Karen Holmberg
My mother strokes the sand
toward her with her palm, drawing
the story out, then levels it
back with the edge of her hand.

All the while
a ghost crab, half-hidden
under a canopy of crisped
sargassum, so well-camouflaged

it's just a blur of movement,
has been sidling in and out
its tunnel, forming identical boulders
of damp sand to stack

at the entrance,
a bulwark. The story
is a stone she collects
from the tideline of the past.

For years it's arrived
again and again, as if something
draws it back
to her mind, tumbles it,

and returns it to her tongue,
a sparer truth: once she hid
a pill bottle in her pocket,
and when the shop owner's

back was turned, pulled
a mystery snail off the glass
and dropped it into the vial
of water, snapping down

the lid. When her father
saw it in her tank, he wrapped
her braid around his fist
and wrenched her off her feet.

A new detail brightens
the memory's
aching chamber. He gave
her aquarium away.

When she loosens her fist
to let fine sugar pour
through the hourglass
of her hand, the crab hunches,

sinking the picks of its legs
in the sand. Its eye bulbs,
lusterless as if dipped in black wax,
fold inward in a cringe.

A mind works this way, in secret,
tirelessly shaping, excavating
a refuge for the tender self. A child
steals the power she longs to have.

What's a snail's shell
but a coiled tunnel.
What's the tough door
but a body building no.
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Art from the cover of Herman Melville's Complete Poems
“Celebrating Herman Melville, the Poet"

"Melville wrote oceans of prose; the poetry didn’t lag far behind. Library of America will shortly be releasing a comprehensive 1,000-page collection of that poetry, and if all you know of this marine master is Moby-Dick, it’s high time to dip your toes in the lyrical swash."

via WASHINGTON POST

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Cover of Denis Johnson's The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly

“'The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations Millennium General Assembly' is a public poem in a number of ways, even if it doesn’t make any grand (or correct) statements about our immediate political situation or about anything that very many people really know or care about. It is a poem about a private figure who became a public one only after his death and only by chance. A poem about a work of monumental public art and about trying to make sense of that. A poem about race and religion."

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