Klas 4A van ArtEZ Creative Writing studeert dit jaar af onder de titel I should be gussying up my resume, dusting off my protestant work ethic, not walking around the neighborhood loving the peonies and the lilac bushes, naar een gedicht van Valencia Robin.

Vanaf 5 juni zijn de eindwerken van klas 4A voor te bestellen. Ben je geïnteresseerd in het kopen van meerdere werken tegelijk? Bestel via dezevendelichting om bundelkorting te krijgen!

Op zondag 4 juli wordt de afstudeeravond van I should be gussying up my resume, dusting off my protestant work ethic, not walking around the neighborhood loving the peonies and the lilac bushes gelivestreamd vanuit Theater de Leeuw te Arnhem.

Wij zijn: Pelumi Adejumo, Anne Bosveld, Elianne van Elderen, Dino de Haas, Liene Schipper, Suzanne Reedijk, Lieke Tijink, Sophie Zwertbroek en Femke Zwiep.

Needless to say I support the forsythia’s war
against the dull colored houses, the beagle
deciphering the infinitely complicated universe
at the bottom of a fence post. I should be gussying up
my resume, I should be dusting off my protestant work ethic,
not walking around the neighborhood loving the peonies
and the lilac bushes, not heading up Shamrock
and spotting Lucia coming down the train tracks. Lucia
who just sold her first story and whose rent is going up,
too, Lucia who says she’s moving to South America to save money,
Lucia, cute twenty-something I wish wasn’t walking down train tracks
alone. I tell her about my niece teaching in China, about the waiter
who built a tiny house in Hawaii, how he saved up, how
he had to call the house a garage to get a building permit.
Someone’s practicing the trumpet, someone’s frying bacon
and once again the wisteria across the street is trying to take over
the nation. Which could use a nice invasion, old growth trees
and sea turtles, every kind of bird marching
on Washington. If I had something in my refrigerator,
if my house didn’t look like the woman who lives there
forgot to water the plants, I’d invite Lucia home,
enjoy another hour of not thinking about not having a job,
about not having a mother to move back in with.
I could pick Lucia’s brain about our circadian rhythms,
about this space between sunrise and sunset,
ask if she’s ever managed to get inside it, the air,
the sky ethereal as all get out—so close
and no ladder in sight.



After Graduate School
Valencia Robin