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 2021

    Prev Next


      housewarming hand-me-down from my cousin, who

      clearly, and incorrectly, thought this was a good idea

      With the help of a little panic,

      sparkling water and a washcloth,

      I am stunned by how quickly the wine washes out,

      how I was sure this mistake would find me

      every day with its gaping mouth, reminding me

      of my own propensity for failure

      and yet, here I am

      with this clean slate

      The rug is made of fur,

      which means it died

      to be here

      It reminds me of my own survival

      and everyone who has taught me

      to shake loose the shadow of death

      I think of inheritance, how this rug

      was passed on to me through blood,

      how this animal gave its blood

      so that I may receive the gift of its death

      and be grateful for it

      I think of our inability

      to control stories of origin

      how history does not wash away

      with water and a good scrub

      I think of evolution,

      what it means to make it through

      this world with your skin intact,

      how flesh is fragile

      but makes a needle and thread

      of itself when necessary

      I think of all that I have inherited,

      all the bodies buried for me to be here

      and stay here, how I was born with grief

      and gratitude in my bones

      And I think of legacy,

      how I come from a long line of sorcerers

      who make good work of building

      joy from absolutely nothing

      And what can I do with that

      but pour another glass,

      thank the stars

      for this sorceress blood

      and keep pressing forward

      from Poem-a-Day

      SHELLEY WONG How to Live in Southern California

      Stay in the car and move from one air-conditioned location

      to another chill location, perhaps in a tour of movie theaters.

      After a long winter back east, 76 percent of California’s population

      is facing abnormal dryness or drought. My family went

      to Palos Verdes to look for gray whales, where the water was rough

      and edged with mansions. As of June 19, 2018, 3 percent

      is affected by extreme or exceptional drought. The Pacific Ocean

      is a stage for an altar or a talk show. On the boat, my mother said,

      “Don’t turn your back on the ocean.” Drive down Pacific Coast Highway

      in a long, curving line—past sandal palaces, neon seafood shacks,

      and offshore oil rigs—while listening to Fleetwood Mac, Katy Perry,

      and Frank Ocean. Since the 1800s, my family has lived

      along the West Coast, from Seattle to San Francisco to Long Beach,

      where the sun so often set without our watching. Come to Disneyland,

      the Hollywood sign, to paradise-by-the-highway. At 3 a.m., there’s always

      another milkshake, another strike to roll in the bowling alley

      of an Art Deco hotel. After discussing polygamy in Utah in 1875,

      President Ulysses S. Grant said, “I invite the attention of Congress

      to another, though perhaps no less an evil—the importation

      of Chinese women, but few of whom are brought to our shores

      to pursue honorable or useful occupations.” The spectrum of drought conditions

      is color-coded from yellow to dark red. In Los Angeles, people drive

      for the experience of driving, to be at the beach and in the hills

      within the same hour. The drought website is maintained

      by the National Drought Mitigation Center. Walk out

      to the end of the pier. The good life is when you don’t feel

      the weather. With sunglasses, you own a particular glamour.

      from The Kenyon Review

      JOHN YAU Overnight

      In Memory of Paul Violi (1944–2011)

      I did not realize that you were fading from sight

      I don’t believe I could have helped with the transition

      You most likely would have made a joke of it

      Did you hear about the two donkeys stuck in an airshaft

      I don’t believe I could have helped with the transition

      The doorway leading to the valleys of dust is always open

      Did you hear about the two donkeys stuck in an airshaft

      You might call this the first of many red herrings

      The doorway leading to the valleys of dust is always open

      The window overlooking the sea is part of the dream

      You might call this the first of many red herrings

      The shield you were given as a child seldom worked

      The window overlooking the sea is part of the dream

      One by one the words leave you, even this one

      The shield you were given as a child seldom worked

      The sword is made of air before you knew it

      One by one the words leave you, even this one

      I did not realize that you were fading from sight

      The sword is made of air before you knew it

      You most likely would have made a joke of it

      from Hambone

      MONICA YOUN Caution (from “Deracinations: Seven Sonigrams”)

      Frisky, her canine sidekick,

      (she’d named him when she was 6),

      had taken off again, seeing his chance

      when she let him out to urinate,

      tunneling under the cedar stakes

      of the fence (as was his much-denounced

      tendency) to make his social rounds

      of the neighborhood. She sighed.

      It was 10pm on Saturday night,

      her parents were at the Korean church

      for choir practice, and, conscientious,

      she couldn’t let the dog run loose

      all night (not since he, contrite,

      had once returned with an unsigned

      note duct-taped to his collar: I’ll shoot

      this fucking dog if I see him in my yard!)

      Honestly, Frisky, though cute,

      was a pain in the ass. Untrained,

      he had the bad habit of chasing

      mail carriers, acquaintances (once

      he knocked a pregnant stranger

      off her bike). Only Asians, for some reason,

      were exempt from these attacks.

      He thinks we all look alike,

      they tittered. She knew, that night,

      where he was: the faux-Tudor estate

      across the lake: the Coates’ residence.

      She was in homeroom with their son, Trey.

      The cool kids had handed around

      fliers for a kegger at the Coates’

      that Saturday, advertising a set

      by his band White Minority (Trey

      was both lead guitar and lead singer).

      Frisky, though half her size (and,

      moreover, spayed) nonetheless

      liked to sniff around the Coates’

      German shepherd, Bitch (that

      was her name. Ha ha.) She didn’t

      want to knock at the front door,

      asking for her dog, endure the sneers,

      awkward, avoiding eye contact,

      while they searched the dog out.

      She didn’t want to crouch

      down in front of them to attach

      the leash—the scenario nauseated her.

      Luckily, another course of action

      occurred to her: she could row across

      the lake in her family’s canoe,

      skulk across the yard unnoticed

      till she located the truant,

      return to her own home, unseen.

      None
    theless, she put on eyeshadow,

      lipgloss, a cute (but not too cute)

      top. Best to be inconspicuous,

      she dissembled. (She cherished

      a secret crush on Trey, unconfessed

      even to herself.) Her trusty canoe cut

      through the darkness—her destination

      shining like a signal fire. She docked.

      What the fucking fuck? A semi-nude

      couple in an Adirondack chair

      cussed her out, then carried on.

      The amber floodlight scattered

      citrines across a swathe of dark grass.

      The yellow brick road, she thought,

      skirting it. Friiiiiisky! she hissed.

      By the poolhouse the dog, serene

      for once, luxuriated—an odalisque.

      His tail smacked the concrete

      like a slow clap. You idiot,

      she scolded, snapped on

      the leash, retraced her route.

      Another curse from the now entirely

      unclothed interrupted inamorati,

      but otherwise their surreptitious exit

      passed undetected. Success!

      Home by 10:30, well in advance

      of her unsuspecting parents’ return. Not

      till Monday did she learn the sequence

      of events later… much later… that night:

      a dirty-blond teenaged girl with “issues,”

      with clear indicators of “ideation”

      (a new term-of-art to her)—that is,

      according to the Coates. A drunken

      semi-conscious round of Russian roulette

      (usually, even at the hardest-core

      gatherings, understood to be charade.)

      But this time, the game was both truth

      and dare. “A tragic accident,”

      the principal said, when she cut short

      the morning’s announcements.

      Oh god, y’all! The girl confided

      to her nerdy but upstanding cohort,

      (this wasn’t technically inaccurate)

      I was there that night! I was there!

      from Ploughshares

      KEVIN YOUNG Dog Tags

      Of us there is

      always less.

      The days hammer

      past, artificial daisies

      at the grave.

      Words I didn’t choose

      for my father’s headstone

      & those that came instead

      to live around my neck,

      dog tags a tin

      pendulum on my chest.

      On my mother’s side,

      my cousin, too young,

      dirt a pile above her

      but no stone, nothing

      but the tinfoil name

      from the funeral home—

      the fresh plastic

      flowers that still wilt

      in this heat.

      At blackjack

      she lost

      everything my great-

      aunt & -uncle had saved,

      even their low ranch

      where I first

      knew blue glass, plastic

      covering the rug

      & the good couch

      in the sitting room

      no one dared sit.

      The prickly underside

      of the clear runner a cactus

      you couldn’t help

      but touch. Uncle Wilmer’s

      pickup long paid off

      now stares empty

      under somebody

      else’s tree. The liars

      & book-cookers

      came with their knives

      offering her

      seconds, & she

      sat & ate—

      once you’ve tasted

      the stone-filled fruit

      of the underworld

      you may never return.

      They took everything

      from her

      my mother says, both

      of us shaking

      our heads, disbelieving

      how exacting

      death is, how deep

      the shade—

      except breath.

      She was in debt

      & dead within

      a year, went through money

      like water—

      And that didn’t

      last long either.

      from Ploughshares

      CONTRIBUTORS’ NOTES AND COMMENTS

      ROSA ALCALÁ was born in Paterson, New Jersey, in 1969. She is the author of three books of poetry, most recently MyOTHER TONGUE (Futurepoem, 2017). The recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Translation Fellowship, she is the editor and cotranslator of New & Selected Poems of Cecilia Vicuña (Kelsey Street Press, 2018). Her work was chosen for The Best American Poetry 2019. She is a professor of creative writing at the University of Texas at El Paso, and teaches in its Bilingual MFA Program.

      Of “The Pyramid Scheme,” Alcalá writes: “I can’t help but think of the devastating impact that COVID-19 has had on nursing homes, although this poem was written long before the pandemic began. I am haunted by the image of someone like my mother, confined to a room, unable to visit with loved ones except through a window. Someone like my mother, dying alone. I think, too, about the underpaid and overworked nurses and aides who took care of my mother, who spoke to her in Spanish, and therefore grounded her, who brought her the food she liked when they thought she was getting too thin. My mother died a few years ago, but do her caretakers continue on under these terrible circumstances? Do they fear for their own lives but have no choice but go to work? I think of my aunt, who died during the pandemic, two decades after she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, and who lived for many years in a nursing home. Whose funeral I watched on YouTube, because only her children were allowed at the service. What I mean to say is that the anger I express in this poem, directed mainly at a system that privileges some bodies above others, that does not care about the sick and the elderly, has not ‘mellowed.’ COVID-19 has simply exposed what was already broken.”

      LAUREN K. ALLEYNE was born in 1979 and raised in Trinidad and Tobago. She is the author of two collections of poetry, Difficult Fruit (Peepal Tree Press, 2014) and Honeyfish (New Issues & Peepal Tree, 2019), and coeditor of Furious Flower: Seeding the Future of African American Poetry (Northwestern, 2020). She lives in Harrisonburg, Virginia, where she is an associate professor of English at James Madison University, and the assistant director of the Furious Flower Poetry Center. More information is available at www.laurenkalleyne.com.

      Of “Divination,” Alleyne writes: “In general, I am fascinated by the fact and idea of ‘remains’ and the way we can use them to read backward, gleaning information about a life. However, I encountered these remains in a workshop setting, as a prompt, and in that context, without any connection to the creature in its ‘before,’ I was surprised to find that I was less interested in what it had been than what it was becoming, and the strange journey this body was having. It struck me that remains are also the weird afterlife of the body itself, rather than just testimony of a prior life. The poem seeks, I think, to capture that train of thought.”

      JABARI ASIM was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1962. He writes poetry (Stop and Frisk); fiction (A Taste of Honey, Only The Strong [all from Bloomsday] and the forthcoming Yonder); nonfiction (The N Word, We Can’t Breathe); and children’s books, including Preaching to the Chickens and A Child’s Introduction to African American History. He directs the MFA program in creative writing at Emerson College.

      Of “Some Call It God,” Asim writes: “In working toward a constructive disruption of my idea of the Divine, I’m embracing the notion of God as Funk, an irresistible impulse to drop everything and move. I can think of few experiences holier than responding to rhythm, whether it’s coming from the beat of a drum or a church matron humming her favorite hymn.”

      JOSHUA BENNETT is the Mellon Assistant Professor of English and creative writing at Dartmouth. His three books of poetry and criticism
    are The Sobbing School (Penguin, 2016), winner of the National Poetry Series; Being Property Once Myself (Harvard University Press, 2020); and Owed (Penguin, 2020). Bennett earned his PhD in English from Princeton University, and an MA in Theatre and Performance Studies from the University of Warwick, where he was a Marshall Scholar. He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Ford Foundation, MIT, and the Society of Fellows at Harvard University. His first work of narrative nonfiction, Spoken Word: A Cultural History, is forthcoming from Knopf.

      Bennett writes: “I wrote ‘Benediction’ back when I lived in New York City. Rereading the poem now, I’m reminded of everything I love about that place. Uptown in particular. Harlem and Washington Heights, all that those neighborhoods taught me from the time I was a small boy about what it meant to do one’s best to live and die with dignity. The poem is part of a sequence that is at the core of a new book I’m writing about black disposability, ecological catastrophe, and fatherhood. It recalls a world before the pandemic. It gestures toward the one we are building together, even now, in the midst of it. And the future world already on its way.”

      Born in 1981 and raised in Shreveport, Louisiana, DESTINY O. BIRDSONG is a poet, essayist, and fiction writer who lives and works in Nashville, Tennessee. Her debut poetry collection, Negotiations, was published by Tin House Books in October 2020, and her debut novel is forthcoming from Grand Central in 2022. Her work has received support from Cave Canem, Callaloo, Jack Jones Literary Arts, Pink Door, MacDowell, the Ragdale Foundation, and the Tin House Summer Workshop.

      Of “love poem that ends at popeyes,” Birdsong writes: “I believe I write best about the transformative power of love when I’m narrating from a hopeless place, and this poem is one such instance. It was Valentine’s Day 2018, and I was the sickest and the saddest I’d been in a long time. I was lying in bed trying to make myself comfortable, but I was also hungry and didn’t want to go out for food, so I decided to write about what I craved. I also really wanted to write a poem where I indulged my most pitiful, maudlin sentiments about loneliness, but it ultimately turned into an exploration of desire, failed/found tenderness, self-detachment from infatuation/objectification, and of course, hope. It’s one of those poems that read me as I wrote it. And although I knew how it would end before I began, I didn’t know that writing it would make me feel a little less pitiful, a little more loved, and a little more satisfied with being alone.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026