Summer 2022
Issue No. 17
death became them
Plenty of folks in town had died at all ages and all times of day or night, some gruesome, some passive, and every one of them referred to afterward as having been ‘too good’ or ‘too young’, or on rare occasions both.
war birds
GI Joe
1945
The trucks parade down Constitution Avenue. I have practiced the steely glint in my eye, holding my beak parallel to the horizon regardless of the rumbling engine. On my right rises the august sandstone of the Smithsonian, an institution one might take pride in, except I know the basements are filled with the feathers of vanished birds.
the path of the spine
Ksjhe was trying to sleep but the smoke from the fires was everywhere. He went to his computer and tried to appease it by typing fire, fire fire fire fire fire fire fire fire into the box. I see you. I see you fire. I smell you fire. I will keep you away by calling your name. You do not need to come any closer because I know who you are.
souvenir
She’s standing in line at the registration table when she sees him, two writers ahead. Sun-spritzed brown hair, strong hands. A hint of crow’s feet indicating he’s maybe fortysomething. No wedding ring. When he leans over the table to sign a form, she admires his pen, a Montblanc, shiny black with its signature bloom of snow at the top.
remembering the women’s march
In bed with my laptop on Saturday morning, January 21st, 2017, I searched for the livestream of the Women’s March on Washington and clicked open a video window, mindlessly, the way I would flick on a light.
old things
I see myself walking on hard-packed snow, from the fields and towards the river.
the power beyond now
In the fall of 1965, my family moved into a small, gray-shingled house in Providence, Rhode Island, whose main distinguishing feature was a bright yellow front door.
Social Soliloquy
A digital rendition of Hamlet’s soliloquy “To be or not to be” performed as a contemporary group text chat.
The End of Society
When an African-American woman submits an unusual piece of original art to a show whose theme is ‘The End of Society as We Know It’ debate ensues between the white arts administrator and the artist. They navigate a treacherous maze of verbal sparring, populated with racial barbsand personal threats. The play is a satire on race relations and the role of art in society.
thing or no thing
i.
Sit in the nothing. Talk to nothing. Do nothing. See what nothing offers, probably nothing.
A Nigerian Boy’s Body Graphics
A boy asked his mother one night how it is to survive in a
country where survival is a furnace & his body like a metal goes
Hurricane Hazel, 1954
You were in a wheelbarrow that day
when the wind overturned
trees, trashcans,
and I was being born.
I met Jesus in Bushwick
On the modular couch, the fingers splays
against the curve of a collarbone, television
if I leave my dad will too; she, perihelion; hatshepsut
hands clutching bitter hand miserable callouses
my mom cheats at scrabble
Not on purpose. She makes the house payment one week and makes the same mortgage payment the next week.
Reclamation; The Astronaut Ages Out
A whale appears in the bay
ahead of schedule
and far from the Pacific.