POETRY

“Poetry is language at its most distilled and most powerful.”
—Rita Dove
Tea

my father holds
his favorite drink

The State School 1984 His Given Name Was Wilbur  We Called Him Magpie

Mostly he ate what was put on his plate
snuck coffee grounds or dirt for a snack
Once a zipper Unzipped

Good Driver

Lights on the dashboard spell out
“You still can’t kiss me”

Drowning in sky

I have observed, the theorist
I am

I Garden at the Edge of Autumn

There is so little left of the tomato plants.

Electric Eels, Finishing School, Teeth

Millions of Americans have been affected by identity theft. It’s probably the greenhouse gases.

Fallout Shelter

I imagined a cascade of slow death for all / that mattered…

“Artifact,” as Translated from Gluberhöff’s Lexicon

Any still figure at mid-late evening, when the long shadows make even crumbs appear arranged like furniture.

Observer of the Patient

Her brown eyes,
how a fig
considers itself.

An Endeavor of Being Now

We stop doing dishes while
a mile unwinds
from the tree outside.

Hollywood Hills
the remarkable thing

I am still waiting for the lion

Going Broke

Winter sat like a wolf
on the horizon.

Lavandula

Listen to me: I know
the winter gloom in
mid-summer…

Aging Punks

Every so often, they add a tattoo
in honor of some long-forgotten love.

Clueless & Briefly Gorgeous

I buy too much, for someone of my stature.
could pawn a skinny metaphor to purchase a plump skin.
its reputed in our lineage— to daydream a life that shreds our pockets.

A Beautiful Thing

I want to roll in this moment until I become its vocabulary
until I smell like the bones
until I am its echo…

The River

I myself should never have been born

Black Ghosts of Ponderosa on a Silhouette of Hill

Even as the sun warms the concrete
the long nights’ sensual cold lingers in my clothes.

Welcome To The House of Static

here is the sky in stop motion, flickering,
a still shot in monochrome

Dear Deer in the Compost Pile

I tap at the alphabet while a single deer
taps at the dirt beyond the brush
on the far side of the tree line.