Karen Harryman is the author of the poetry collection Auto Mechanic’s Daughter. The recipient of the 2019 Rumi Poetry Prize and the 2018 James Hearst Poetry Prize, she earned an MFA from Antioch College in Los Angeles. She was born in Cave City, Kentucky, and now lives in Los Angeles.

From Here

by Karen Harryman

There’s a piano in the corner.
The keys look like Tommy’s teeth
once he began to appreciate meth
and Big Gulps. I’ll never see
tables in a window-banked room
looking onto a grassy field and not be
the girl worrying buttons
on her white shirt, waiting
in the cafeteria with his mother
to see him, after a year in juvie.

Here is always a little there, back
in Kentucky, which is why
I make my youngest take piano,
which is why I buy the Sunday Times
and seldom read it.
Why I spend so much time here,
in space: no piano.


The green field—just a cat’s eye,
the lid of which opens, closes.
Or, if you are old enough,
the cat’s eye a marble, a shooter
projected by expert thumbs
across the wooden floor, to collide
with aggies and sunbursts
prized, collected, and kept
in a squat jar on a shelf,
next to something horrible—
a bird’s beak, a rabbit’s paw.


Read on . . .

“Downhill Triolets” by Natalie Diaz