Category: Poetry

bi·sex·u·al

Pastor’s face clawed with sweat streaks
growl flinging spit and cracking
like guitar distortion
around you raised hands trembling
and praising your condemnation
Yes Lord’s and Hallelujah’s
quivering over cymbal crashes
feet stomping merciless
between the hardwood pews

Blood Songs and other Poems

We pretend we own the island.
We build malls where sugar once sang in the air,
boardwalks where fishermen once fixed their battered nets.
But the beasts remember.
Even now, under the new hotels, the new laws,
the old breath of the island stirs.
A wildness we cannot pave over.
A truth older than asphalt.
A kingdom of things that never needed our permission.

For Alton Ellis and other Poems

talking poetry, telling you about graduate studies timelines
and fiscal allocations across national gender bureaux
had i pretended you were just some summer fantasy
i wouldn’t have broken my promise of
writing you letters on colonial postcards
we exchanged for coins in Bookland

Two Poems About Love

he, lifting off the book that had dropped, covers upward,/splayed on the breast of the woman sleeping;/bookmarking the page; turning, till it clicks,/the knob of the bedside lamp; pausing a moment/to be sure to not wake her in the breath-held dimness

Sovereign

You see it then: the violence of tropical light,
all living things now reduced to chalk outlines against a bruised sky, knuckled
daylong into perfect blue performance. And you too, you realize,
are knuckled, sore with the weight of expectation, pummeled by the script
of nationhood, its exhaustive choreography.

Day Done Clean

I come from a place where the spirits walk among us.
They carry black kerosene lamps. Ask me to fetch parcels for their friends.
Walk with your eyes straight, they snarl.
Don’t think to look back.

Sheila, the Vanisher

GILBERTE FARAH Adapted from an admissibility petition (Trinidad). “The three men met [Sheila] at a Bazaar, followed her through a tunnel along her route. Mr. H was alleged to have made advances, which she rejected. She fled but...

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PREE 14

FICTION

The Talking Forest of Yaminsa
Ayasha Ayurbe

 

Seaside
Jose Belaval

 

Lifting the Veil
Yvonne Weekes

 

Scarface
Melanie Grant

 

All is Not Lost in Translation
Yzahira Valle García

 

Bush Baths
Amanda Haynes

 

Frankie’s Father
Danielle James

 

NONFICTION

The Things We Inherit, The Things We Let Go
Ashae Forsythe

 

POETRY

There is Only Wailing, The First Cries, Inheritance
Yashika Graham

 

An Abecedarian Cut in Half Like a Nose
Amelia Badri

 

Two Poems About Love
Kendel Hippolyte

 

bi·sex·u·al
Choiselle Joseph

 

beautiful hand
Allison Whittenberg

 

For Alton Ellis and other Poems
Amílcar Peter Sanatan

 

To Talk of Trees, The Cannon Ball Tree, Bloody Orange
Debra Providence

 

Blood Songs, Beasts of the Island, Storm Seasons
Joely Williams

 

ART-ICLES

Roberta Stoddart’s “All in the Family” 
Isis Semaj-Hall

 

INTERVIEWS

Unmothered, Unafraid, and Free: A Conversation with Camille U. Adams
Caryn Rae Adams

Entertainment Report on PREE