Clint Margrave is the author of Salute the Wreckage(2016) and The Early Death of Men (2012), both published by NYQ Books. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Threepenny Review, New York Quarterly, The Writer's Almanac, Rattle, Cimarron Review, Verse Daily, The American Journal of Poetry, and Ambit (UK),among others. He lives in Los Angeles, CA.




Poets Resist
Edited by Asante Keron Hamid
October 24, 2018

Clint Margrave

On the Banks of the Danube

they found the young mother’s body. And all I could think about were the fields of sunflowers that went on for miles when I traveled through Bulgaria last summer. The red roofs of village houses. The shopkeepers that sat smoking together on busy streets in perfectly-timed cigarette breaks. The devoted young friends I made, staging art exhibits in the center of cities. The father who kept kissing the cheek of his disabled daughter each time he wiped the drool from her mouth. The boy ringing the bell on his bicycle. The parents who carried their paraplegic son onto a raft in the Black Sea so he could swim with his brothers and sisters. The melon ice cream in the park on Saturday. The little girl running across grass in bright pink pants shouting, “Mamo! Mamo!”


As someone who has visited Bulgaria many times, including for a month this past summer, I'm still trying to wrap my head around the brutal rape and murder of Viktoria Marinova, Bulgarian journalist and mother of a seven-year-old daughter. It's hard to merge this horrifying story with my overwhelmingly positive experience of this beautiful, peaceful land and its kind-hearted and devoted people. Unfortunately, such experiences are not newsworthy enough to be reported by the New York Times or CNN and most Americans only associate Bulgaria with what does make the headlines: communism (formerly), corruption, and now crime.

Poets Resist is published by Glass Poetry Press.
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