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Issue 82
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Devi / Ali
- Colin Bailes
- Emily Banks
- Parcerisas / Cassells
- Laura Dixon
- Odio / Ekiss
- Isaac Ginsberg Miller
- Donnelly / Miller
- Mitchell Glazier
- Jessica Goodfellow
- Grotz / Sommer Translations
- Todd Kaneko
- Keineg / Marris
- Elizabeth Onusko
- Colin Pope
- Karen Poppy
- Candiani / Portnowitz
- Elizabeth Ai Powell
- Mike Puican
- Anthony Tao
- Angela Narciso Torres
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BOOK REVIEW
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
by David Baker
- David Rigsbee reviews Swift: New & Selected Poems
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ESSAY
Issue > Poetry
Crossing the Bridge
The berries on the bridge I walk across
each day have turned a dusky mauve.
My mother calls. The mustang mare is sick.
So far away, but once I took the breath
from her muzzle through my nostrils,
chest. The devil lets
us beat our hands like hooves against
the bare soil, at the end of winter when
the fresh white powder that intoxicated us
for months reveals a lie,
heart rate too high,
collecting interest like clots of blood.
Grandmother told me move
your feet fast in tight loops, rotate your ankle bones
to keep your circulation from stopping.
But then hers did. My mother says
it doesn't get better. That after thirty years
of marriage, sometimes, still,
the unloved feeling gets a hold of her.
And what troll's hiding here
beneath this bridge, waiting for
withering fruit to fall, for freeze
to trip me up? I too am vicious.
Every day I pick
a berry from the bush, split it in half,
dissect its reproductive organs
with my nails. They'd do the same to mine
if I let them.