
In This Issue

This is not America! It is not the America I grew up in, it’s
more
a joke.
She remembers that golden ocean, the promise of a whole new land.
more
Sam was like family. He was the angel of my writing life in every word.
more
Poets need to be
more
in constant touch with the extremes of feeling.
When we move together in the dark I can almost get to him but I turn back.
more
Without the ugly, the beautiful wouldn’t look half so good.
more
She had seen him take the crop to a girl for doing nothing at all.
more
Typhoon
The girl wiped her father’s forehead with a cotton rag. The fabric was stippled with gray at each point of perspiration, and the girl refolded the rag and brought it down the bridge of his nose. Several times
he moaned loudly, as if sending a distress signal from beyond the border of consciousness, but the girl paid no mind, and her father did not wake up. Through the window the girl watched a breaker roll in languidly, its last breath a sputter of sea foam against the sand. His sallow skin looked incandescent in the midday light, and the girl continued to blot the perspiration from his forehead. Sweat droplets pooled between his closed eyelid and cheekbone and when he turned his head, the thimbleful of moisture fell down his face. The girl wiped it from his cheek before refolding the rag and shaking his arm. He swatted her hand away and began snoring. She knew he would wake soon.more
Sorrow
Living alone the feet turn
voluptuous,
cold as sea water, the thin brine
of the blood reaches them slowly;
their nubby heads rub one another.


