Article

  • The Red Umbrella

    Of the stiff-backed prime minister the people saidThat he had swallowed his umbrella. They trusted himNot with their lives, their daughters, or their pension plans,But with something intangible: his bloodshot eyesGlimpsed in their collective souls a yearning to undoThe code by which they lived—the code he would rewriteIn a war launched on an imaginary foe….

  • Exchange

                   I answer the phone. After the usual delay, no telemarketing hum but a male-voiced “Gotcha, gotcha a little bit.” His tone is practiced. It boasts he’s finalized everything that needed saying. Here in me to be jeered at is the thing we’ve all got coming that may not…

  • Yardsticks

    Skinny printed boards half ad, half measurement, they came home with dad from businesses he visited, their names and numbers and Lowest Prices! slogans branded into cheap wood like on giveaway pencils. Lightweight, I’d wield one as a bat, a sword, a club: if it splintered, no problem, there were plenty of trees and we…

  • To Have Light

    Somewhere on I-5, in the flash of hazard lights, I was broken-down. But it seemed enough to have light. The piano playing itself in the hall needs tuning, its notes ghostly and bent in the half-light. Tennis shoes and tin cans tied to the car the couple rushed out toward, struck by rice and the…

  • Things That Break

    Skin of a plum. Rotting tooth. Switches cut down by a child to lash a child’s legs. A siege does something like this against sturdy walls. The wrong rules. A dozen angel figurines flying from a balcony. Flailing fist. Splint. Forefinger and index, dislocated, not broken. One points to the left of a man and…

  • Waiting Room

    Your sister’s inside in a green gown and you, here, twisting your dread into origami tissues, riot mind ticking wrong wrong, you’ve crashed your mooring, fear every wart, organ, every minor— what’s this pain in my groin? Is this what’s been waiting all along? All of us carried off on a train, pressed to a…

  • Falling

    Nobody judges clumsiness, and nothing about                  wounded animals makes me weep,                  but something about a woman with eyelashes like broken wings, about a woman                  wearing leopard print who wears the smell of death, languidly    awaiting    a predator…

  • The A Man

      His superpower was achieving the world’s first happy marriage by wedding his daughter, whom he loved at first sight i.e., when she was adopted at the age of 6 by the woman he was wooing & whose inevitability in the girl’s life led him to stick around until the girl was a preteen, a…

  • Thermopylae

    It’s unincorporated, but there’s a place in Kentucky called Burning Springs, a few knobby hills and a stream and the smell of rotten eggs in the air. An unlikely place for paradox, but there it is, mysteriously, the ground is oozing paradox. If it was ever the scene of valor it’s unrecorded, which I prefer….