Eleanor Cantor is a lifelong musical performer and half of the duo Sister Chain & Brother John.
Her poems and short stories have been published in various international magazines and anthologies, and she is a 2024 winner of the Ellie J Shakerley Poetry Award.
After many years in Berlin, she settled in Sheffield in 2020 and now enjoys exploring the Peak District and beautiful Derbyshire countryside. However, her poems continue to focus on human nature and mental landscapes.
Eleanor is a member of the Creative Writing Group Berlin and the Poets of Esnoid in Yorkshire. She appreciates the mutual support and inspiration found in writers’ communities.
Poems
Advice
Standing at the duty-free shop with a dad who didn’t care on our final holiday together I ask him to recommend a bottle of whisky, “for who?” “a friend” “If it’s a good friend, then this one’s best,” he regally points to a smoky 12-year-old single malt that’s way above the budget of an English major, and does not offer to add it to his cart. Nor do I ask. I bring the fancy bottle in a cab tracing the embossment to avoid the driver and try not to make a big deal of it, but place it nonchalant by the CD rack of a man who didn’t care about me and he drinks half of it that night, the other half with someone else a weekend later. & the smoke washes off in the laundry the taste of malted disappointment lingers…fades… & 12 years on I’ve wonderfully matured and single. <<<
The Crusader
When he fell, her father carried back his heart in a metal case for her along with the plate he had stolen from the Holy Land. The letter in which he had cancelled their engagement was lost, and so his memory was left unharmed. She cried by the heart and the plate, which were both fitted into the castle’s gate, and kept asking what it was…the different shapes and letters She wanted to know everything he might have known. Her father explained what he could, but he knew little of that distant culture. Her dejection worried him, yet he felt cruel when implying her mourning was excessive And so he went on comforting the forever crying princess by the plate and the heart. <<<
Richard Ringer
You said: “Let’s get together for dinner and I don’t mean the New York ‘let’s get together’ I mean really ‘let’s get together’ Give me your number I want to cook for you guys I’m from Ohio, me and her are”. She said: “yes, we mean it, come to dinner.” You grilled for us outside your Brooklyn brownstone as if it was a front lawn. The fire kept going out no matter how much fuel you poured and in the end, everything, everything tasted of gasoline. The meat, the corn, the veg. We got high on gasoline, we burped gasoline We licked our plates clean of gasoline We talked of our show We talked of your show Of our upbringing: Catholic, Atheist, Jew, JW (all parents make mistakes) of puppies and of horror films; Does Richard Ringer like “The Ring”? We kept in a touch, for a while. I saw you have a child now. Not with her. We have two. You’re still in skinny jeans screaming your head off As it happens - so are we Let’s get together again and burn stuff. <<<
Angel of Suburbia 1983
After “Descent” - Painting by Finnian Clark
You might not think of “swagger” when you think of angels but of grace and holy stuff: unearthly eery things but that Angel who came to my terrace that night as big and as golden as Shwedagon temple and made my parents shut up and blew up the school and took me to see the stars and made stars ask for my autograph and when I showed him my scars said: “what scars?” and shrugged for me the smooth skin of a teenage seal and before he left placed his giant palms on my shoulders – two big yellow California suns and said that what was definitely WILL NOT ever shall be That angel – he had swagger and I’ve been flying on it, soaring ever since. <<<
Talisman
Courageous, set forth – fork it! apron silence begging for his walking stick to stick once and for all. He walked to the Isle of Wight – Celebrated. “Old man always did what he wanted” Not a toss given to the cost shriveling in the rags of the end of the century before last. Yarn ancestors – men barking, men up and left me men three families, women finding out on the bus with pursed photographs “that’s my Owen that is!” “that can’t be!” Now great granddaughters Table duties for the do “You big baby!” She shrieks as he jumps up and down on their mini outside St. Vinnie’s hall Belly rise belly falls, belch belch We lasses ageing chickens bleeding feathers In the crazed despair for mating in the slaughterhouse How come anyone would do? <<<
Protocol
It has been a week I have been sleeping in my office. Nobody knows apart from the guards, if they have noticed. The workday begins at 8.30, and I am first at work. I have my own office which no one enters unauthorized. I could have easily taken a hotel room, but I do not wish to. As long as I am in the office, business is as usual. Last Thursday: returned from work early, from a meeting, just to check, and – how banal – a strange man in my home. Without words, I took out my second briefcase, filled it with shaving kit and change of clothes and returned to the office – the last place in which I’d been happy, and since then I have been here. I worked that day until the last of the employees left, and could not decide where to go. A city hotel? A friend? I feel that as long as I am here my life is as it was. <<<
Thank you; I like unusual material, that takes me somewhere (other). Do I sense a kind of Berlinesque beat feel?😺