"Mrs. Roy Tollerud to Mr. and Mrs. Floyd C. Olson"
"Mrs Ruth Luger to Mrs. Joanne Lienenkranz"
"Clarence Bunsen to his wife, Arlene"
"The babe"
"How I came to give the Memorial Day address at the Lake Wobegon Cemetery this year"
"Who do you think you are?"
3. Letters.
"How to write a letter"
"Estate"
"O the porch"
"Traveler"
"Sneezes"
"Pool table"
"Cold"
"Puck drop"
"Lutheran pie"
"Sexy"
"Regrets"
"The Pennsylvania Dept. of Agr."
"Family honeymoon"
"Home team"
"Basketball"
"Woodlawn"
"Episcopal"
"Nu er der jul igen"
"Glad bags"
"Hoppers"
"Mills "
"Atlanta Airport"
"The talk of the town squad"
"Subway"
"Gettysburg"
"Postcards"
"Nineteen"
"Patmos"
"Reagan"
"Laying on our backs looking up at the stars"
"The meaning of life"
"Stinson Beach"
4. House poems.
"O what a luxury"
"Lamour
"In memory of our cat, Ralph"
"The solo sock"
"Mrs. Sullivan"
"Guilt & shame"
"Obedience"
"Upon becoming a doctor"
"The old shower stall"
"Mother's poem"
"The Finn who would not take a sauna"
5. Stories.
"Meeting famous people"
"The lover of invention"
"Lonely boy"
"What did we do wrong?"
"Yon"
"The art of self-defense"
"End of an era"
"Glasnost"
"After a fall"
"My life in prison"
"We are still married"
Reception
Bill Henderson, reviewing the collection in The New York Times, wrote:
The worst I could probably say about the 11 poems and 61 prose pieces brought together in We Are Still Married ... is that I liked some pieces better than others, but—and this is more than one can say for most such collections—I liked them all.[1]