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Issue 80
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Kelli Russell Agodon
- Heather Altfeld
- Derrick Austin
- Sam Barbee
- Michael Carman
- Adam Chiles
- Matthew Carter Gellman
- Stephen Harvey
- Holly Karapetkova
- Stephen Knauth
- Sara London
- Maren O. Mitchell
- Susan Musgrave
- D Nurkse
- Alison Palmer
- Doug Ramspeck
- Mitchell Andrew David Untch
- Joshua Weiner
- Jennifer Wheelock
- Ken White
- Emily Paige Wilson
Issue > Poetry
Composition
I am made of handles
in the hallway
the bedroom door
opened and closed.
I am made of dark spaces
holes in conversations
that my mother and father have
in the kitchen.
I am the smoke from her lips.
I curl through cracks in the window.
I am my father's exit strategy.
I am made of grass.
In the backyard,
air that fills my mouth.
I am the blank stars I write on.
I am made of my sister's hair.
I fall across her shoulder
down the small of her back.
I am her first pair of nylons.
I am the fabric on her skin,
falling open like a curtain.
I am the hand behind it.
I am made of school
and Mr. Conner's gym shorts.
I rub the sky with my clipboard
and dictate the way things are.
I am the way things are.
I am forty years old.
I am the book I am reading.
I am its ending.
Symmetry
After you'd gone
our bodies
uncoupled in the dark
I lay in bed
and started to think of things
that are halved
apples pears seeds
and the knives that separate them
I thought of doors
half open half closed
their wide
unexpected swings
into the middle of rooms
how they halve distances
I thought of windows
invisible seams
that separate interiors
from exteriors
half journeyed
and half way there
I thought of your mouth
in the same breath
the other half of the world
half a shell lying on the beach
its smooth abandoned
chambers
filled half way with sound
half of me listening
half of me not