Do not say anything anybody else has said ever. Things are not “bleached by sun.”
Okay, picture this: We’re in an elevator. The elevator shuts down. It doesn’t matter where we’re going, only that we’re alone.
Now that the Israeli has left, it falls on me to make the salad.
Listen to me: I know the winter gloom in mid-summer…
I don’t know why I’m in the garden kneeling on dirt
The poetry of Brian S. Ellis unravels, inverts, investigates, and complicates. His poems are radical koans and invitations to forego common narratives.
It is the 70s. 1970s? 2570s? Who knows? Audre and I have a penthouse in New York.
If my life was the size of my arm, I would stretch it out for you.
I myself should never have been born
I suffer visions and many indignities while looking for the Lobster
and apples, mackintosh mostly, but any kind left in The Pub at the Assisted Living Place
Her brown eyes, how a fig considers itself.
Millions of Americans have been affected by identity theft. It’s probably the greenhouse gases.
it’s touch-and-go with me and weddings
We found in his suitcase T-shirts, his siddur, gifts he bought for his grandchildren…
my friends’ fathers are dropping I mean dying like flies
The two of us toast to a man we both love, to whatever degree, clink our glasses and laugh…
You are strange, my mother said, dwelling on the past.
You’ve spent a lifetime training for this.
Should have found a job by now; should have slept in the night; should have boiled old coffee before noon.