January Gill O'Neil

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January Gill O’Neil was born in Norfolk, Virginia, and received a BA from Old Dominion University and an MFA from New York University. She is the author of Rewilding (CavanKerry Press, 2018), recognized by Mass Center for the Book as a notable poetry collection for 2018; Misery Islands (CavanKerry Press, 2014), winner of a 2015 Paterson Award for Literary Excellence; and Underlife (CavanKerry Press, 2009). The recipient of fellowships from Cave Canem and the Barbara Deming Memorial Fund, O'Neil was awarded a Massachusetts Cultural Council grant and was named the John and Renée Grisham Writer in Residence for 2019-2020 at the University of Mississippi, Oxford. She is an associate professor of English at Salem State University and holds board positions at the Association of Writers and Writing Programs and Montserrat College of Art. O'Neil was the curator of a special series of Poem-a-Day from July 6–July 17, 2020, and lives in Beverly, Massachusetts. Source

The Rookie

America under the lights
at Harry Ball Field. A fog rolls in
as the flag crinkles and drapes

 

around a metal pole.
My son reaches into the sky
to pull down a game-ender,

 

a bomb caught in his leather mitt.
He gives the ball a flat squeeze
then tosses it in from the outfield,

 

tugs his cap over a tussle of hair
before joining the team—
all high-fives and handshakes

 

as the Major boys line up
at home plate. They are learning
how to be good sports,

 

their dugout cheers interrupted only
by sunflower seed shells spat
along the first base line.

 

The coach prattles on
about the importance of stealing
bases and productive outs

 

while a teammate cracks a joke
about my son’s ‘fro, then says,
But you’re not really black…

 

to which there’s laughter,
to which he smiles but says nothing,
which says something about

 

what goes unsaid, what starts
with a harmless joke, routine
as a can of corn.

 

But this is little league.
This is where he learns
how to field a position,

 

how to play a bloop in the gap—
that impossible space where
he’ll always play defense.

Published:

2015

Length:

Regular

Literary Movements:

Contemporary

Anthology Years:

2025

Themes:

Childhood & Coming of Age

Family

Identity

Music & Sports

Racial Injustice

Literary Devices:

Alliteration

the repetition of the same letter or sound at the beginning of words appearing in succession

Anaphora

a figure of speech in which words repeat at the beginning of successive clauses, phrases, or sentences

Dialogue

conversation between two or more people as a feature of a book, play, or movie

Metaphor

a comparison between two unrelated things through a shared characteristic

Onomatopoeia

A word that, when spoken aloud, has a sound that is associated with the thing or action being named.

Polyptoton

The use of multiple words with the same root in different forms.

Sensory Detail

words used to invoke the five senses (vision, hearing, taste, touch, smell)

Simile

a comparison between two unlike things using the words “like” or “as”

Tercet

A stanza of three lines of verse that rhyme together or are connected by rhyme with an adjacent stanza.

Varied syntax

diverse sentence structure