Realizing

poetry
  “Silver seems to dominate in the Carolinian dream, when it is, of all such dreams, the one least likely to be realized.” —Popular Science, 1892   Silver does dominate…

Mine

poetry
  Prospectors may appraise an entire mountain range and identify only the absence of a single ore.   But if just mica and corundum crumbs are found, if the profits…

Hains Point

poetry
  The old men chide each other to tee up quick, before the rain. I want to buy a fountain soda, sit on the porch, and eavesdrop. I want to…

Portmanteau Prayer for Moms

poetry
  lord, grant us the shelter of strangers where no one needs us to be animute, invisociable as an old retriever   give us room to braid our three halves…

Transatlantic

poetry
  This alone. The man on the TSA line right in front of you, carrying caribou antlers. Yes, you drank. Yet no doubt. There he stands with the horns. And…

Rumorville

poetry
  Mathematicians don’t have friends. Astrophysicists: kinky. Oceanographers: beige, stringy, often unaware of holes in their hearts. Chronologists will not shut up. Chemists: introverted onanists who wear a single suit…

Truth I Tell

poetry
  —after Sara Borjas   There is a footrest inside of me: lie. Everyone steps on it and never wants to leave: that is a lie. I give them water…

Marge Farrell

poetry
  —after I Married a Monster from Outer Space (1958)   Who giveth this woman in marriage? Outside the Wee Kirk Chapel, in my coronet of white myrtle. Then, the…

Kat Harvey

poetry
  —after Casper (1995)   In Friendship, Maine, in the mansion of Whipstaff I waft in eyelet lace, floor-length out the steamer trunk.   There are steeples and myrtle and…