are there in your face

One thing to keep in mind: those words

Don’t have to be your best to make it to the Deadline.


Now for a quick commercial break, lol.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.


2026 is coming down the road. I’m wondering what words it will bring along.

-30-


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


Rivers and Words: Poetry Night, 23 Nov. 2025

Tonight is Poetry Night for me, as I continue my journey as a poet playing around with words and ideas, scrambling both up into what could be called a decent dinner or a very late brunch. We could go with either one.

Before we get into the poetry, however, I have a brief poetry celebration to commemorate.

Last year for the first time, I became a dues-paying member of the Iowa Poetry Association, a small effort on my part to try and take my poetry seriously. For the first time this year, I participated in the IPA’s competitions for their annual anthology, Lyrical Iowa. Although I did not place in any of the competitions I participated in, my poem “Peace of Mind” was selected for publication in the 2025 version of Lyrical Iowa. You can pick up a copy here: this year’s edition was dedicated to Rodney Reeves, a fellow IPA member and a member of the Burlington-area Society of Great River Poets I also belong to.

Now, on with the poetry


I’m glad it’s becoming late fall/early winter now. I’ve always felt I did better in colder climates than warmer ones – maybe some heritage from my Wisconsinite parents and grandparents. But I also wonder if it would be everything I’d hope for, so this poem grew out of these thoughts.


village on sea coast
Photo by Mikhail Nilov on Pexels.com

Dreams or Mirages of the North

Fort Madison, Iowa, 23 November 2025

Cradled in my head

In the heat sink of an Iowan July

Despairing of sensing cold ever again

I entertain images of ice-wind gusts over rocky and remote lands

Mountains standing sentinel over a modest hamlet

The stark beauty of winter in twilight.

However, my mind ponders

The cool images warming my overheated soul

And I question if they are mere delusions.

If my dreams became some form of reality

And I arrive at my ideal lands,

Would it merely be a cold hardship rather than one overheated?


I only once lived in a home near the ocean, the modest-sized town of Seabrook, Texas. It was southeast of Houston, on Galveston Bay with Galveston Island a bit further southeast.

I ended up spending most of my life on the banks of the Mississippi River, but I’ve sometimes wondered whether I would have developed something of a similar kinship to the ocean I did to the river. I’ve come to consider that it might be slightly different due to apprehensions I have about very large bodies of water.

I have the type of fear of heights that has no effect on me if I’m at the top floor of a building or flying in a plane1, but leaves me almost paralyzed at the thought of me hanging off the side of a building on a rope or even peeking over the balcony of a tall place. Similarly, I have no fear of crossing an ocean by ship, but I wonder what type of panic I would have if I ducked my face underneath the waves and all I saw was dark blue fathoms and prowling sharks below2.

So, those thoughts prompted the following.


serene ocean pier extending into blue waters
Photo by Shuaizhi Tian on Pexels.com

Tepid Channels and Chilled Depths

Fort Madison, Iowa, 23 November 2025

Sitting in the brownish green of The River

Its Flow around me as I sit on the edge of the channel

Anchoring my feet in the muck of its riverbed,

The life and waters pouring around me,

I ponder what it would be like to dive into the open waters

Of the Open Sea.

I picture myself bobbing on top of the endless brine

And anxiety wrapping my heart into tap-out submission

At the thought of dipping my head above the surface

Gazing into the acres of dark blue, the alien fathoms,

Waiting for it and its dwellers to devour me,

I treasure the tepid channels above the chilled depths.


Now for a quick commercial break, lol.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.


Take care, everyone, and I’ll see you down by the bend in the river, road, or line.

-30-


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


  1. My reluctance to fly nowadays is due to crowded aircraft, cramped seating, and overcharged tickets. ↩︎
  2. A new word I learned today – Thalassophobia, the fear of deep bodies of water. You can learn new stuff every day. ↩︎

Rivers and Words: Poetry Night, 26 Oct. 2025

Welcome to a Sunday night edition of Poetry Night, where I produce some original poetry usually inspired by the territory and lands I live in or my day to day experiences and musings. Tonight will be a mix of both of those ideas.


I managed to get out onto the Mississippi River again today, thanks very much to my wife. It was especially lovely in October when you can see the leaves changing and you don’t start sweating five minutes after you step outside like you do in July. This was (hopefully) the first of a few results of the trip.


Drifting

Fort Madison, Iowa, 26 October 2025

Upstream

The boat muscles against the current

Against the Flow

While we huddle as the wind

Whisks our warmth away.

Once we navigate the starboard turn

Between the green can near the Iowa side

And the red cone near the Illinois

The current and the islands protect us from

The worst of the wind

And we go with the flow.

The multicolored leaves shelter the cabins

On the River’s edge

And it feels like home.


I’ve tried to not get too political with my writing in general and especially my poetry, but it feels like there’s more that needs to be said.


happy birthday greeting card with red and white striped ribbon
Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com

The Cost of Speech

Fort Madison, Iowa, 26 October 2025

Americans confuse “freedom of speech”

With “free speech.”

Trust a teacher and poet to get pedantic

With vocabulary and definitions.

While the latter is a shortened version of the former,

Implications grow that speech is free.

Speech, in fact, has both great value

And great cost.

The proper words have enough value

To inspire people and save souls.

But they also cost their speakers

In ways more valuable than money.

All of us have freedom

But we all have to pay the cost.


Now a quick commercial break, lol.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.



I hope you’ve had a great weekend. I’ll see you around the bend.

-30-


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


A Hodge Podge: Poetry Night, 28 Sept. 2025

assorted color paint buckets

Hello, all who either happened to stumble on to my page or regular subscribers. It’s Poetry Night, where I drop some samples of original poetry for your consumption and consideration. The theme for tonight is… all over the place, to be honest. Let’s see what I whip up tonight.


The first poem tonight is me realizing I’m in a fiction writing rut and trying to get out of it with this poem. It’s only sort of working1.


human skeleton on top of a laptop
Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com

Procrastination

Fort Madison, Iowa, 26 September 2025

Staring at a screen

Which is not the one you need to be staring at

The words don’t come

You want them to appear already

The creation completed

The effort behind you.

But your thoughts

Dart toward endless distractions

And entertainments occupying your mind.

The problem is

While you feel calm when you distract yourself

At the end

There’s just emptiness for time and opportunities

Wasted.


This is not a poem intended to be aimed at anyone in particular. I think it’s something that might apply to many people who think they might need to engage with certain individuals, some they know very well, some little more than strangers. Sometimes it’s better to keep your distance.


house in foggy mountains
Photo by Wendel Rocha de Oliveira on Pexels.com

Hermitage

Fort Madison, Iowa, 26 September 2025

There are people in this world

Who provide anxiety and not comfort

Emotional work and not renewal,

Who drain and don’t cultivate.

You feel you need to engage

To draw them in, to cultivate relationships.

Building relations, networks,

Is the most human of instincts.

But poisoned people you don’t need

In your hermitage of the soul,

You can keep that safe

And thrive on your own.


Now a quick commercial break, lol.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.



Anyway, hope your night is going well. I’m doing all right, trust me. See you around the bend of the road, river, or rail, depending2.

-30-


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


  1. It’s actually not – I just looked at my word count for last week. ↩︎
  2. Thanks to my friend and fellow poet Gesene Oake for her suggestions and revisions to these pieces. ↩︎

Poetry Night at the Writing Life, 23 August 2025: About word weaving and word weavers

photography of eyeglasses on top of book

Hi, everyone, subscribers and random readers alike. It’s Poetry Night, the night I drop some brand new selections of verse for your reading pleasure. The use of words and those who use words for a living are the themes of tonight’s offerings.

But first, a quick commercial break 😄.


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.


Over the years I’ve spent writing in all forms and genres, there’s always been a balancing act between using mountains of words to paint vivid mental pictures or construct grand arguments and keeping what you write short and to the point. Combining this observation with Miles Davis’ statements about how the notes a musician doesn’t play have more significance than the ones they do play were inspiration for this piece.


what is this is all real text with yellow background
Photo by Aleksandar Pasaric on Pexels.com

Words and Spaces

Fort Madison, Iowa, 22 August 2025

Over time in the years I’ve worked and weaved with words

I’ve used ones which were impactful, obscure, theatrical, stylish, and elaborate.

At times they overcrowded my work

Weary football fans packing onto too-small benches for forgotten games and reasons.

But over years I’ve come to learn

The spaces between words

The things left unsaid and unattended for the reader to ponder

Make a meaningful effect.


Earlier this week was the ninth anniversary of The Tragically Hip’s final live show in their hometown of Windsor, Toronto, Canada. The legendary Canadian band was at the end of its final tour after vocalist and primary songwriter Gord Downie announced he had terminal brain cancer. He’d die a year later at just 53 years old.

I had been vaguely aware of the band during its growth into prominence during the early 90’s, but they were always more Canada’s band than other great Canadian musical acts that found cross-border appeal. Unfortunately, I didn’t get into them heavily until just before his death, so I’ve had to spend the time since sifting through three decades worth of fantastic music.

Tonight, I figured a dude who once wrote a song called “Poets” was probably a good subject for one.


Gord Downie

Words to Remember Gord (A Memorial)

Fort Madison, Iowa, 20 August 2025

I remember the sight of you in white

Jaunty white top hat

Knife-edge lean but a grin as wide as the Ontario prairies

Singing for your home and people with a ferocity born

Knowing it was the last time.

Knowing Death was gathering you up, preparing your space,

As you stood tall on the stage.

You sung of death long before it reached you,

But also of love, friendship, loss, home, and life

You were a poet even as you said not to tell you of them

And what I learned from you is

Life has no dress rehearsal

It is now.


Well, hope I gave you some enjoyment tonight. Hope the rest of August goes well for you. Take care, everyone.


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


Poetry Night at the Writing Life, 26 July 2025: About cool secluded places. And mushrooms lol.

Hello, all subscribers and anyone happening upon my page this Saturday evening. Tonight is Poetry night once again. This is where I throw out some brand new, never before seen poetry out into the world and see if anyone digs them or not. How about I get started?


If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…

My first collection of poetry is out.

Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.


You may have sensed this if you have followed me1, but I am not a fan of the hot weather. When some of my work colleagues in April were praying for sun and warmth, I was thinking of how July 2024 extended into November of the same year and thought to myself oh, don’t worry, you’ll get it soon enough and get it hard.

Some people want to vacation in Cancun or Florida, I would prefer to go to Iceland or the Faroe and Shetland Islands. Some people want to go on cruises to the Caribbean; I would prefer a tour of the Rhine/Main/Danube rivers or a voyage of the Great Loop2.

With all that being said, if I had to go outside, I’d feel a lot more comfortable in a dense, cool, moist forest with plenty of shade rather than a tropical jungle, beach, desert, or other biome3. This, plus a bevy of mushrooms popping up in my yard4, inspired this poem.


Mushroom Hunt in the Forest

Fort Madison, Iowa, 26 July 2025

Crisp breeze

Wet air

Cloudy days

Now is my time.

Sneaking under the pine and oak canopy

On my own

Burlap bag over my shoulder

Mushroom knife in my true right hand

Well-thumbed mushroom guide in

My left.

I wander around the trunks

In the cool shade

On the lookout for

Cauliflower

Chanterelle

Hawks Wing

Honey Mushroom

Lobster

The Prince

And the Truffles.

I put them in my sack

Converse with nature

And get some satisfaction

That I can be resourceful

As my electric-deficient ancestors were.


To be honest, however, the deepest darkest place I tend to hang out in (if I have one) during the depths of the overheated Iowa summers has been a basement. My childhood home in Muscatine had a great basement where I spent most of my waking moments. It was my lair. In the first three homes I owned, they all had basements but were not quite set up for lounging, so I had to come up with alternative locations. My new home here in Fort Madison has a proper basement, with enough space for not only my home office, but a recliner and love seat, breakfast nook table, a utility room/storage area/work bench, more storage, bath and shower, refrigerator, and microwave. I need to be appreciative of the nice stuff I have. 🙂


Man Cave

Fort Madison, Iowa, 25 July 2025

Back when

Homo Sapiens Sapiens

Was just Homo Sapiens

Before they built castles

Long houses

Daub and wattle huts

And lean-tos

They gathered inside the natural caverns

In their irregular water and wind-carved

Empty spaces

To make them their own.

They liked the solid cool spaces

Sheltered from the elements

Secure from danger

With a dollop of safety.

I live in different times.

My caves are not rounded and irregular

But squared and measured.

My caves are not wet and living

But dry and dead.

However,

It is a good home for me

Not in tune with the natural world

A concrete, steel, and wood sanctuary

For a civilized boy like me.


That’s it for tonight. Hope you all don’t sweat to death the next couple (or few) of months56.


While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


  1. And how. ↩︎
  2. Here’s some info in case you didn’t know what I was talking about. ↩︎
  3. I am not an outdoorsy person, as you will see. ↩︎
  4. Told you the photos would have some relevance. ↩︎
  5. Iowa only has maybe two perfect months of weather during the year. I have told my wife I do not wish to live anywhere between North and 40° South latitude. Currently, I live at 40°38’05” North. ↩︎
  6. Honestly, I would love to retire and live somewhere around 45° North or South, which would suggest somewhere in Minnesota, the Upper Peninsula, or Alaska. Or maybe southern Patagonia in Argentina. I like cold places, all right? In my final days, I don’t want to sweat to death, even in our climate change world. ↩︎

Poetry Night at the Writing Life, 28 June 2025: About what we keep and what we remember

a room with a chair and a desk in it

Hi, it’s Poetry Night once again. I’ve been busy this month with the imminent release of my book The Yank Striker’s Journey, so poetry hasn’t been on the front-burner of my brain1. But I I do have a couple of offerings for you tonight.


If You’re Interested in my Poetry Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More

My first collection of poetry is out now.

Since Substack doesn’t quite have the setup for this, I’ve set up something here at Liegois Media. I set up my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. This is the link, as is the one below.


As far as poetic inspiration goes, I ended up doing a bit of picking up and rearranging some things I’ve stored for a long time. I mean, some of these items have traveled with me for about twenty years at least and between maybe four different houses. The process inspired at least one poem, which I’ll share with you below2.


crates with potatoes
Photo by Carlos Moura on Pexels.com

Memory Memorials

Fort Madison, Iowa, 28 June 2025

Black plastic mausoleums

Sit ready to entomb

Talismans of memory.

Older resting places

Tearing carboard boxes and dirt-smeared tubs

Disposed for secure memorials.

Letters, trinkets, tickets, and keepsakes

Keys to memories faded or misplaced

Like forgotten jars in the back pantry

And older clothes tucked into the sides of closets.

Talismans tucked away

In hermetically sealed plastic bags and acid-free paper

Then into the black mausoleums stowed on steel shelves

The external hard drives of human memory.


All the thinking about memories, the ones you have and the ones you had, led me to write this related poem below.


bunch of photo print
Photo by Suzy Hazelwood on Pexels.com

Memories Lost

Fort Madison, Iowa, 28 June 2025

Why do memories fade

Other than short circuits and worn wires in the brain

Other than the subconsciousness

Protecting the front of the brain?

Do they get misplaced

Shoved into the back corners of the skull?

Do some memories have shorter life spans than others?

Or does the human hard drive have limited storage

Forced to overwrite older memories for higher priority ones?

It would be good to know

Because finding lost memories

Isn’t as straightforward as finding your phone or house keys.


That’s it for tonight. Hope you’ve had a great June and Pride Month.


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While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


  1. And I’m sorry I blew through my usual deadline for releasing something today (5 p.m. Central). ↩︎
  2. There have been more than a few poems I’ve written not intended for publication (at least not immediately). That’s allowed me to be a bit more free with my experimentation and subject matter than the stuff I write with the express intention to share publicly. ↩︎

Poetry Night at the Writing Life, 24 May 2025: Inspiration from different places

Hi, everyone, it’s Poetry Night.

As I’ve mentioned in this space previously, the final steps to bring my latest book, The Yank Striker’s Journey, have occupied much of my mental capacity that hasn’t been drained off by the end of the school year. It’s a bit difficult to write poetry during these times.


If You’re Interested in my Poetry Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More

My first collection of poetry is out now.

Since Substack doesn’t quite have the setup for this, I’ve set up something here at Liegois Media. I set up my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. This is the link, as is the one below.


The first poem tonight was inspired by a conversation I heard the main character of one of my new projects have with his son. I ended up feeding into the themes of recent poems I’ve written, so I decided to go with it.


red and white boats on water
Photo by Simon Hurry on Pexels.com

What Your River Was Like

Fort Madison, Iowa, 23 May 2025

The boy asked me

What My River was like

I had to think

Because I’d not seen it in years.

There’s a river where we live

We’ve guided our boat down with the flow

But it’s not like My River.

This river is open, framed by surrounding mountains

And the cityscape

My River ambled through the wetlands,

Absorbed the throbbing summer heat

Muddy waters hiding, teeming with life.

I love to take my boy out on the river

But when we glide across the waters

I keep thinking about My River

Where I’ll never return

I wonder if My River would give me as much peace

As it does in my memories.


The second poem was inspired by a recent loss. Shortly after my most recent Poetry Night post, I learned that a close writing acquaintance of mine, Rodney Reeves, passed away after dealing with some health issues. He was a fellow member of the Burlington, Iowa, Society of Great River Poets, which I recently joined. He was a published poet, and at the time of his death was an officer with the Iowa Poetry Association. I can’t claim to have known him as well as many of his friends – we only got to know each other during the past few years of his life. But he was a welcoming presence at Great River Poets meetings who encouraged my initial fumbling with working in verse. I will miss him.


Thanks for the Words (Verse for Rodney)

Fort Madison, Iowa, 23 May 2025

I’ll always remember you sitting there

With a halo of gray hair and a warm smile

Always glad to see me and all the others

Who came to share their words.

You always had a joke,

Or an old music story

I remember how delighted you were

To see the new film about Dylan.

I knew about writing, about words,

I didn’t know how to play with them

Like the poets do

But you invited me and everyone else to the table anyway.

You wrote in the last poem I read of yours before the end

“Be bold never afraid to fail,”

So I’ll keep doing that

Whenever I play with words.


That’s it for tonight. Have a great Memorial Day weekend.


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Poetry Night at the Writing Life, 27 April 2025: Spring has sprung

Hi, everyone, welcome to Poetry Night.

I have to admit the poetry wasn’t as free flowing as it has been recently. There’s a good explanation for that – I’ve been in the midst of revising my upcoming novel The Yank Striker’s Journey. It’s a bit difficult to write words when you’re trying to trim down words you’ve written, among other skills. It’s especially true when you are trying to write in something approaching verse but revising in prose. But, those are the breaks, and I am dedicating myself to try and actually write poetry rather than just brag I write it every once in a while1. So, as usual, I decided to follow what was going around me as inspiration for today’s offerings.


If You’re Interested in my Poetry Here…

My first collection of poetry is out now.

Since Substack doesn’t quite have the setup for this, I’ve set up something here at Liegois Media. I set up my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. This is the link, as is the one below.


Onto the new words. The first poem is inspired by the arrival of the shortest season in the state of Iowa – Spring.


Spring is Sprung

26 April 2025, Fort Madison, Iowa

It’s a fantastic feeling

Driving with the windows open

No sweat on your brow

Shirtsleeve comfort

Bright sun direct and above

No cloud in the sky

Enjoying the first soft-serve ice cream cone

Of Spring.

There’s a regret wrapped in the joy

Because this is Iowa

And in a few weeks

Summer and corn sweat will fill the air.


I couldn’t get revising off my mind this weekend, so it ended up in a poem.


Disappearing Words

26 April 2025, Fort Madison, Iowa

It’s a wonderful sensation

Just like creation

Of the words and worlds from your mind.

You feel accomplished again

When you read words then

Start making them disappear.

The aim is for

You to say less and not more

While allowing the reader to fill the empty spaces.

You hammer the words

Like the smith beat the swords

And leave yourself something strong and true.


That’s it for tonight. See you poetry fans back here in May.


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While I do appreciate you following this blog, I really would like you to subscribe to my Substack page. By subscribing to that page, you’ll not only be receiving my Substack newsletter, The Writing Life With Jason Liegois (the companion blog to this one), but you’ll also be signing up for my email list. Just click the button below.


  1. 1I’m even writing several poems I’m not planning on publishing right away, which I never used to do. I like having the freedom of writing something without having the pressure of wanting to publish it right away. ↩︎