The Widow’s Crayon Box
The Widow’s Crayon Box, Poems by Molly Peacock ff
The Anna Karenina principle might have merit, that all happy families are alike, but when one member dies, say one member of a marriage, the similarity, along with some of the happiness, passes through a prism and splits into an array of variation. I became a widow a few months after Molly and I find her idea/metaphor of the mammoth crayon box to be a gift. So much distress is caused by the feeling that our grief must conform to some preordained chain. Ideas on the stages of grief abound and give people who have enough to feel and process the additional, and crazy, notion that there is one right way to grieve. With this book of poems, the full spectrum of color is at our disposal.
Along with color, water is an image that dominates the work – swimming in…



