Copyright © 2018 Jill Osier. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 Jill Osier. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review (Winter 2018).
Copyright © 2018 Jill Osier. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review (Winter 2018).
Copyright © 2018 James Arthur. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
It’s the last few hours of a county fair, or the ninth inning, score tied, in a small-town high school big game, everything that’s going to happen destined to feel inevitable. Everett’s favorite cow has yet to win a prize, and what occurs next on the field will likely determine whether a certain boy, years later, will run for mayor, or still be known as the guy who dropped the ball. Elsewhere in the same town Pastor William is writing down his sermon on what it takes to live a moral life, confusing rectitude with deprivation, and his wife’s frequent, unapologetic nothing-for-you-tonight-dear. Tomorrow, no doubt, because this happens in towns both large and small, seventh-grade Joshua, who knows the answer, but won’t go to the chalkboard because he has a hard-on, is thought to be dumb. That is, until he proves he’s not, the answer written down in code for Mr. Zenner to see, perhaps to understand. Sharon the beauty is also smart and her pet pig wins Best in Class, but she won’t accept the award. The family needs money, but the prize is given by the DAR, and she wants to take a stand. It seems inevitable that in a town this size Joshua and Sharon will marry, but she goes to a faraway college, meets Nathaniel, a city boy who knows nothing about pigs but something about integrity. They fall in love and the rest, as they say, is history—babies and hardship, grad school and in her case visits to the now curious place that was home— Joshua working the counter at Beal’s Hardware, Thursday night bingo at the church— how things could have been had she not become someone else.
Copyright © 2018 Stephen Dunn. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
As a seed, I was shot out the back end of a blue jay
when, heedless, she flew over the meadow.
She had swallowed me in my homeland when she spied me
lying easy under the sun—briefly, I called her Mother
before I passed through her gullet like a ghost.
In a blink of God’s eye I was an orphan. I trembled
where I fell, alone in the dirt. That first night
was a long night, early May and chilly, and I remember
rain filled my furrow. I called out for mercy—
only a wolverine wandered by. I cursed my luck,
I cursed the happenstance of this world, I smelled
his hot stink, but he nosed me deep into the mud—
this was the gift of obscurity. I germinated, hidden
from the giants of earth, the jostling stalks,
the various, boisterous bloomers, and this was my salvation.
After seven days and nights I pushed through—
yes. Here I am, kissable: your tiny, purple profusion.
Copyright © 2018 Lisa Bellamy. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 Lynne Knight. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 David Bottoms. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
IT'S A BRAND NEW DAY, the greasy spoon’s sign has recited each day for the last ten years. Eighteen-wheelers haul their hundred hands of empty space through an air hallowed by the smoke of a thousand-acre grass fire. New roads take on the shape of the old the way rivers tongue the drowned, eternal rush hour, eternal city: beneath the floodlights on the side of the highway the blue eye of the welder’s torch snaps open, a circular saw spins—disk galaxy, roulette wheel if the ball’s skipping through the working hours of the rest of their lives— then bites into concrete, teeth through stone. * Mouthful of cinders, the earth has begun to reel back its lines of chlorophyll. Birch shadows walk on their toes on their way to nowhere. Bark strips skiff from the sycamores, pale coracles, & set off into the world. Through a screen of falling rust-shot leaves it’s hard to tell the planes from the planets, but I know one is Flight 90, where last week a man confided that he’s collected over twenty thousand Pillsbury Doughboy dolls. I tried to remember the name of the horn player who used to play a club for a plate of spaghetti—something about being in between cities, in between lives & hours, had left me otherwise wordless, with nothing else to offer, with nothing more to say about need— * except, once, I rounded a corner & came face-to-face with a naked woman behind a door of glass. I saw her everywhere I went the next few days. Each time I saw myself in a window, in the canal below. I read a billboard a mile from the glass door: VOODOO INVERSO: BEFORE LEAVING NIGERIA, THIS TRAFFICKER TRICKED ME WITH A FAKE VOODOO CEREMONY. I WAS VERY FRIGHTENED. WHEN I STOPPED PAYING, THEY SENT SOMEONE TO THE VILLAGE AND CRUSHED MY FATHER'S LEGS. NOW I TURN THE VOODOO BACK ON HIM . . . Ten thousand days into my life, Lord, & not one more promised. Ten thousand days & I’ve nothing * to say in light of the overpass fire in front of me, a salt furnace except its only output is flame & ashes upon the air. You can take ten thousand steps & get no nearer to heaven, someone once said, but the smoke is halfway there. If the overpass is a temple, it’s a Parthenon blueprinted by the stars that are now fading overhead, one dedicated to elsewhere, that negative mirror, a thousand times more air than concrete, more not there than there: a dozen pillars & a cement roof, nameless place you only know by the places you’re on the way to: a via negativa of every place you’ve been. If the ashes on the air are inch-long vanishing points of veils, this temple had a million. And I’ll be its augur. Already I can see the bouquets & votives left there for its priestess, still buckled in her burning Corolla, her name unremembered everywhere.
Copyright © 2018 Mark Wagenaar. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 Mark Wagenaar. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 John Kinesella. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.
Copyright © 2018 Noah Warren. Used with permission of the author. This poem originally appeared in The Southern Review, Winter 2018.