Molly Cross-Blanchard

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Molly Cross-Blanchard

Molly Cross-Blanchard

Biography

Molly Cross-Blanchard is a white and Métis writer and editor born on Treaty 3 territory (Fort Frances, ON), raised on Treaty 6 territory (Prince Albert, SK), and living on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples (Vancouver, BC). She did an English BA at the University of Winnipeg and a Creative Writing MFA at UBC, and is now the publisher at Room magazine. Her debut poetry chapbook is I Don't Want to Tell You, published with Rahila's Ghost Press in 2018, and her debut full-length book of poetry is Exhibitionist, published with Coach House Books in 2021. Find out more at mollycrossblanchard.com or by following her on Twitter and Instagram (@mollyecb).

Poetics Statement

I write poems against shame—shame about the body and its functions, our identities, and our behaviours as social beings who fall in love and get hurt—oscillating between the consuming heaviness of shame and the complete rejection of it. The major themes and subject matter in my poems are romantic love, body image, pop culture, anxiety and depression, sex, Indigeneity, food, childhood, desire, disclosure, embarrassment, and fantasy. What the speaker of my poems wants more than anything is to tell you the worst things about herself with the hope that you’ll still like her in the end.

I blends epistolary, confessional, lyric, and prose forms, especially favouring the poetic statement and contemporary plainspeak, and I try to use humour and sharp thematic and formal turns act as vehicles to empathy and reader comprehension. There is variety across my body of work with regard to rhythm, shape, voice, and tone, and one of my publishing goals is to avoid alienating readers with complex language, resulting (hopefully) in work that appeals to both new readers of poetry and seasoned poetry fans.

I hope you’ll be able to laugh with (and at?) my poems, and let them take you inward. Feel free to gently poke fun at me, and yourself, and know that you have a friend who understands how you’re feeling. I hope these poems will allow you to get lost for a while in a world that feels less lonely.
 

Sample of Poet's Work

EXHIBITIONIST

The most orgasms I ever had in one go

come over Christmas vacation

in my childhood basement bedroom:

 

door cracked open, sheets

peeled back, pussy

in plain view of the cat

 

clawing carpet. Is this how flashers feel

in their trench coats and

chest hair? I’d like to sit

 

in the park with my thumb stuck

up my nose and wait

for someone to notice. I want to be more

 

like the woman in Burger King

who eats fries straight off the floor,

the woman who cries in Walmart

 

when her preteen son says Fuck you, Mom

for the first time in front of the greeter

yanking carts. At the strip club

 

I eat onion rings, watch the dancer

watching me from upside down

in her halo of light. When will my roommate notice

 

the way I air-dry underwear on the corner

of the hallway mirror, symbol of sex

in his reflection? I want to feel

 

like a display-model lipstick — dug-at nub

smeared across the mouths of strangers, a much-handled

sample of the real thing.

WAY OUT, OR

POEM I WROTE WHILE JOGGING ON 12TH AVE

If that Purolator van hops the curb, crushes

my pelvis and spleen, New Balance tumbling acrobatic

into the intersection free of my body, triumphant

bloom of blood across my sweats. If I’m tube-fed

in the hospital and my body has to eat

its own fat while my exes watch

from the visitors’ wing, distraught

and horny. I’m unable to sit upright,

my new job has to be done by someone

else. I’m released from my contract. I’m brave,

not depressed. Pointing to each purple scar,

the brace around my neck, the needle

pumping morphine into my wrist, I say See? This

is why. And the bosses say You poor thing.

 

A lawyer from the tv show Suits goes to court for me,

wins a giant settlement from Purolator.

I never have to work again. I heal. My body

meets this dismembering with fervour

and I’m stupid beautiful. Edward Cullen

has drained me of my mortal blood

and filled my flesh with liquid marble.

While the sexy physical therapist is testing

the mobility of my new titanium hip, he can’t help

himself, he eats my pussy and then

tells me I taste like peaches and I really do

taste like peaches. When we swap

tender vows ’til death do us, two doves

fly a heart around the sun.

WHEN WE’RE YOUNG AND INSECURE ABOUT OUR INTELLIGENCE

after Monica McClure

Serena never talks to her mom on the phone

while she’s pooping. As soon as she buys toilet paper

Serena takes it out of the plastic and puts it in a drawer.

Has she seen me flick a booger at the floor? Serena never

sticks loose hair to the wall when she showers, and she knits

while she’s watching Netflix. I don’t do anything

while I’m watching Netflix.

 

Serena has the coolest clothes. She wears these shoes

you’d only see in a Billie Eilish video. Billie Eilish

is seventeen. When I was seventeen I was so worried

about the hem of my Giant Tiger jeans. Now I read

my horoscope and itemize each sadness

in a notebook. Billie Eilish reads her horoscope

and has her people build a theme park. Serena

reads her horoscope and just can’t be bothered.

 

One time I ran out of toilet paper and used

a torn-off piece of tampon box to wipe. When Billie Eilish

runs out of toilet paper, her people go to Walgreens

and then she makes toilet-paper cranes and crushes them

with her butt cheeks for a music video, and it’s ART. Serena

never runs out of toilet paper. When Serena leaves a party

to poop, and upon her return a friend hands back her vodka soda

asking, How was your poop? she never

replies, Disappointing.

 

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