Poems by Cristiana Baik

by Cristiana Baik Autoconstrucción¹ My second life began with fabrication my other name plucked from a book by Auntie Kyung, in a plane ride to California from Seoul. In the breach that was the Pacific what was familiar became interpretation that always-constant point of reference: ghost-shades of adolescence toward transformation—that different place rewritten: where I was born. Life became about arriving, property lines and furniture, new rooms thus dividing walls, eating spaghetti with chopsticks, a washing machine and never drying clothes out in the sun. My father’s absence and golf clubs, cardboard boxes and accumulation. That’s why we marry, my friend Alex explains. That’s why we write and get tattoos. Objet Trouvé Mid afternoon hour’s changing light—fetching. Thunderstorms in distance resemble washed-over paintings, blue sanded down pale. In a dream, there were no paths or roads. Just piled-up stones where trees began to grow. In another dream a hat, obsidian, wire mesh, broken shells and plastic buoys. Hula-hoops. He said, This is an encounter, all the while I thought it impasse, watching the delicate rupture, flood of light darkening into vast open space. I was left with found fragments, possibilities after points of convergence becoming equilibrium. I told him there...
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Issue 04 Masthead

Masthead Executive Editors Managing Editor Alexandra Watson Literary Editor Chris Prioleau Editor-at-Large Melody Nixon Publisher Zinzi Clemmons Genre Editors Fiction Editor Scott Dievendorf Poetry Editor Joey De Jesus Visual Art Editor Legacy Russell Nonfiction & Blog Editor Cecca Ochoa Administration and Development Designer & Webmaster Ingrid Pangandoyon Development Manager Crystal Kim Events & Promotions Coordinator Joe Ponce Multimedia Coordinator Belal Rafiq Social Media Manager F.T. Kola Copy Editor Marina Blitshteyn Founders Melody Nixon Zinzi Clemmons Jennifer Ohrstrom Aaron Shin Advisory Board Cathy Park Hong Margo Jefferson Marie Myung-Ok Lee Victor LaValle Roger Reeves Keith Solomon David Mura Paul Beatty Gary Shteyngart Rachel Eliza Griffiths

Sea Psalm by Becca Liu

By Becca Liu Where evening meets a shell-shocked lover is a distortion of light on water. The shell-mottled sidelines are a construct of winter, contouring a melody nestled in return. We hear the clip of persistence, pearly presence of this gargling world. Gulls plummet in circles and low clouds swagger in. I carve the beach to bring you to water, to forge you a one-winged bird in shallower pits. In the low country, winters are not enough. Heaving seabeds dry to salt. Slowly you peel the skins off a grapefruit, fingers clinging to the cottony pith.