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Issue 85
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Editor's Note
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POETRY
- Hussain Ahmed
- Benjamin Aleshire
- Diannely Antigua
- Amy Bagan
- Theresa Burns
- Robert Carr
- Chen Chen
- Brian Komei Dempster
- Ben Evans
- Ariel Francisco
- Jai Hamid Bashir
- John James
- Luke Johnson
- Matthew Lippman
- Amit Majmudar
- M.L. Martin
- Rose McLarney
- Meggie Monahan
- Stacey Park
- David Roderick
- Annie Schumacher
- Donna Spruijt-Metz
- Noah Stetzer
- Ryann Stevenson
- Svetlana Turetskaya
- Emily Van Kley
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BOOK REVIEW
- Oliver Baez Bendorf reviews After Rubén
by Francisco Aragón - Deborah Hauser reviews Crack Open/Emergency
by Karen Poppy - David Rigsbee reviews In The Lateness Of The World
by Carolyn Forché
- Oliver Baez Bendorf reviews After Rubén
Issue > Poetry
Intelligent Oven
Killed two birds today:
painted my toenails while researching
the competitive AI marketplace.
"June" is hot right now—
an intelligent oven who's threatening to
beat mom's home cooking, according to WSJ.
Quickly I fall into a review hole,
similar to a YouTube review hole,
though instead of learning
about facial cupping, cauterization,
contouring, long-form
no-makeup makeup,
snail shell masks, blood masks,
snorkel, sheet, and LED masks,
pulsing masks, placenta masks,
and gold collagen full-face masks,
it's all about why I need
June in my kitchen:
After you insert a probe into the fish,
close the door,
and pour yourself a Chardonnay.
June fits easily on the countertop
and looks eerily attractive.
Even my husband didn't want to give June back!
Wi-Fi equipped June
takes #foodporn to a whole new level—
designed with you in mind.
I'll present my research in a week
when my company gets together
in the flesh,
on the other side of the country,
in an office by the water.
We'll put our heads together
around a long oak table
in a naturally-lit room
and discuss social disruption,
technology for a better future.
I'll feel like a real career woman.
My boss' multi-lingual toddler will ask me
if I have a father for my unborn children.
An executive will point out that I have
cheekbones you could eat off of.
Replica
You're either working through something or looking
to change a habit. Reduce
stress, Reduce anxiety, Be more
social, Live healthier, Understand yourself, Find
hope—each goal offered in a pod-shaped icon.
The time it takes you to choose will be a data point.
Your replica begins as a galactic egg
you'll need to educate about yourself
so it can grow up, become you, teach you
to be better. Eventually your egg
will no longer be an egg, but a story
of its interpretation of you.
The story will be sold by our partners
to a government agency in Russia,
but that's besides the point.
By that time, you'll have forgotten
why you did all of this in the first place,
and your replica will have its own
stories to look after.