I want to roll in this moment until I become its vocabulary until I smell like the bones until I am its echo…
Any still figure at mid-late evening, when the long shadows make even crumbs appear arranged like furniture.
The collective failure of ethical standards
We found in his suitcase T-shirts, his siddur, gifts he bought for his grandchildren…
four-thirty a.m.
You are strange, my mother said, dwelling on the past.
If my life was the size of my arm, I would stretch it out for you.
The poetry of Brian S. Ellis unravels, inverts, investigates, and complicates. His poems are radical koans and invitations to forego common narratives.
a folksome, gruesome opera of gauze and malcontent.
how does an afternoon turn on its axis?
I imagine that undressing a color, though, would be so much like peeling a memory away from the grey and the white matter of your brain.
I have an axe with hearts gashed
Long after midnight, we’re talking about our first time
I count my homes— those of my scattered youth the sanctuary of our young family the intermittent rest stops of apartments and vacations.
You let the yellow glow from eye sockets. The building up the street is burning faster and faster.
I slumped in front of a massive desk, a passive patient corroded with failure and dread.
we drove on through the blue seal of morning as the turbines turned and winked out their hearts
you quit wearing pants loaf around your yard in hole-nipped panties
You’ve spent a lifetime training for this.
Listen to me: I know the winter gloom in mid-summer…