4.6 • 729 Ratings
🗓️ 19 February 2025
⏱️ 8 minutes
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Today’s poem will leave you “knowing very well what it was all about.” Happy reading.
Gary Soto was born in Fresno, California on April 12, 1952, to working-class Mexican American parents. As a teenager and college student, he worked in the fields of the San Joaquin Valley, chopping beets and cotton and picking grapes. He was not academically motivated as a child, but he became interested in poetry during his high school years. He attended Fresno City College and California State University–Fresno, and he earned an MFA from the University of California–Irvine in 1976.His first collection of poems, The Elements of San Joaquin (University of Pittsburgh Press), won the United States Award of the International Poetry Forum in 1976 and was published in 1977. Since then, Soto has published numerous books of poetry, including You Kiss by th’ Book: New Poems from Shakespeare’s Line (Chronicle Books, 2016), A Simple Plan (Chronicle Books, 2007), and New and Selected Poems (Chronicle Books, 1995), which was a finalist for the National Book Award.Soto cites his major literary influences as Edward Field, Pablo Neruda, W. S. Merwin, Gabriel GarcĂa Márquez, Christopher Durang, and E. V. Lucas. Of his work, the writer Joyce Carol Oates has said, “Gary Soto’s poems are fast, funny, heartening, and achingly believable, like Polaroid love letters, or snatches of music heard out of a passing car; patches of beauty like patches of sunlight; the very pulse of a life.”Soto has also written three novels, including Amnesia in a Republican County (University of New Mexico Press, 2003); a memoir, Living Up the Street (Strawberry Hill Press, 1985); and numerous young adult and children’s books. For the Los Angeles Opera, he wrote the libretto to Nerdlandia, an opera.Soto has received the Andrew Carnegie Medal and fellowships from the California Arts Council, the Guggenheim Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. He lives in Northern California.
-bio via Academy of American Poets
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0:00.0 | Welcome back to The Daily Poem, a podcast from Goldberry Studios. I'm Sean Johnson, and today is Wednesday, February 19th, 2025. |
0:14.5 | Today's poem is by contemporary poet Gary Soto, who's also an author of many awarded and well-recognized books for adults, for young adults, |
0:24.3 | and for children. |
0:25.9 | And he specializes in dramatizing the particularities and challenges of immigrant communities and particularly the very young. |
0:38.3 | And this poem is in that latter vein. |
0:41.7 | It's called oranges. |
0:43.8 | I'll read it once, offer a few comments, and then read it one more time. |
0:49.7 | Oranges. |
0:52.5 | The first time I walked with a girl, I was 12, cold and weighted down with two oranges in my jacket. |
1:00.0 | December, frost cracking beneath my steps, my breath before me, then gone as I walked toward her house, |
1:08.0 | the one whose porch light burned yellow night and day in any weather. |
1:12.5 | A dog barked at me until she came out, pulling at her gloves, face bright with rouge. |
1:18.2 | I smiled, touched her shoulder, and led her down the street across a used car lot and a line |
1:23.7 | of newly planted trees until we were breathing before a drugstore. |
1:27.8 | We entered, the tiny bell, bringing a sales lady down a narrow aisle of goods. |
1:33.0 | I turned it to the candies, teared like bleachers, and asked what she wanted. |
1:38.2 | Light in her eyes, a smile starting at the corners of her mouth. |
1:42.9 | I fingered a nickel in my pocket, and when she lifted |
1:46.1 | a chocolate that cost a dime, I didn't say anything. I took the nickel from my pocket, |
1:52.3 | then an orange, and set them quietly on the counter. When I looked up, the lady's eyes met mine |
1:58.7 | and held them, knowing very well what it was all about. |
2:04.2 | Outside, a few cars hissing past fog hanging like old coats between the trees. |
... |
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