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the wallpaper project

Paper-thin Walls

I’ve never lived
with wallpaper
but I know paneling

thin veneer laid
over pressboard
formaldehyde and glue

medium fake oak re-
varnished every year
tacky tar washed

away and doors
slammed one room
over. Voices, hushed.

* * *
For a Read Write Poem prompt, which was terrific. I need a little more time with it, but it’s all I got for now. Thanks, Dave.

Find other ideas, here.

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30 Comments

  1. Shayla says:

    I really like that you went with paneling as the narrative wallpaper; it’s so relatable. Everyone’s had to live with paneling and/or thin walls at some point in their life, whether in their childhood home, dorm room, first apartment, etc.

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks Shayla, for the visit, and comment!

  2. Neil Reid says:

    Deb, that last stanza gets really real! Especially the hushed voices! (Maybe I’m glad I was an only child.)

    1. Deb says:

      Hey, Neil. I’m an only, too.

  3. Derrick says:

    Hi Deb,

    “thin veneer” can apply to so many things and panelling of the kind we see over here is the type you want to rip away!

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks for reading, Derrick. I appreciate your response. :-)

  4. Lori Morea says:

    Egads…Flashbacks of a paneled basement never finished! Loved the slamming doors, 2 sisters, had lots of those!

    1. Deb says:

      Ah, sometimes our houses are too quiet, sometimes too noisy. Thanks, Lori, for stopping by and commenting.

  5. Cynthia Short says:

    Was so fashionable in the 60′s…
    I like the cheap, tawdry feeling I experienced while reading this.
    (funny how so many of this week’s poems have to do with childhood sadness-mine included!)

    1. Deb says:

      Not just fashionable, but structural. That’s how trailers were made, and mostly still are, I suppose.

  6. rallentanda says:

    Like the door slam and hushed voices. Don’t like the veneer.Im
    drawn to only children…they have an air of confident solitude about them.When asked if I’d like a brother or sister I always said yes because I suspected that was an acceptable response but secretly
    the idea did not appeal to me at all.I really enjoyed being the entire focus of my family’s attention. I feel very sorry for children who grow
    up in the shadow of a sibling!

    1. Deb says:

      Ha! We’re outing ourselves.

      I never liked paneling, either. Esp. having lived it.

  7. I’ve never lived with it either, just paint on the walls and posters/tapestries wherever possible. There’s a deeper meaning suggested by that simple phrase, though: “I know paneling”…the expansion given only heightens my curiosity.

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks, Joseph. I think there is more to be written.

  8. pamela says:

    Deb nice poem. You can smell the varnish here.

    Pamela

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks, Pamela.

  9. wayne says:

    thin veneer laid…..I really like that…and the rest is very enjoyable also…..thanks for this Deb

    1. Deb says:

      Thank you, Wayne!

  10. Dick says:

    Deb, this is a keeper. Within its economical structure, it manages the association between the veneered, ‘tacky tar’ of the environment and the life lived within it superbly well. Don’t tamper!

    1. Deb says:

      Wow, thank you, Dick. I’ll leave it alone.

  11. carolee says:

    i like the brevity of this and how it ends with the doors slamming and then a hush. i can picture a child looking around a room. and then the door slam as punctuation. :)

    1. Deb says:

      So glad, Carolee. Thank you. I hate slamming doors, hushed voices.

  12. Paul Oakley says:

    Great opening, Deb! “This I know…”

    And such powerful evocation in the string of words:

    thin
    veneer
    formaldehyde
    fake
    varnished
    tacky

    And all that neighboring stuff that can’t help but intrude, making private stuff open to all..

    Very strong evocation, Deb. Thanks!

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks for the close read, Paul. So much.

  13. Barbara says:

    The sentence “I know panelling” is so down to earth, and just light enough that the hushed voices really have impact. god, but I hated that sound.

    1. Deb says:

      Thanks Barbara — I think you are quite right (although I work intuitively & didn’t plan that out). I hated that sound, too.

  14. Tumblewords says:

    Wonderful layers of thumps that bump. There’s a bit of memory, real or imagined, in each of those lines. Nice, oh, nice.

  15. irene says:

    I thought the tackiness of the wall became metaphor for the human story. Nicely done Deb.

  16. Michelle says:

    I love the spareness, Deb x

  17. allan cox says:

    Fake paneling and slammed doors give me the willies, too. Loved this short power, calling it.