just write poems, just sings songs
just be happy you're not dead yet
like those people you met in Little Italy;
the old handsome men you sought to be like,
their Italian leather shoes and beautifully kept shirts,
clean, pressed, sitting, legs crossed smoking pipes,
sipping coffee, reading the paper
and all alone. Their shirts will become shabby
with no wives to iron the pleats.
just know, your mustache is not so full and not so well kept
and cannot be so nice as theirs.
it isn't in your genes.
handsome, handsome
San Diego says,
"Go home now,
the ocean has washed you enough."
BY ALEX KARPICKE
The summer I turned eight,
Grandpa informed me that I needed a tree house:
A man needs a place to work.
I was just excited by the idea
of having some place to play with my friends.
In a whisper, Mom told me
that Grandpa was getting too old
to climb up and down that tree.
He overheard and pounded his fist on the table,
Young lady, mind your own business, Goddamn it.
It was decided I would have a tree house.
While Grandpa repeatedly sketched the blueprints
at his workbench, I hunched next to him,
scribbling pictures of the fort in pink crayon.
Grandpa noticed the color,
snapped that crayon in half,
and then handed me a blue one.
Up in the branches Grandpa noticed my thin arms,
and urged me, Nail harder. Pound with force
and Push firmly, you sissy,
so I wouldn’t strip the heads off the screws,
so I would build some muscle.
Once the floor was completed, we would break
for him to have a beer
and eat the black jellybeans
that Grandma saved for him.
who can stomach these.
I learned to construct walls
around the punch lines of his dirty jokes.
I didn’t understand why nuts were funny,
but I memorized his words
because he had stood glaring when I told him
my favorite knock-knock joke.
By the time we were adding the roof
I was already carrying a jackknife and wearing a tool belt,
even when we weren’t working,
because Grandpa forgot to take his off most of the time.
As the final touch, Grandpa built me a workbench
and after he had climbed down from the tree
I sat there forcing down a bowl of black jellybeans.
That evening, my friend, Matt, hoisted himself up.
We colored pictures of ourselves.
I stood on white paper, scrawny and holding a hammer.
Matt urged me to add pink to my drawing.
Then, I told him about the nuts but neither of us laughed.
When he left, I looked at the picture,
pink lying next to those black jellybeans,
and I pounded my fist onto Grandpa’s workbench,
crying, Goddamn it.
BY JAKE BAUER
pale on the stairs, she's scared, she's scary, and she sure is swaying,
saying something like, " don't save me if it will take you too"
the children keep leaving in the middle of the night
and the world writhes a little
in a way that everyone can kind of feel, it's delicate,
you can't see it unless you have a chandelier
even then, the shiver is so long and soft
you might mistake it but
there's something wrong it's been wrong for so many years
elliott smith is anyone awake too long
everything feels silly when it's pretty
and things like cinnamon and things like ships
and things like lanterns and things like cedars
are night gowns
for ghost towns
BY MAREN HOOPFER
Every night I lie in bed and practice my posture.
Every day I hope I die before dark.
Marilyn hangs over my headboard.
It is not because I, like everyone else, fantasize about her
as I struggle for sleep,
my body rigid next to yours.
You do not understand
why I lay with my eyes wide after sex;
you do not understand
why I kick in my sleep, screeching shards of glass in the dark—
call it a nightmare;
you can’t understand.
Everyone dubbed her a sex goddess
but that’s too simple.
She understands how it feels to jolt awake
in the midst of your own monstrous screams.
She understands how it feels
to stare bleary-eyed through a mental institution’s safety glass
at the one person who could never quite love you
because he couldn’t understand.
Only I ever noticed
that she was distant, that she was alive, that she wanted to die.
I see her understanding
in her frozen lip, mid quiver and in her destroyed pupils.
She understands because
her hand shakes when she drops sleeping pills into her whiskey sour,
but she does it anyway,
because how else would she survive the night?
·
I write Ask Marilyn on a pad of paper
and set the pill bottle over her name.
When you come, I will be, same as always,
straight-backed and stiff in bed
but now, eyes delicately closed
and finally peacefully silent.
You will try
but you will never understand.
BY JAKE BAUER