if comets raining overhead. if we turn into a
museum for the living before
the big one hits. if language, an improbable
opponent to gravity & stars,
came up with new names for gravity & stars,
what force could trick a river
north, but the dreams of those who fear sleeping
through this version of
the world. if against better judgement we went
out at night, run like roman
candles against the wick of sky. if they find
us in the riverbank. if our
hearts in our stomachs, a pile of stones, tell
them to tie my shoes together.
tell them to throw them over a power line of
rusty apricot; silkscreen t-
shirts with our likeness; tell them to inspire
bedtime stories in the foreheads
of small children; tell my children to go out
at night & sing.
Winner
of the 2016 Slope Editions Book Prize, as selected by Mary Ruefle, is New York/West
Virginia poet Keegan Lester’s first collection of poems, this shouldn’t be beautiful but it was & it was all i had so i drew it (Greenfield MA: Slope Editions, 2017). Constructed out of a series of
untitled “ghost notes,” along with a short three-poem “Coda,” Lester’s this shouldn’t be beautiful but it was &
it was all i had so i drew it is composed as a kind of lyric sketchbook, a
catch-all of sorts, giving the impression that everything has been included in
this collection, yet everything fits. As he writes: “now that we know we’re
average. there are / no special snowflakes. we’ve become what / we’ve watched
from afar. we’ve become / the photos we orchestrate into meaning.” There is an
enormous amount happening in these poems, an enormous amount packed into a book
writing on such small, seemingly mundane considerations, such as falling in
love, being alive, watching television and considerations of the domestic and
day-to-day. He makes the daily come alive and appear beautiful, precisely
because, as we all know, it is.
My
only real complaint about this book, which is beautifully designed, I might
add, is that the type is so damned small. Why is the type so damned small?
i don’t want to be saved
by my lover, my lover says to me
with her eyes closed
on a park bench,
& the al pastor is a little too chewy
& our stomachs turn u into less sexy
versions of ourselves
in our heads, but we are old now anyways.
sexy is relative. we are like two
thirteen-year-olds at a dance on opposite sides of the room,
waiting to make a move & our eyes meet
during that country grammar song
& nelly’s syntax makes us believe
in what entire flocks of seagulls can be
capable of,
miles from a beach.
every time a person takes a selfie,
a piece of them dies.
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