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Episode 151: The View from the Outside artwork
Arts

Episode 151: The View from the Outside

Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile by Painted Bride Quarterly

Feb 18, 202633:02Arts

We’re so over the snow and ice, Slushies. Join us as we cozy up to three poems from Hilary King. We admire the first poem’s warm nostalgia towards old technology and its recollection of a burgeoning appreciation for art....

About This Episode

Episode 151: The View from the Outside is an episode from Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile by Painted Bride Quarterly. We’re so over the snow and ice, Slushies. Join us as we cozy up to three poems from Hilary King. We admire the first...

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This episode belongs to Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile.

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Episode Details

Published Feb 18, 2026, 33:02 long, audio available.

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What is Episode 151: The View from the Outside about?

We’re so over the snow and ice, Slushies. Join us as we cozy up to three poems from Hilary King. We admire the first poem’s warm nostalgia towards old technology and its recollection of a burgeoning appreciation for art. Sam notes how well the poem’s title prepares the reader for the poem that follows. The pairing of the projection of art and the projection of memory intrigues Jason. The setting in an art history class sends Sam to the Julia Roberts’ movie Mona Lisa Smile , also set in 1953. Whether mothers or daughters, we consider how much we can know about another person’s interior life. Kathy puts on her bad cop hat, but in the nicest way possible. We’re thinking about the importance of sharply observed details and how they can focus a poem from the general to the specific. In the final poem we’ll clarify whether we’re talking about drunk aunts or drunk ants and why either would be preferable to a drunk uncle. And Dagne questions what duties an epigraph can or should perform. Slushies, if you’re attending AWP in March, please stop by and see us at the book fair. We’ll be at table 1272. We’d love to see you in person. Thanks, as always, for listening! At the table: Dagne Forrest, Tobi Kassim, Samantha Neugebauer, Jason Schneiderman, Kathleen Volk Miller, Lisa Zerkle, and Lillie Volpe (sound engineer) Author Bio: Originally from the Blue Ridge mountains of Virginia, Hilary King is a poet now living in the San Francisco Bay Area of California. Her poems have appeared in Ploughshares, Salamander, The Louisville Review, Fourth River, Common Ground Review, and other publications. She was the 2023 winner of the Rose Warner Prize from Freshwater Review and the second place winner of the 2025 Common Ground Review Annual Poetry Prize. She serves as an editor for DMQ Review, and her book of poems Stitched on Me was published by Riot in Your Throat Press in 2024. Author Website: Instagram: @hilaryseessomething Facebook: Hilary Rogers King Bluesky: @hilary299.bsky.social My Mother’s Scholarship Job, 1953 In the ivied dark, she rushes to keep up. The professor barks out facts, theories, slows only for art he likes, or to hiss when she fumbles a slide, sending a Renoir sideways, her face hot in the yellow projector light, rows of girls in store-bought clothes turning to stare at her. After she was accepted, her mother began sewing, made her six versions of the same dress, full-skirted, round necked, good as any that ever dressed a mannequin. She does fumble the slides. She hasn’t mastered this machine, dazed by how it transforms a square into the magnificent. Monet’s shimmering train station, Van Gogh’s glowing garden at Arles. She never tells her mother she wears dungarees for the class she takes over and over again, the machine oily, trapping her in the dark, in the back, never up front, her pencil poised like a fork for a feast. Nest She turned thirteen and shut her door on us. We let her, let her make a freedom of those four walls. What she did, watched, heard, learned, hid– we had only outlines, fear and hope filled in the rest. Mornings she stepped over the threshold, shouldered her childhood, cycled towards the gristmill. Afternoons she returned, spent, recovered only with the door closed. Gone just yesterday, grown enough to go, I leave her door open, let it swing like memory. How to Be Peonies from Trader Joe’s Enter the house in a shroud. Allow the presence of water. Exist as a fist. When no one is looking, peep out one pink petal. That night, alone again, unfurl another. Watch them walk past the golden pollen you fed the table. Get drunk on your own beauty, open your face wide as a drunk aunt’s smile. One day later, die spectacularly, fabulously your magenta remains scattered like broken glass.

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Which podcast is Episode 151: The View from the Outside from?

Episode 151: The View from the Outside is an episode from Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile by Painted Bride Quarterly.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 33:02 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on Feb 18, 2026.

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Are there related episodes from Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile?

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Where can I listen to Episode 151: The View from the Outside?

You can listen to Episode 151: The View from the Outside on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Episode 151: The View from the Outside is from Painted Bride Quarterly’s Slush Pile by Painted Bride Quarterly.

What are the episode details?

Published Feb 18, 2026 and 33:02 long