der Tag, day
By Poetry Issue 125
Each day, my I changes forms. It’s why I stick to the sonnet:
I like the continuity of it—each day with its plan to queer the Diane.
Mothership
By Essay Issue 125
My mother and I are driving five hundred miles to see a replica of a mystery.
Read MoreAfter Covid
By Poetry Issue 125
I stand beside my mother & her tree, picker in hand, ——–—extending the rod, aiming for an apple in apparent ecstasy, fullness aflame, ——–—aquiver in the favonian breeze, brilliant as the seed that gave it birth ——–—when its need in the soil first cast a vision for this grandeur: autumn day brandishing ——–—sapphire sky, air…
Read MoreKnitting with Tears
By Visual Art Issue 125
Growing up between silence and discussion, repression and resilience, shaped my understanding of freedom as both political and personal. This understanding informs my art today.
Read MoreSmall Book of Designs
By Poetry Issue 125
Light Through Church Windows at Edingthorpe
By Poetry Issue 125
I’m a shadow cast by the moon in a cold pass at midnight, far away.
Read MoreThe Twilight of Numbers
By Poetry Issue 125
It’s a war you shelter.
You shelter it inside your God.
Prayer’s Indicative Free State
By Poetry Issue 125
It’s the body that’s alone, a harbor
waiting for new ships.
The Testaments
By Fiction Issue 125
The priest had a real hard-on for alliteration. It drove Maggie nuts.
Read MoreElegy for the Heaven of a Black-and-White TV
By Poetry Issue 125
I’m constructing
a heaven of pixels like tiny, vibrating dimes, falling stars
I can scoop up and offer in two hands.


