Sandra Cisneros, from Loose Woman: Poems; "Bay Poem from Berkeley"

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Sandra Cisneros, from Loose Woman: Poems; "Bay Poem from Berkeley"
Sandra Cisneros, from Loose Woman: Poems; "Waiting for a Lover"
Poem by Denis Johnson
To a stranger by Walt Whitman
Vow by Emily Jungmin Yoon
Les Petits Poissons , The Little Fish - Janet Fish , 1984.
American , b. 1938 -
Oil on canvas , 38 x 56 in.
In the Morning, Before Anything Bad Happens
by Molly Brodak
The sky is open all the way.
Workers upright on the line like spokes.
I know there is a river somewhere, lit, fragrant, golden mist, all that,
whose irrepressible birds can’t believe their luck this morning and every morning.
I let them riot in my mind a few minutes more before the news comes.
Untitled - Line Holtegaard
Danish , b, 1980 -
Oil on canvas , 60 x 70 cm.
KEVIN YOUNG
Stadtbad Neukölln - Eline Brontsema, 2026.
Dutch, b. 1988 -
Woodcut , 71 x 47.5 cm. Ed.30.
Lakeside Cabin - Martijn Hesseling , 2023.
Dutch , b. 1971 -
Newspaper with industrial lacquer on plexiglass , 133 x 173 cm.
Framed
Everything is waiting for you by David Whyte after Derek Mahon
Cherries - Kaj Bernstone
Swedish , b. 1946 -
Watercolour
AFTER THE HOLIDAYS
the house settles back into itself,
wrapped up in silence, a robe
around its shoulders. Nothing
is roasting in the oven or cooling
on the countertops. No presents
are waiting to be wrapped, no cards
fill the mouth of the mailbox.
All is calm, all is bright, sunlight
glinting off snow. No eggnog, no yule
log, no letters to be licked
and stamped. No more butter
cookies, no more fudge, just miles
to go on the treadmill, another round
plate added to the weight machine.
All our good intentions pave the road.
We stride out into the new year,
resolute to become firm, to define
our muscles, to tighten our borders.
The thin tinsel of the new moon
hangs in the dark sky, a comma
dividing the sentence between
last year's troubles and this year's
hopes. The calendar ruffles her pages,
a deck of shiny cards, deals out
a fresh new hand.
BARBARA CROOKER
RESPITE
It’s New Year’s.
It’s New Year’s & the stars are white-hot & all your favorite dishes
are flushed warm on the island: tteokguk for fortune, knife-cut noodles
for longevity, persimmon pudding & a tin can of sardines.
The nectarines are in season in our backyard & the pigeons
are painting their pale bodies with rain. The man in the powdered apron
still feeds them on the porch of his square little store, the way you said
was too generous. Too much for such small bodies to be eclipsed
by hunger. We leave flowers by your pillow, the lakeside whirring
with cicadas. We chose a round pound cake from the supermarket
last week, the anniversary of your funeral. I confuse my birthday
with the day you died. Are you listening? I am still making a list
of places for us all to visit: the static image of your youth,
the last lake in which you loved. There should have been
more distractions. There are still so many sardines
left in their cans, floating belly-up in brine. Seabirds still float
against the red bridge, arrogant, flashing their bellies
toward the sky. I think you would have liked to feed them.
I think you would have been generous,
despite.
ELANE KIM