Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Best American Poetry 2014

    Prev Next

    with the left. Before a doctor shot light

      into the twitching thing, before I realized

      how little light I could handle, I never

      thought much of the boy who clawed up at me

      from beneath my punches, how a fingernail scraped

      the eye, or how it closed shut

      like a door to a room I could never leave.

      ••

      I could see the reflective mesh of his shoes,

      the liquor bottle tossed in an arc

      even before it shattered at my feet, and I am embarrassed

      at how sharp my eyes were, how deft my body,

      my limbs closing the distance—how easily

      I owned his face, its fear, and fought back tears—

      all of it mine. I don’t want to remember the eyes

      that glanced over shoulder just before

      I dragged him like a gazelle into the grass

      that was a stretch of gravel and glass

      outside a liquor store. How easily this becomes that.

      ••

      On a suspension bridge I close my bad eye

      and it’s like aiming through a gunsight;

      even the good eye is only as good as whatever glass

      an optometrist can shape. I watch sundown

      become a mouth. Broad and black-throated,

      it devours the skyline and every reflection.

      Horns sprout from the head of my silhouette

      rippling dark, dark, dark against the haze of water

      and I try to squint that monster

      into the shape of a man.

      from Ploughshares

      SHARA MCCALLUM

      * * *

      Parasol

      You could still become a queen.

      When, a slip of a girl,

      you directed trees

      to lower their limbs,

      neither fire ants nor sap

      could stop your climb,

      nor rain that lightly fell,

      misting leaves.

      Inside a story’s spell,

      you find your way back,

      where a stone on a path waits

      for you to stumble.

      Like the kaleidoscope’s contents,

      time is jumbled, opening at will.

      Now: a too-bright sun and you,

      teetering on a wall,

      parasol clutched tight as you tumble.

      This parasol is, for a moment,

      everything you’ve lost

      and all that can console.

      from The Southern Review

      MARTY MCCONNELL

      * * *

      vivisection (you’re going to break my heart)

      the frog ready for inspection, skin flaps

      opened and pinned back, organs

      arrayed for the taking—this is how

      I approach you. and you. here, my spleen

      for the squeezing. my intestine

      to be strung out, perhaps wrapped

      around the neck like a lariat. not

      for the squeamish, my heart thudding

      to be plucked out with a delicate thumb

      and forefinger, dinner for the willing,

      and beautiful, and broken. I am not smart

      about love, is what I’m saying. not even

      smart about whose face I will take

      in my hands and press against my face

      until we are a single organism. the mouth

      is not an organ but I give it to you

      anyway, I give it all away is what

      I’m saying. I’m easy to adore. my torso

      a life raft strung with Christmas lights

      and full of all your favorite things, beer

      and expensive cheese and songs

      about leaving. I’m so beautiful

      splayed out on this tray full of tar

      and entrails. I’m so useful

      I could be a meal for an army

      of traumatized surgeons, I’m full-time

      at this job of bleeding, my esophagus

      a stripper pole or cocaine straw.

      when I say eat me I mean

      suck the bones clean, leave nothing

      for the waiting, nothing for the vultures

      or the travelers to come.

      from The Carolina Quarterly

      VALZHYNA MORT

      * * *

      Sylt I

      Lie still, he says.

      Like a dog on the beach

      he starts digging

      until the hole fills up with water.

      He has already dug out two thighs of sand

      when she finally asks, what’s there,

      convinced there’s nothing.

      There’s nowhere he can kiss her where she hasn’t already been kissed by the sun.

      Every evening she goes to the ocean with her three sisters and their old father.

      They strip in a row,

      their bodies identical as in a paper garland.

      Bodies that make you think of women constantly chopping vegetables

      —it is like living by the train station,

      their father swears—

      and always putting the last slice into their mouths.

      For her, there is not even a knife left in the whole house.

      The sound of a cuckoo limps across the dunes.

      She takes a beam of sunlight sharpened side by side with stones

      and cuts with it

      and you can tell her vegetables from the others’

      by how they burn.

      By now they already stand wrapped in cocoons of white towels,

      her teeth, crossed out by a blue line of lips, chatter,

      scratching the grains of salt. Her bitten tongue

      bleeds out into the mouth a red oyster,

      which she gulps, breathless.

      Their father turns away to dry his cock,

      but the girls rub their breasts and crotches openly,

      their hands skilled at wiping tables,

      their heads as big as the shadow of the early moon,

      their nipples as big as the shadows of their heads,

      and black so that their milk might look even whiter.

      She, too, is rough and indifferent toward her full breasts,

      as if she were brushing a cat off the chair

      for her old father to sit down.

      They drink beer in the northern light that illuminates nothing but itself.

      Sailboats slip off their white sarafans

      baring their scrawny necks and shoulders,

      and line up holding on to the pier as if it were a dance bar.

      It bothers her, what did he find there after all?

      So she touches herself under the towel.

      It is easy to find where he has been digging—

      the dug-up spot is still soft.

      The water is flat like fur licked down by a clean animal.

      A bird, big even from afar,

      believes the ocean is its egg.

      So the bird sits on the ocean patiently

      and feels it kick slightly now and then.

      from New Letters

      HARRYETTE MULLEN

      * * *

      Selection from Tanka Diary

      I’m seeing lots of dead zebras lately

      on floors of elegant homes pictured in

      interior decorator magazines.

      WE PROUDLY HARVEST RAINWATER—a sign

      in a neighbor’s yard. With a deep barrel

      I could humbly and thankfully harvest rain.

      Several homeowners organize a neighbor-

      hood watch patrol after discovering used

      rubbers discarded on their lawns.

      Folded cardboard tent-shaped trap

      hanging among dark leaves of the lemon tree

      to capture the galling Mediterranean fly.

      A profusion of oleanders—to beautify

      the freeway and filter the air, though

      leaf, stem, and blossom are all poison.

      Dried-out snake on
    the road

      I brought as a curiosity to the child—

      who insisted we give it a proper funeral.

      Urban tumbleweed, some people call it,

      discarded plastic bag we see in every city

      blown down the street with vagrant wind.

      from The Harvard Review

      EILEEN MYLES

      * * *

      Paint Me a Penis

      If the best thing the world discovered today is that at the inside

      of the universe is a cat

      I love your braids; I love your peaceful eating

      I hate that the sum total effect of the schedule

      was sadness. Do you read the schedule. Nope.

      I’m jealous. If he used the same words

      over and over in plays and movies and commencement

      addresses is that wrong. Is it wrong. What if art is wrong.

      Is there only one sun. Some planets have two.

      When the rain was pouring I wanted to be in there

      silent with you. In the dog’s beady black gaze. In the room

      with the sleeping dog. With you leaving the room.

      I’ve stopped the rain, I’ve silenced you.

      I think the story was that one woman had gotten

      the painting from the other and they were dating

      but she never paid for it and then she moved out.

      The painting sat in the second floor window and the painter

      saw it and demanded it back. No. So the painter wrote

      Marie O’Shea give me back my painting and put

      it in the window opposite. She’s a mess. We call her

      cunt face. Twat. When it blasted I asked you to put

      your headphones on. The dog’s wheezing. I think

      smack in the middle of that time was a virus

      and it gave itself to everyone freely. We learned that

      everything was related to everything else. Just as everything

      was getting more separate and no longer a simple bowl

      of fruit everyone was dying of the same thing. Not everyone.

      Later when they hit the buildings it was just like everyone

      in the city felt it. Not the same. We felt the shake. The request

      in the air was how are we all feeling it now. It wasn’t the same.

      It was like you kept breaking off another square of the

      bar and tasting it. He came running back into the room.

      He was moaning. And now he just stares. And the rain

      starts up again. I’ve never been invited to one meeting.

      Do they have them. I remember the time I was invited

      and we went around the room saying how we came

      to be here. I was invited and everyone

      stared and they never let me know when they were

      meeting again. She wore a yellow dress. Everyone’s watching you. He stands

      in the doorway watching you eat. It stopped.

      I want the painting in the window. Yeah. And you can

      really ask her questions when you get her alone. And you were reading all the

      time. And you said it a lot, that you wanted one which

      you don’t remember. I guess I wanted one. Now some

      people in that mysterious time there it goes again

      decided to in a very dedicated way begin talking about it

      because there wasn’t enough of that. That part had waned. Otherwise

      you could just take it off the walls, you could go to funerals

      and get fucked. You could recite it so that all they saw

      was you. Huge numbers of them banded together marching

      slowly into the room. There’s footage of us dancing. I wouldn’t ask

      the stars to be quiet but I’m closer to them now. She was so

      smart. I’m serious. I bet she’d make a good one. Since I didn’t grow

      my own I’d like to see what she’d make me. If he demands that no

      one tells theirs at the breakfast table I think he probably pulls

      it out of his pajamas and slaps it on the table. Dreams to me are

      always receding. It’s the only perfection: it’s vanishing, stoking my

      appetite so I’m drawing it for you as it becomes less the experience

      that just happens as I’m resurrecting it for you. I’m making it

      for you. I’m asking her. Make it for me. I’d like that. I’m putting it

      in real deep. Out there, where everyone is.

      from Green Mountains Review

      D. NURKSE

      * * *

      Release from Stella Maris

      “So you’re saying there is no self?” I asked the doctor.

      “Well . . .” he said. He took off his glasses and breathed

      on the lens—for a moment an extraordinary radiance

      hardened there, then he flicked it with his cuff.

      He coughed, painfully, and swallowed hard.

      At once you heard the other patients bickering

      along their waxed corridors, and I counted myself

      lucky to be alone with the master surgeon,

      the one whose lab coat bulges with key rings.

      Perhaps this I who still speaks

      was just the experience

      of watching snow fly in a dim window?

      That might be a great happiness.

      When the head rose, I rose also, when he pulled on

      his gray calfskin gloves, I rubbed raw knuckles,

      braced for the wind that blows from the mind itself.

      from FIELD

      SHARON OLDS

      * * *

      Stanley Kunitz Ode

      Ninety-five years before he died,

      Stanley found an abandoned kitten

      in the woods of Worcester. Stanley’s father

      had drunk Drano in a public park, while

      Stanley had still been turning, a nebula

      slowly taking human form

      inside his mother. And when he found

      the lost cat, he took it home

      and gave it a box in the attic, under

      the stars where his father was wheeling, and he raised

      his feline companion—I don’t know girl

      or boy—without his mother much noticing,

      hard as she worked, silent as she kept.

      And his pet grew, and when they got to the woods he would

      take off the collar and leash and they would

      frolic together, she-he/he-she would

      teach Stanley, already sinuous,

      to slink and hunt. And I don’t know who it

      was who suddenly saw that Stanley’s

      companion, growing stronger and bigger and

      lither, was a bobcat, and none of us

      was there the night Stanley released her-him

      or there when it rose in him, the desire

      to seek a feline of his own species.

      And when he was 98, and Elise

      had gone ahead, leaving her words and

      images behind her, casting the skin of them,

      I saw, in a city in Ohio, an elegant

      shaving-brush-soft replica bobcat,

      and brought it back to West 12th, along with the

      usual chocolates, and flowers, and a demo of my

      latest progress toward a model’s sashay on the catwalk.

      And after that, when I’d come over, in those

      outfits I wore then, Diana-ing

      for a man, Stanley would be holding the stuffed

      animal, and petting it,

      nape to rump, nape to rump,

      stub of the bob tail—98,

      99, 100, those huge old beautiful

      hands, stroking the world, which hummed when Stanley stroked it.

      from The Harvard Review

      GREGORY PARDLO

      * * *

      Wishing Well

      Outside the Met a man walks up sun

      tweaking the brim sticker on his Starter cap

    &n
    bsp; and he says pardon me Old School he

      says you know is this a wishing well?

      Yeah Son I say sideways over my shrug

      at the limpid smooth as spandex behind me.

         Throw your bread on the water.

      I tighten my chest wheezy as Rockaway beach

      sand with a pull of faux smoke from my e-cig

      to cozy the truculence I hotbox alone

      and I am at the museum because it is not a bar.

      Because he appears not to have changed

      them in days I eye the heel-chewed hems

      of his pants and think probably he will

      ask me for fifty cents any minute now wait

      for it. A smoke or something. Central Park exhibits

      the frisking transparency of autumn. Tracing

      paper sky, leaves like eraser crumbs gum

      the pavement. As if deciphering celestial

      script I squint and purse off toward the roof

      line of the museum aloof as he fists two

      pennies from his pockets mumbling and then

      aloud my man he says hey my man I’m going

      to make a wish for you too.

         I am laughing now so what you want

      me to sign a waiver? He laughs along ain’t

      say all that he says but you do have to

      hold my hand.  And close your eyes.

      I make a sabbath of my face before

      he asks are you ready. Yeah dawg I’m ready.

      Sure? Sure let’s do this his rough hand

      in mine inflates like a blood pressure cuff and I

      squeeze back as if we are about to step together

      from the sill of all resentment and timeless

      toward the dreamsource of un-needing the two

      of us hurtle sharing the cosmic breast

      of plenitude when I hear the coins blink against

      the surface and I cough up daylight like I’ve just

      been dragged ashore. See now

      you’ll never walk alone he jokes and is about

      to hand me back to the day he found me in

      like I was a rubber duck and he says you got to let

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026