Lundi Gras at Commander’s Palace

posted in: poetry | 0

  for Billy, Nikki, Josey, Rosie, and Pearl   We drink good whiskey under the magnolia trees, talk about how the dead can’t see how great life gets. What a rip! All the happinesses we couldn’t have imagined, growing up. … Read More

European Stag Beetle

posted in: poetry | 0

  Because you swarm when the sky turns heavy, we call you thunderdoll and kill you to protect our thatch   then we snap your heads and slip them in our pockets, or give them to our wives   to … Read More

Partial

posted in: poetry | 0

  like a flower that only opens at night. Call it moon vine: only flower half the time.   Blossom unfastened by absent light —how withholding spins   desire. What I want he does not want, besides this perfect knot … Read More

Tied

posted in: poetry | 0

  It was time to build the trap, so I sat on the bed, watched, didn’t help, as he fashioned it. Tested the tension of each line, formed a ring on the end.        to be fixed               eclipsed … Read More

Anchor and Cave

posted in: poetry | 0

  Enslaved people’s quarters, Woodlawn Plantation, Virginia, 1820   We lay side by side in the heat, in the night’s palm, the dried sweat of day thick upon our chests, like sap that hardens inside the grooves   of sugar … Read More

Echo

posted in: poetry | 0

  When the young die, for weeks they appear in halls and crowds–the slap whisper of semblance in a body or head, a gait, any remembrance that likens death to life.  It is always clear that they are not, yet … Read More

Trapdoor

posted in: poetry | 0

  Grief is the floor. There is a door there, a door in the floor. On the other side, on the underside, in the dark, along with pipes and wires, is what rests on what, what now and again shifts, … Read More

Death on the Other Hand

posted in: poetry | 0

  1. So many years of nightly death have made us practiced, professional.   2. Death on the other hand is scripted, sheep-worn, muzzy, and tastes bland as a tomb.   3. Death,   whom one might call an enemy … Read More

You’ve Got to Be Good to People

posted in: Fiction | 0

  Florian Davis was hit by a truck on Monday at 3 o’clock; she was just crossing Main Street. That’s what everyone said: “She was just crossing Main Street.” They said it as though it would have made sense to … Read More

Mastermind

posted in: Fiction | 0

It was the fall the NFL players went on strike, asking that their wage scale be calculated as a function of gross revenue—a demand the team owners recoiled from as if someone had upended a pitcher of urine across each … Read More

Seventeen Things about My Friend Farzana

posted in: Fiction | 0

  1. Farzana is even more beautiful than I remember. The girlish softness of her face has sharpened into angular maturity, as though someone reached under her skin and adjusted her cheekbones to sit higher. She dyes her hair with … Read More

Editor’s Note

posted in: Reviews | 0

  Definitions and usages of the word “time” as a noun take up two tightly printed, small-font columns in Webster’s New Universal Unabridged Dictionary. I’m not sure exactly when this 2,127-page beast (not including various appendices) came into my possession, … Read More

1 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 32