Good, Renée Nicole

United States, (1988-2026)

On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs

  1. i want back my rocking chairs,
  2.  
  3. solipsist sunsets,
  4.  
  5. & coastal jungle sounds that are tercets from cicadas and pentameter from the hairy legs of
  6. cockroaches.
  7.  
  8. i’ve donated bibles to thrift stores
  9.  
  10. (mashed them in plastic trash bags with an acidic himalayan salt lamp—
  11.  
  12. the post-baptism bibles, the ones plucked from street corners from the meaty hands of zealots, the
  13. dumbed-down, easy-to-read, parasitic kind):
  14.  
  15. remember more the slick rubber smell of high gloss biology textbook pictures; they burned the hairs
  16. inside my nostrils,
  17.  
  18. & salt & ink that rubbed off on my palms.
  19.  
  20. under clippings of the moon at two forty five AM I study&repeat
  21.  
  22. ribosome
  23.  
  24. endoplasmic—
  25.  
  26. lactic acid
  27.  
  28. stamen
  29.  
  30. at the IHOP on the corner of powers and stetson hills—
  31.  
  32. i repeated & scribbled until it picked its way & stagnated somewhere i can’t point to anymore, maybe
  33. my gut—
  34.  
  35. maybe there in-between my pancreas & large intestine is the piddly brook of my soul.
  36.  
  37.  
  38.  
  39. it’s the ruler by which i reduce all things now; hard-edged & splintering from knowledge that
  40. used to sit, a cloth against fevered forehead.
  41.  
  42. can i let them both be? this fickle faith and this college science that heckles from the back of the
  43. classroom
  44.  
  45. now i can’t believe—
  46.  
  47. that the bible and qur’an and bhagavad gita are sliding long hairs behind my ear like mom
  48. used to & exhaling from their mouths “make room for wonder”—
  49.  
  50. all my understanding dribbles down the chin onto the chest & is summarized as:
  51.  
  52. life is merely
  53.  
  54. to ovum and sperm
  55.  
  56. and where those two meet
  57.  
  58. and how often and how well
  59.  
  60. and what dies there.

 Renée Nicole Macklin. Academy of American Poets Prize 2020. Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA. https://poets.org/.

About the Poet:

Renée Nicole Good (aka: Renée Nicole Macklin, Renée Nicole Ganger), United States, (1988-2026), was a poet. In 2020 was an undergraduate in the English Department at Old Dominion University in Virginia. That year she made Spring Dean’s List and was the winner of the 2020 Academy of American Poets, University & College Poetry Prize at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA.

In 2026, Good, then a 37-year-old Minneapolis mother of three, was fatally shot on Jan. 7, by a federal ICE agent. She and a group of people were allegedly blocking ICE officials. Good and her wife, Becca, had stopped to support their neighbors that day amid an immigration enforcement operation. Becca said later, “We had whistles. They had guns.” More about her: Renée Nicole Good. [DES-01/26]

 • Biographies here are short. Yet all the poets presented have fascinating lives. And they have created a bountiful trough of treasures beyond these works. Please root on about those you enjoy! I hope you find something informative, meaningful or that provokes your further contemplation.

13 thoughts on “Good, Renée Nicole”

  1. This was so raw and beautiful and honest. I’m so sorry what happened to you… this never should have happened to you. My heart breaks for your family left behind.

  2. rest in peace renée. what a beautiful poem that encompasses such a seemingly mundane part of life as donating items we don’t need anymore, and the nostalgia and self-reflection it brings. i wish the world could have more of your poetry.

  3. RIP Renee. Taken too soon by monsters. May your children remember your laughter and the way you kissed them goodnight. I didn’t know you, I only learned your name today, but as a mother, my heart aches. Both for your own mother and for your children. Your poor husband, I’m so sorry. May something good and lasting come from this senseless tragedy.

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