Set in a small-town, sub-Arctic dive bar, this debut poetry collection explores the complexities of addiction and the person beneath, and the possibility of finding home and community in unexpected places. Among Borin’s poems are portraits of the bar’s regular customers and employees—recurring characters, like those who might appear in a dark and unconventional sitcom. The religious night janitor catalogues the day’s sins; the retired barmaid gussies up at the mirror; the regular customers and their regular habits are described to a new employee: “R has a two-drink limit. A likes a coaster. Remember, / Mrs. O takes a chilled pilsner glass / with her bottle of Blue.” In the melancholy atmosphere of the bar and the rooms upstairs, the speakers of Borin’s poems find unexpected solace and belonging. The habits, the routine, the regulars, the predictability of it all brings some kind of chaotic order to chaotic life: We drink without even having to think about it, because it feels good to lose control, feels like regaining it.
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Tara Borin. The Pit
The. Pit
Contents
Beer Parlour
Desire Paths
Church Key
List of Duties in a Subarctic Dive Bar
Sunday Morning Coming Down
Father’s Day
Total Eclipse
Cribbage & Chill
Rooms for Rent
Heartbreak Hotel
Home
Wraith
Drunk Tank
Last Night
We’ll Never Have Enough of This
The Regulars
Dearest
Night Janitor
Offering
Portrait of the Water-Witcher
Portrait of the Retired Barmaid
Reasons
The Hard Stuff
The Addict’s Wife
Punch
Telephone
Enough
At the Cop Shop
Pit Kid
Last Call
Rest Stop in Pelly Crossing
Flood
One for the Ditch
Romance Capital
The Wall
Notes & Acknowledgements
About the Author
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Tara Borin
This book is for everyone who has found home at the Pit, for better and for worse.
.....
Held in perpetual Christmas lights’ glow, curtains drawn against the street, we pull hands from pockets to lay bare our secrets like dark gems.
They glint among small change, crumpled General Store receipts, bits of loose tobacco—