Eve Hoffman

The State Fair by Eve Hoffman


I choose my painted carousel horse, impatient for the calliope to signal we’re

about to move. On the summer breeze French fries, corn dogs and the cattle 

barns where 4-H kids parade their hoped-for-prize-winning calves. Carnival 

barkers hawk Jonestown Kool Aid, give away tickets to the Kiss-the Dear 

Leader’s Ring booth. Funnel cakes compete with Marie-Antoinette pastries 

fortified with Machiavellian, yeast laced with champagne conspiracies. In 

the Scientific Method tent tidy rows of glass boxes display a two headed calf,  

a “genuine” mermaid, testicles & vertebrae of elected officials.  Pre-teen boys

& girls sneak first kisses behind booths  along the Midway.  I catch up with 

my brothers spinning  red lunch counter stools, ordering  grilled cheese 

sandwiches and chocolate shakes. We watch little girls become  princesses 

after their turn in the face-painting booth.  “Fixing” the Ring Toss and Three 

Card Monte, governing  principles on the Midway but, hey, it’s the State 

Fair. OK? I take my chances knocking down  a row of moving ducks with 

a small rubber ball. I  win a key chain with a tiny yellow fuzzy duck.  Cotton 

candy machines spin pink & blue lies. Neon orange arrows direct fairgoers 

into a Congress of concave mirrors where a Texas Senator inveighs in Joseph 

McCarthy cadence.  Blue ribbons are hung beside o 4-H pigs & sheep to be sold 

for breeding or butchering. Fireworks signal the fair is shutting down for the night.  

Lights blink off  on the Ferris Wheel, in the poultry barn, in buildings of jams, 

jellies & flower arrangements, over the bedded goats &  shoats. In carnie 

caravans “social contracts” for liquor & cards & whores are satisfied. The bottom 

of my new red Keds, gummy with bubble gum, popcorn  & cotton candy, pick-up  

parking lot gravel.   In my pocket a keychain with a tiny yellow fuzzy duck. 

I plead with my brothers Do we really have to listen to the Atlanta Crackers

baseball game  all the whole  hour- long ride home?


Eve Hoffman lives on a remnant of the Georgia dairy farm where she grew up. Still follows dirt roads and Guernsey cream. She’s been honored as a Remarkable Woman by her alma mater Smith College. Published: Celebration of Healing stories of twenty models impacted by breast cancer to accompany Sal Brownfield’s paintings. Chapbooks Red Clay and SHE. Full-length Memory & Complicity, Mercer University Press, nominated for Georgia poetry book of the year. evehoffmanpoet.com evehoffman@bellsouth.net