SHE WON’T READ THIS

She’s busy making dinner after getting home

from ‘her work’, which is merely chatting

to consumers then transferring their money

into the ether. Me? I give birth to and nurture

poems and send them off to editors who may

or may not be discerning. Okay, she gets paid

while I labour primarily to change the world

via publication hence more reason to be

exempt from duties that could take my eyes

off a poetry prize. Playing long game here.

Delusional if she thinks I can manage that

while cooking and cleaning. Let’s call it

what it obviously is: Bread-winner privilege.

Yesterday, under pressure, I showered while

there was a needy poem calling out from

the screen. I do not smell bad, rarely work

up sweat. It’s not easy living with the un-

cultivated but, being tolerant as well as

creative, I give it my second-best shot.

“Allan Lake was born in 1949 and lived in the small Canadian town of Asquith in the prairie province of Saskatchewan. After high school he first felt called to hippiedom in British Columbia and then joined a religion which prompted a move to Cape Breton Island on Canada's east coast. After deciding to become an English teacher, Lake moved to the Spanish island of Ibiza where he taught for a year and met his future wife. Together they returned to Saskatchewan where Lake completed his degrees, taught English for many years and had three daughters.

In 1985 the family migrated to Launceston on the island of Tasmania where Lake found employment as an English teacher.

It was during his 13 years on Tasmania that Lake published his first collection of poems called “Tasmanian Tiger Breaks Silence” (1988), followed by a small volume of 4 poems called “Grandparents : Portraits of Strain” (1994) and Sand in the Sole (Xlibris, 2014). Here’s an E-book preview.

He also edited 11 volumes of Traks, the poetry annual by Tasmanian high school students.

Due to some family health issues, at the end of 1998 the family moved across Australia to Perth for a change of climate. Lake continued to teach English and write poems but published very little during this 10 year period. It was during this time that his marriage ended as did his faith in religion. His then adult daughters and 2 granddaughters had all moved to the other side of Australia so in 2008 Lake did the same, settling in Melbourne, Victoria.

His latest chapbook of poems, “My Photos of Sicily”, was published by Ginninderra Press in 2020.

Journals as The Hong Kong Review, The big windows review, The forty South, Borderless journal, Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Tokyo Poetry Journal, Cajun Mutt Press, Cordite Poetry Review, Odyssey, Fevers of the mind, The wild Word, DSMAG and many more have published him.”

Sources: Amazon and several magazines