Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
Gezi
Once again, a newborn cried for the first time. The bald scream carried her voice through crowds in a chestnut-smelling street, rousing the cats from their curbside sleep. The sound stretched farther on to the trees of Taksim as they shuddered with an intensity foreign to them. The cats knew of what was coming before us. They found Spirit in a corner of İstiklal, licked and nursed her. They were the ones who would tell her about the name of the street, about how long before it meant independence, it meant dismissal and rebellion. They told her, as she cried, that she was rebelling even now when she did not know the word for it. They were the ones who decided that the time was right and carried the newborn to a nearby park. The cats, from atop the branches of Gezi, all silent in their knowing, wanted to show Spirit the trees.
Poetry • Spring 2026 - Fear
There’s something to be said about those little birds inside the eggs, with the sticky baby down and bones melted tender. This morning, you call me soup-for-brains and I imagine a boy’s guts cupped inside the feathered belly on my plate—another boy pressed open like a drum, a membrane. I drink the brine from a jar of Koon Chun plums for breakfast. Practice, I say, and you call me Pussy for the first time all week. They say it doesn’t taste like anything. Just the salt of the duck and the blood-tang of marrow. But I forgot you’re tutoring Leah Wong at her place today, so I turn and face your black-feathered buzzcut. No time for a game behind the school with the Chus’ half-popped basketball, which yesterday I poked till it dimpled and likened it to one of her mom’s big fake ones, and you hit me. For a split-second I thought I saw your eyes turn milky and your spine go baby-bent, but I pulled up your T-shirt and you were still hairless as a girl, your skin opaque. So it’s dinnertime and Mom isn’t home yet and all I have is the chick in my egg. He’s just boiled awake, beak parting to call me Dumbass. Soft. My fingers turn to yellow protein in calcium dust, prying you into this wet, scalding kitchen. Walls gum-pink and beating; I take you where heat reigns.
The fresh online pieces we experiment with outside of our print cycle. Formerly known as Blog.
From the Archives
Poetry • Spring 2023 - Decoy
“Consider if Jesus had had a bit of chrome up on that hill – what was it,
Calvary, Calgary, the hill they hung ‘im from? Shit’d be a lot different right
now. We’d be better. World’d be burning less. Burning much less. A gun is
less dangerous than your watch. Some cost about the same. Sometimes, the
watch is more expensive. Jesus didn’t have a timepiece neither. Imagine that,
Jesus with a gun or a watch? Fanged of both violence and métron
simultaneously? Consider it. Really a blessing. Think how it changes things.
What would He have used the gun for, up there? Huh? What use for He the
watch?”
Poetry • Spring 2010
At the corner of my eye is the most exasperating
fringe at the oceanic hem of vision
—the beveled edge of glasses.
Most of the world is peripheral it seems
to what falls on the macula the fovea. caught
in a single ?ashlight that seems like trouble. Look
it’s clouding up again.
The shadow of a palm is a lizard the wind runs back and forth
on the handrail faster than the others.
I think I could spend forever in the space of one Shef?era
Lawn chairs drag their shadows back and forth daily.
I wake up with pet clippers and the dog thinking
it’s a bath so ?attens and slinks away.
But I am not awake and the dog is gone for years.
The incoming gold is doubloons and escudos and chain
and all the pinnate and ovate leaves are nodding *of course*
to the light wind from Mexico and its plundered treasure.
Waking up with not so much as a pause in delivery.
I think I am awake and I think if I sit
in a new place I will see new things dancing and dancing
as well in the banks of my glasses chrome and backwards.
What has come onto the window frame is the depth
of blasphemy everything ?attened by intent.
The trees are cut-outs as if put together with a wrench and socket set.
Carved birds strung before the doorway.
But something solid is a problem worth having.
We are such poor redeemers.
Glass. A substance you can make a dog out of and two gazelles
with a blowtorch and still see the whole coast straight on
as it is now edged in spectra.
Poetry • Fall 2016
*God is a set*
*of certain values.*
*He is the values*
*and they are him.*
We are one
and the same.
He, if he punctures
my face with leathery
hands. Me, when I slam
through the glass
library door, and puncture
my mouth with a cigarette.
I become the library but it
is not me. I am not yet defined.
Define is a proposition. I swear
I couldn’t read until the tenth
grade, and not because
I was locked away,
but because of my occupation
pouring concrete or playing
basketball. *The set must*
*follow a rule. The*
*predicate and the subject*
*must be in an order.*
* *
*The Bad Man is just*
*God with an empty set.*
*He is not God, and God*
*is not him, but God is*
* *
*that set of values that will*
*get lost the next time you*
*misplace it or forget*
*to pass it on to your children.*
* *
*The Bad Man becomes*
*the hereditary trait and mixes*
*with God’s set. Soon, there*
*is no set or no God, but only*
* *
*empty. They become each*
*other, and the doors, and my*
*father. The bad man is God*
*if his set were empty.* I become
my body, the communion,
you, take it as the sacrifice.
I am the bad man, and he
is I, but we are not one.
He, if he takes
his leathery hands
and slams them through
me, even though I know
they are my hands too,
and even if I shout, father,
I am me. *God cannot*
*shout this, he is one*
* *
*with his set. So his*
*shout is the same*
*as his words and his father*
*and his hands are not*
* *
*leathery, because he is perfect,*
*or at the very least*
*he is constrained to be.*
Unlike me, he is
the boundary and his
very own set, and he
doesn’t need to shout,
*Father, why have you*
* *
*got hands that are so*
*leathery when you haven’t*
*once left the office, other*
*than to drive home too*
* *
*fast and drink a little*
*too much and touch your*
*hand to my face, too fast*
*for affection, with your hands that you*
* *
*haven’t ever washed or knelt*
*down to take communion*
*the right way, like me,*
*without belief in God,*
* *
*Father, I am you*
*and me but I am only*
*me, the bad man.* He is God.
He is an empty set.
Features • Winter 2011 - Blueprint
When I was eleven there was a real push in my family to build a deck over our backyard, out from the kitchen on the second floor. This was a real motion, like the time when my father said that he was considering getting a dog for my brother and me, though that never actually materialized. But the building of the deck looked real, obstacled only by the old-man berry tree in the garden plot and the basketball hoop whose base was filled with sand. Joe, who lived next door, had promised to help us build it. Or else he knew a guy.
Building a deck meant staying on Avenue R for a summer, a real decision because usually my parents, teachers, saved what they could so we could go away for a few weeks while we were all off school. Both of them had travelled extensively in their youth and it was something of a tradition. This was a priority, more important than new furniture, or painting the kitchen, or going out to dinner. But to build a deck we’d need to stay put for a while, to save the travel money, at least for a year or two.
Joe had been advocating the construction of a deck in our backyard for years, in no small part because he couldn’t wait to be the one who personally cut down the berry tree. It was on the edge of our backyard, right next to the fence, meaning that, to be fair, at least half of it grew over into Joe’s own property. The snow in the winter made the branches crack and fall and in the summer, berries: ones that no amount of scrubbing the carpet or yelling at rulebreakers to take their shoes off could help. Though they smelled wonderful when crushed, purple and everlasting.
Building a deck was serious business on Avenue R, still is. There is an alleyway that runs behind our backyards that was built, so they say, for the garbage trucks to come through and do their business. Which means that we have this illusion of space, enclosed by fences, backyards jutting out to a long asphalt alleyway even in the middle of Brooklyn. We have our berry tree. Most of the houses have basketball hoops and in the alley we play football, tackle, when it snows. The houses touch on either side and Avenue R at our front entrances rumbles citylike by, but out here, where the deck would go, it feels like perpetual country summer. My mother swears that it’s ten degrees more temperate “in the back.”
Which is why everyone wants a deck, to double their living space, to extend their second floors into the outdoors, to have this little quiet area to take the sun and barbecue and listen to Spanish radio. The couple on the end hangs their laundry there. The next one over has lots of plants and vines. Joe on our immediate right has a nice and simple one, just the barbecue and a few lawn chairs, but he likes to stand for hours at the edge of his and watch what’s going on, up and down the alleyway, like at the helm of a ship.
What’s going on Joe?
Nothing, nothing.
Same old.
Same old, he says.
*
When Joe was younger he was a cop. Those were tough days to wear blue, back in the sixties. Some people liked you, sure, but you also had lots of enemies. It didn’t help if your last name was Castellano. He told me that he’d only had to draw his gun once, thank God, but had never shot it, though there were some chases, and guns pulled on him.
There’s a story he sometimes tells that everyone used to know in the city, though most people have forgotten now, about when a city councilman brought a friend into City Hall, and no one patted him down. And then the friend took his place up in the gallery, and stood up and took a shot at the city councilman on the floor. But the real part of the story, what’s crazy, is that there was a cop, a regular police detective, who was plainclothes in the lower level: and he took one look up at the shooter and shot him, surrounded by people, dead, one bullet. It’s a great and gruesome story, but I particularly like the way that Joe tells it: with great sensitivity to the angle of the police detective’s shot, how he was from below, the jutting out of the upper balcony, the levered supports, the force of gravity. These are things he took into consideration when he built his own deck, or oversaw the guys doing it, I forget which: for Joe it amounts to the same thing, him maintaining a terrible disdain for people who can’t or won’t do their own work.
Joe has a lot of respect for the United States Army and fond memories of his days serving in part because it allowed him to get to Europe as a young man, the only time he ever traveled. He was stationed in Germany for a while after the war: not so much fighting as policing, or giving tours, wherever they went. But this seems to have done it for him: he’s satisfied with what he’s seen. The extended family comes to Avenue R on holidays, when his wife Angie cooks enormous dinners at the stove in the kitchen overlooking the deck. He doesn’t like to stay overnight in other places, doesn’t even like to drive so much anymore—once he told me a terrifying story about how sometimes red lights look green to him. Yeah you know, they just look green? he said. It didn’t seem to bother him too much. He likes his time at home.
*
The thing about a deck on Avenue R is that it stands for stationary. These things aren’t quite legal, by city law, and they cost a lot to do, so it’s not like you’d just move out a couple of years after the last two-by-four’s put down. Decks are for summer afternoons, for people to sit on deck chairs and look up at the smog. From here the cars on the other side of the houses sound like rushing water, or waves, just like you’re on a beach. There aren’t many restaurants in this part of Brooklyn because everyone cooks their own dinners, then eat them out on the decks, staggering dinnertimes so neighbors don’t overlap. The Q train is a car-ride away, so getting into the city is hard—easier to stay out here and relax.
The older my brother and I got on Avenue R, the more decks there were. When we were little there was just the one that was a homerun if you hit a Whiffle ball on top. Then they started popping up like Bloomberg campaign posters. We kept putting it off. Next year, next year. That summer when I was eleven or so was the culmination. There were heated discussions about the construction: my father especially didn’t want to be tethered down. He’d always loved the city across the river and wanted to be as close to it as possible. This was a distant second. This was the year my uncle died, and I remember peering from the stairwell and watching my mother say to the mirror: My world is falling apart.
We never built a deck behind our house and in a way it’s good, because then there’d be five decks in a row with no separation, and we’d really be stepping on each others’ toes. But somehow it signifies that we haven’t put our roots down yet, even though my brother and I have lived here all our lives. We’re afraid to. There’s something of the frightened nomad in us. We could leave anytime. We’d leave nothing behind.
To build a deck, first you have to measure and lay out the site. You have to install the ledger, and pour the footings, and set the posts. There is a point in the middle of the process where you lay the decking. Then the railings, then the sweet-smelling paint that keeps the thing from rotting away. I can imagine Joe building it with me. I can see Joe with a t-shirt tucked into his pants, tossing me a bottle of water, asking me why I went away. Everything’s here. You can even keep the goddamn tree, if you want: it’ll just be a short deck.
I love that tree, the berries, the face of an old man growing out the middle of the trunk. I used to love looking at it when we’d park the car in the backyard after some trip. While Dad got the bags out of the back I’d stand in front of it and let it scare me a little. The face always looks like it’s yelling. I’d stick a twig inside its mouth. Home, I’d say.
Poetry • Summer 2015
You skitter mad,
Jack,
misguided ballistic
with a lazy left eye and your high-pitched
whine of a fuselage dripping
coolant immediately crystalline to leave your flicker-
trail in the stratosphere. We watch you flicker
by again across our televisions tonight, nomad-
ic the way we could never be boxing up our palace of refrigerated paint-drips.
Here on the couch we commune with you, Jack,
you blockhead, in thinking there is more than adamantine space garbage in the pitch-
black, and going ballistic
among the weird, ancient, stars and ballistic
vibrations of the kinds of true science we flick
through at breakfast, in magazines, trying to figure the evolutionary origin of teeth. Pitch
us another perfect white orb, drive us just mad
enough for the American past-time of jack-
hammering detritus and patenting the feeling like the flotsam-feeders we are, dripping
with pride like the crackle-pop of your cassette tape voice box which, yet unfinished, drips
school glue at the slightest oscillation. Perhaps, then, it is for the best that the intercontinental ballistic
missiles went unfired, although they were undeniably shaped like lightning bolts, you genius, jack-
booted thug. One flick
of a switch would have made uranium boom towns of all our vacant lots and cataclysmic mad-
houses for our traveling salesmen pitching
themselves asunder, who now, door-to-door, sing slightly off-pitch
and only of you. And so drippily
we venerate the one who, barreling upward, kept us safe, like the one who made
glow-in-the-dark, the one who made stars. And so though the ballistic
reports came back conclusive the thought might have flickered
quietly across the Midwest like the seconds before snow that you would come back, Jack.
Jack,
our idiot savior, for whom we flock to where cities fall dark as pitch,
where constellations flicker
most conspiratorial. Come morning, we will read the greatest story ever told on cereal boxes, dripping
milk from our chins because *ballistic*
means moving under the force of gravity only. You skitter mad,
Jack, throw us a wink. Drip
us another pitch, plans for a new kind of ballistic
to a new shape of moon, and we will flicker to you, madly.
Features • Winter 2016 - Danger
I may or may not have flown to Toronto, Canada on July 18.
At which point I may or may not have stayed with a friend named Erik, and borrowed his car to drive to the Mount Pleasant Cemetery, where I may or may not have searched for the tombstone of someone who had died between the ages of four and ten.
I may or may not have found the eight-inch-high headstone of Peter Reynolds, beloved son of Nancy and Jerry Reynolds, born July 2, 1977, died May 18, 1987. I may or may not have written the information down on a notepad.
I may or may not have then gone to Citimail Box Rental on Queens Street and taken out a mailbox in the name of Peter Reynolds.
I may or may not have gone to the website of the Office of the Registrar General and downloaded an application for a replacement birth certificate, visited a genealogy website to find the birth dates and cities of Nancy and Jerry Reynolds, and filled out the form.
I may or may not have called the Vital Statistics Agency to make sure they didn’t store birth and death certificate information on the same system, and then sent them my form along with a money order for thirty-five Canadian dollars.
The birth certificate may or may not have been waiting for me in the mailbox when I next returned to Toronto, at which point I may or may not have sent a copy along with an application form to the Social Insurance Registration office.
A social insurance number and card may or may not have been waiting for me in the mailbox when I returned a month later, after which I may or may not have gone to the Ontario Ministry of Transportation and taken a written test to obtain a learners’ license.
I may or may not have taken Erik’s old University of Toronto identification card, peeled off the lamination, changed the name to Peter Reynolds, replaced the photo with one from my old college ID, and relaminated it.
At this point, I may or may not have gotten passport photos taken, had one of the photos signed by both the photographer and Erik, and sent my original birth certificate and copies of my learners’ license and school ID, with Erik serving as a guarantor of my identity, to the Passport Canada office.
“I hope you know what you’re doing,” Erik may or may not have said. “My mother’s gonna kill me if I get sent to jail.”
After taking all these steps, I may or may not have received a Canadian passport with my picture on it over the name of a dead child.
Not a day goes by that I don’t think that, somewhere in Toronto, there is a mother who loved and lost her child. And, to her, I apologize. What I may or may not have done was wrong, not to mention risky. But there are situations, and there are places, where not being American can mean the difference between life and death.
We are at war, you may or may not have realized. It is a world war. And it’s not one that we are winning. We haven’t won a war in more than fifty years. That is, if you believe that anybodyactually *wins* wars.





