Using form: Sonnet: Jenna Le, ‘Purses’

When our Quiz Bowl team of eighteen-year-olds snagged
a berth in the finals, held in New York City,
my small-town Minnesotan brain cells dizzied—
at last I’d be some place that mattered. Swag
was my teammate Anne’s fixation: knockoff bags
peddled in Chinatown, affixed with glitzy
Kate Spade labels. Anne bought a sack of six,
then forgot it on the airport shuttle’s shag
seats; someone swiped it within minutes. Kate,
I learned a fact of womanhood that year:
even we knockoff girls, cheap, desperate
to look like someone else, to imitate
a finer woman, have our value; we’re
wanted, wanted, until we disappear.
*****
Jenna Le writes: “The anecdote narrated in the first ten lines of the poem poured out of me easily and naturally enough. It was an anecdote that had been knocking around inside my brain for many years, but it wasn’t until I sat down to write the poem that the incident’s metaphorical meaning — that is, the epiphany contained in the poem’s last four lines — seemed to crystallize in the air in front of my eyes — and, to me, made the whole poem worthwhile. Honestly, until I sat down to write the poem, it had never even occurred to me that such a slight-seeming anecdote might have any metaphorical meaning at all. I sat down to write the poem more or less on a lark, and then the sonnet form just sort of took over and forced me to look deeper, to see more depth in my own material. This is one of the reasons I love the sonnet form.”
Jenna Le (jennalewriting.com) is the author of three full-length poetry collections, Six Rivers (NYQ Books, 2011), A History of the Cetacean American Diaspora (Indolent Books, 2017), and Manatee Lagoon (Acre Books, 2022), the last of which is the collection in which “Purses” appears and which can be purchased here: https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/distributed/M/bo185843950.html
Photo: “DIY Kate Spade Owl Purse” by Stacie Stacie Stacie is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0.


