It recommended soft porn, as gentle prodding and petting parent to parent might calm and soothe the kid.
I am still waiting for the lion
You let the yellow glow from eye sockets. The building up the street is burning faster and faster.
a folksome, gruesome opera of gauze and malcontent.
Winter sat like a wolf on the horizon.
my friends’ fathers are dropping I mean dying like flies
and then her eyes fully opened — blazed through with strands of mud
Ma wrings a wet world of colors
you quit wearing pants loaf around your yard in hole-nipped panties
it’s touch-and-go with me and weddings
Listen to me: I know the winter gloom in mid-summer…
The storm passes without snow. The car waits loyally in the back lot.
Now that the Israeli has left, it falls on me to make the salad.
how does an afternoon turn on its axis?
He has stories that I am not in anymore. It’s healed this way.
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.
You are strange, my mother said, dwelling on the past.
you know that baby swallows make silver ripples in wild rivers to court reeds?
It is the 70s. 1970s? 2570s? Who knows? Audre and I have a penthouse in New York.
The poetry of Brian S. Ellis unravels, inverts, investigates, and complicates. His poems are radical koans and invitations to forego common narratives.