Article

Limerence

It is the train-off-a-cliff courting, the half-mast eyes across a room, fingers lingering too long on the exchange of a book, a cigarette, an apple. Nights of seeing a face in the moon and finally leaving the window to walk empty dawn streets in search of a rock or flower to hold in your pocket…

Maybe

Maybe a year can be just what’s needed toting its days as a cloud its night fresh from the dark A year might throw light on everything who knows so that all is known and understood that would be nice or a year might fail to please not ever wish to please A year involves…

A piece of osmium about the size of a paper grocery bag weighs as much as a new car a small Honda Accord for instance…

Some years are light as air you don’t even have to lift them from your memory they float their weightless goodies in and out of your today with less fuss than a summer cloud roaming the sky but other years are heavy as a suitcase full of a murdered torso heavier than plutonium or osmium…

Her Blue Body Full of Light

Can you believe I have cancer? Yosra asks, holding a mug of tea between her hands, her hair close to her scalp, almost laughing. I try to imagine the cancer auditioning inside her body, tiny translucent slivers of light weaving in and out and of her abdomen and uterus, traveling up and through her throat,…

Mermaids

Sometimes it’s tucked into itself, sewn up like the lips of a prisoner. After the procedure, the girls learn how to walk again, mermaids with new legs, soft knees buckling under their new sinless bodies. Daughter is synonymous with traitor, the father says. If your mother survived it, you can. Cut, cut, cut. One girl…

The Plagiarist

There’s at least another being being you you may / may not have met. You know the theft and that free pass driving the already raging raging mad, scary as scarefest movies like by Stephen King when tombs thrust up from roiling mud in storms obligatory to the Big Reveal. But. No one sees them…

Death of a Priest

When you collapsed the first time at the dinner table, you fell not like a hero in Homer, not like a great tree with a concussive thump that raises a dust cloud that blinds the battling soldiers inside it so they can’t tell enemies from friends— but imploding like a tall building shaken at its…

Classroom Incident

Poetry Workshop Princeton, 1980 We had water fights at home, she said of the subject of home when it stuck its big head awkwardly into the room and sat down. We others at the table gazed at it, at her— this mousy senior who looked thirteen with her pale frail body, bumps for breasts, and…