Millions of Americans have been affected by identity theft. It’s probably the greenhouse gases.
I imagined a cascade of slow death for all / that mattered…
this is what I want you to to see: leaves falling because it is too late for them not to
I myself should never have been born
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 observed, the theorist I am
I have an axe with hearts gashed
I am not a guide for every traveler of loss.
My grandmother asked, “Does it feel like being widowed?”
The poetry of Brian S. Ellis unravels, inverts, investigates, and complicates. His poems are radical koans and invitations to forego common narratives.
the strands of your hair on the bathroom tiles aren’t sketching defeat. that’s you spitting disease in the face with another day you’ve woken up to.
We found in his suitcase T-shirts, his siddur, gifts he bought for his grandchildren…
It recommended soft porn, as gentle prodding and petting parent to parent might calm and soothe the kid.
You are strange, my mother said, dwelling on the past.
Her brown eyes, how a fig considers itself.
the man is stayed bent over the canvas of my sofa. the man is me the man is him self and I bring down the whip…
We stop doing dishes while a mile unwinds from the tree outside.
Just starlight and some small scribbling across vinyl.
I don’t know why I’m in the garden kneeling on dirt
Do not say anything anybody else has said ever. Things are not “bleached by sun.”