ode to newspapers

(for the boomers)

sharon hope fabriz
2 min readApr 12, 2024
cropped photo / Newspaper fire orange from Newsflash /

toppled trees brought straight to the kitchen table

or divan or recliner or the stack in the garage

to fill the recycle bin or the fireplace

to assuage the guilt of consumption of

what’s happening that somebody somewhere

wants known, sold, bartered, exposed, named, held

for a time as oatmeal bursts its oozy bubbles on the gas stove

and the tea kettle relieves itself of steam to sound the dramatic

call for comfort from outside to inside,

the mmmmmm feelings of morning,

and that newspaper, a sidewalk promise retrieved like some treasure,

landed right here, right now, in the plastic wrap to keep the rain out

because everyone knows the mess of wet pages and

how the ink stains the hand

and the sheets are impossible to separate and what’s the use of hanging the

whole damn Section A out on the line when … well,

the news will return again tomorrow…

Oh, Bringer of the Outside In, thank you for

showing off what’s hot and what’s not,

what’s blowing up and what’s closing in, what’s fast fleeting and

what’s making people forget all those worries if

they just had themselves a new washing machine or storage shed and

for saving the funnies for the end to wash clean of

every get this want that advertisement and

every woe is us headline and

let’s just take a minute with Ziggy and Peanuts and B.C. and

Hagar the Horrible and Doonesbury and Garfield and Far Side

sure, the news was a day old and marketing was rampant,

sure, the editorial board bias was clear in every placement, angle and edge,

sure, the puzzles were light and addictive and

a relief from the stuff of argument,

sure, the classifieds rarely held that surprise,

that perfect job, that lost kitten found,

that antique mirror that would look nice over the mantle…

Chronicles and Times and Registers and Posts,

thank you for giving me a reason to rest and

let myself feel a part of something bigger in the early morning hours

when everyone else in the house was still behind

a closed bedroom door. . . .

. . . .double-clicking for an op-ed in the glow of a screen

just ain’t the same thing.

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