Tag Archives: SUNY Geneseo

2.2 | Music

 


I Whispered Never

Kirsten Maxwell & Amy Bishop


 

Kirsten Maxwell is a senior English (Creative Writing) major at SUNY Geneseo. She hails from Huntington, New York and hopes to one day be a world famous guitar-playing-henna-wearing singer/songwriter. Her work has previously appeared in Gandy Dancer 2.1. She would love to have tea with Rebecca Lindenberg, whose honest and passionate work has inspired Kirsten in her exploration of poetry. 

Amy Bishop is a junior English (Creative Writing) major at SUNY Geneseo originally from Hamburg, Germany. A connoisseur of language, her passion lies with poetry as she is a romantic at heart. She’d like to have tea and muffins with Sylvia Plath, as she admires the intensity of her writing

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Stephanie Narwocki

Broken Bucket Wisdom

The office was in an old walk-in cooler. It was the only area of the Japanese restaurant where I could work without the weight of heavy food trays or sore feet that needed to be elevated with a stack of pillows before bed. I pretended to be earnest during Yasuko’s job interview, but the second I saw her fragile frame and exhausted, elderly demeanor, I labeled her as unfit.

Waitresses are expendable. The second they decide to pocket tips or help themselves to our wine cellar is the second I’m ordered to toss them on the streets with a reputation as clean as a used condom. Restaurant work is brutal—my mom worked three serving positions when I was a girl, and I grew up coloring white paper napkins with old crayons in an empty booth while watching my mom carry tray after tray of sushi to demanding customers. When I turned thirteen, Mom put me to work—and I climbed my way up the ladder.

Yasuko shocked me by handing over a formal résumé—even the paper that it was printed on shouted that she needed this serving position.

“And what’s your level of education?” I asked.

I slammed my jaw shut, trapping a piece of my lip between the top and bottom rows of my coffee-stained teeth. The résumé claimed she had obtained a master’s degree in Japan.

“I earn master degree in Fine Art, girl.”

 

“Why you never go home after work?” Yasuko’s voice took precedence over the repetitive Kyoto geisha suicide music that we listened to day after day. I treated it like a constant reminder that we should never believe that we are denied options: I can serve sushi and make enough money to pay the bills, or I can go home and kill myself.

 

I continued to fold the green dinner napkins. “My mom and I don’t get along,” I replied.

“She Korean right? No one get along with Korean women!”

I laughed politely to make it seem as if searing needles weren’t pricking the outer layer of my skin.

“She’s definitely hard to get along with.” “What about Dad?”

“We don’t talk.” I stood up and walked to the back door for a much-needed cigarette break. When I returned, Yasuko had thrown the leftover unfolded napkins back into the bucket. I swallowed hard and acted as if the thought of my parents was harmless.

“Ay-ya girl, you don’t need to play tough with me!” She crushed my inventory list into a crinkled paper ball and then began folding the rough edges into a swan. “Sometimes girl, even most broken paper can become swan,” she said before turning the swan back into a worthless ball.

“Is that what you learned at art school?” I joked, wanting to dodge the intimacy that Yasuko so happily handed out.

“Swans are beautiful, until they hiss. Then they not so beautiful.” She grinned and threw a green dinner napkin at me.

 

I loathed the customers that would come into the restaurant for dinner, selfishly wanting the dining room to be empty so that Yasuko and I could talk unbothered.

It was another slow day at work as I sat in my favorite secluded booth, staring at the teardrops of water as they streamed along the window and converged. A bowl of white rice and miso soup steamed in front of me, and I thought about how I would be begging for the warmth of food later in the evening. Of course, I had to find a new place to park my blue Honda Civic. The paranoia of being found habitually sleeping in my car alone at night in the same spot at Ellison Park forced me to become an explorer.

I thought about calling my dad; the scenario played out in my mind day after day. Of course, it was just a fantasy that I lived whenever I felt desperate enough to ignore the memories—or construct some fictional father figure in my mind. The reality is that whenever I found the courage to speak to him, my words were as rotted as the clothing left on a corpse.

If I breathed too heavily, if I lost my balance standing atop the rows of empty glass bottles, the nights I held my little brother Brandon under the blankets in my bedroom while the thin drywall around us crackled and crumbled under the weight of a morbid marriage would be stained into my head for hours. My mother’s wails always changed in tone with each fist that struck her delicate cheeks—nothing more than a musical instrument for my father to practice, night after drunken night.

“Are you open for lunch?”

I felt a slight jolt at the strange voice from behind. “Yes! How many for today?”

The older man began to take off his raincoat as he settled down at his table. “Two. My daughter should be here soon.”

I smiled, handing him two menus. I felt my skin crawling with disgust as I walked into the kitchen and smashed a crystal wine glass against the wall. As I swept up the pieces, I began to laugh at my own ridiculousness and then I sobbed in the storage room, muffling each deep breath with a hand tightly cupped around my mouth.

 

“You know them, girl?”

I grimaced at the content and functional family in the back without realizing how obvious I was being.

Yasuko jabbed me in the shoulder with the back of her pen, forcing a soft click. “Girl, you always so angry! You see this pimple?” She pinched my cheek and laughed as I jerked away. “Angry makes pimples! Ay-ya! So many!”

“I’m aware of my acne,” I snapped.

“So pretty, but so much anger! So much anger make for bad wife!”

I hunched my back and mocked her posture. “So much talk make for bad server! Go take order before I old lady like you!”

Later that night, I caught Yasuko wincing in pain as she put every ounce of her energy into using the heavy mop. I sent her home and finished the job for her. As I filled out the closing paperwork, I lied and jotted down that she stayed the extra hour. I was starting to care about the old bag of bones.

Goddammit, I thought as I slammed the books shut.

 

“I know she’s psycho, but you have to take it,” I said.

I felt my little brother’s forest-green eyes shoot flames and laser beams into the side of my face as I continued to drive down the dusty gravel road.

“Steph, you don’t understand.”

His voice had become so deep, it drowned the high-pitched little boy who used to ask his big sister to sit at the foot of his bed until he fell asleep. Already, I had suspicions that this “brother-sister” trip that Yasuko lectured me into taking was a shitty idea, one that might result in a secluded knife fight to the death. Her voice echoed: “Brother is same blood! What you mean you no get along?”

I thought about her broken English and warm honey-brown eyes. “You go spend time with baby brother! He all you have!”

I snapped out of reflection and questioned whether or not my little brother would cut my throat if I antagonized him enough.

“I understand better than you think,” I mumbled indifferently a few seconds after the fact.

“Mom told me to kill myself yesterday.”

“How?” My head jerked when the front tire of my car dipped into a massive hole in the makeshift road.

“She said, ‘if you no want to go to the school, then you can go to the hell.’ Then she told me to go get hit by a car.”

My laughter bounced out of the rolled down windows of the car and eventually his deep chuckles joined in.

“I swear, Mom is getting more and more creative,” I squeezed out, laughing at the imagery of our Korean mother ordering my brother to lie down in front of speeding traffic.

“Do you ever wonder what her issue is, Steph?” I answered with silence, and he continued, “She still asks about you.”

I turned the steering wheel to the right and parallel-parked the car in front of the opening to the hiking trail. “Tell her that the faggot is alive and just fine.”

He rummaged through the trunk as I reached in the backseat for a handful of granola bars, which fell out of the torn plastic bag and scattered amongst the random articles of clothing and books.

“When d’you think you can come home?”

I cursed under my breath as the back of my head hit the roof of my car and a wave of rage welled up within me.

“Don’t worry about it! You just worry about covering your own ass and passing summer school!”

The high squeal of a mosquito buzzed in my left ear. I slapped myself in an attempt to squash its evil plot. Brandon marched in front of me, careful to avoid the holes that begged to sprain a careless ankle.

Hours later, we both leaned on our knees and gasped for breath after scaling a significant portion of the trail, which shot up at what felt like a ninety-degree angle. I rolled my backpack off my shoulders and reached inside for my cheap, re-used Poland Spring water bottle. I splashed the lukewarm water on my face to wash away the dirt and sweat and peered down at my phone to check the time. A single unread message popped up as a red talk bubble in the bottom left corner of my iPhone’s display.

“I think we’re finally high enough to get service,” I proclaimed in amazement.

I read the message over and over again to the point where my brother couldn’t help but peer over my shoulder in curiosity: FAGg. You know what you do what ever. You make me so seek of you for toomany time I relly don’t give shit as long as you don’t make me mad for so many of everything. You are out of controle. Hope one day you know what you did to everybody.

Another text message from my mother appeared as my phone vibrated for a quick moment: I want you gone for good.

Brandon wrapped his muscular left arm around my shoulders at the sight of my shaking.

“At least she got the last one grammatically correct…”

I smiled momentarily to console him. Tears fell from the corners of my half-Korean eyes and drove along the bumpy contours of my cheeks. My little brother hugged me so tightly I couldn’t brush away the tears from my eyes.

“I don’t know what to say, so I’m just going to hold you—okay?” It was the same thing I used to repeat to him while our parents fought.

That night, I sat in the driver’s seat of my car, unable to sleep under the noise of rainwater smashing against metal. The air smelled of rotten wood as I examined one of the many paper dragons that littered the floor of my Honda like garbage.

 

I unlocked the double doors and walked into work with two medium black coffees from Dunkin Donuts in hand. Yasuko was attached to every thought that trailed along my mind. Work was no longer unbearable and even though I was house-hopping from friend to friend, constantly worried about whether I would be sleeping on a couch, a bed, or in my car, I felt at home when Yasuko’s voice was present. I sang along with the radio that I blared early in the morning and began setting up the dining room.

Around 11:15 am, I became annoyed that her coffee was a disgusting lukewarm temperature. She was rarely late and a mere fifteen minutes wasn’t cause for alarm, I told myself. A growing concern pricked at my thoughts ,but I continued to work and hum along to the music that was now more of a distraction than a pleasure.

Hours passed and her whereabouts were still a mystery as I ran from table to table, trying my best to keep up with the demands of the angry customers that bitched about their limited lunch breaks. I dumped the cold coffee down the drain and crushed the paper cup under the weight of my fist.

Yasuko didn’t show the next day, or the day after that. For whatever reason, perhaps as an indication of my own self-destructiveness, I would hope to see her straggle in with her “ay-ya’s” and constant references to me, her manager, as “girl.” I missed her teasing jokes, and her accusations that I wasn’t a “true Asian” when my face turned a bright shade of crimson from her spicy papaya salad. Her absurd home remedies for the common cold included binge-eating mangos and forcing me to eat an entire bowl of fresh pickled ginger.

I had always laughed at how she refused to call glasses or cups by their official name. Teacups, wine glasses, empty pints of beer—none of that mattered to Yasuko. They were all buckets in her eyes. A week before she unofficially quit both her job and her unofficial homeless lesbian daughter, she lectured me as I mopped up a mess made when I dropped a tray of full water glasses. Shards of glass scraped against the tiled floor as I rolled my eyes at her voice from behind. She picked up a large piece of crystal glass with her bare hand and interrupted me when I began to protest.

“Even broken piece can hold water, see?” She tilted her hand and I watched the water pour from the edges.

I rang the heavy mop out into the bucket as she continued. “Hope is water that stays in broken bucket.”


Stephanie Narwocki is a senior at SUNY Geneseo studying English Literature with a minor in Political Science. Born and raised in the snowbelt of Western New York, she enjoys any sort of winter activity, from tobogganing to pelting innocent friends with tightly-packed snowballs. Stephanie has written for Thought Catalog, an online journal that publishes a variety of different genres.

<< Holes and Patches

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Meghan Kearns

Holes and Patches

I am standing in the middle of the road, a quiet side street in an upstate New York village of 6,300. At least, it’s usually quiet. Today, the oak trees lining the sidewalk bounce the war cry of a stubborn three-year-old between them the way scabby-kneed children toss rubber balls across a parking lot at recess. All I asked was that Emma move back to the curb before an SUV late for soccer practice came barreling around the bend, the garbage truck arrived early, or Mrs. Hansen returned home to find her little miracle frolicking along the pavement, trailed by the most inept babysitter in all of suburbia. This request has put me on the wrong side of a preschooler’s war against safety. Emma can identify all twenty-six uppercase letters of the alphabet. She can ride a bike with training wheels and Velcro her sneakers securely. She will walk where she pleases.

“Emma.” I say her name in a warning tone, stressing the last syllable and letting it trail like a question while we each calculate our next move. Her nose scrunches, her hands find her hips, and I know I am in for it. Her eyes are like a forest, shifting from green to brown according to her internal seasons. Now they are a feverish August morning, and they dare me to cross her.

“Come over to the side with me.” I hold out my hand. In response, she folds the collapsible pink doll stroller she has been pushing along. Her short brown hair is sticking to her sweaty forehead, and she pauses to wipe a strand from her eye before rearing back with her makeshift weapon. Whack. A wheel makes contact with my shin.

“If you want your M&Ms, you have to listen.” I am not above bribing a child with sugar and red dye #40. Whack. I am apparently not above taking a beating from one, either.

“You. Can’t. Tell. Me. What. To. Doooo!”

I am a nineteen-year-old legal adult who can write complex theses. I can operate an industrial printing press and tie a mean double knot in my shoelaces. I want to sit down and cry. The image is ridiculous, the two of us blubbering on the asphalt, unable to safely navigate our way across the street. Cars would brake for us like they brake for the geese that confuse themselves in the middle of Lincoln Avenue near the pond by my house. Drivers would beep or wave impatiently, making sweeping motions with their hands as if they had the telekinetic power to brush us aside.

But feigning nonchalance is a talent of mine, and my inner distress goes undetected. When I do not visibly react to her display of violence, Emma drops the stroller and stomps to the sidewalk. She walks the rest of the way home with her head up and shoulders back to indicate that this slight change of route is her choice and has nothing to do with the fact that I asked her to take it a few minutes earlier. Startled by my own emotional instability, I let any resentment toward my two-and-a-half foot charge drain into the pavement as I bend to retrieve the miniature pushchair. In fact, I begin to marvel that a person who’s only been around for three years can function at all. Counting nine months of fetal limbo, I’ve had two decades of existence in this strange world, but I feel as though I am toddling precariously on the stilts of self-awareness. Emma strides like a girl who has not yet discovered she is breakable. Later, she falls asleep in my lap.

 

I have been babysitting the Hansen kids for eight years, long before Emma was adopted at one month old. Now, her siblings are growing self-sufficient and I spend most of my energy chasing the youngest Hansen child around the house and yard. Today, however, is different. In addtion to all four Hansens, I have also acquired Milo and Sophie from the house on the other side of Mrs. Hansen’s garden. The skinny blonde duo, ages seven and three, have made a habit of joining us for fort building and butterfly catching. With six overheated children under my wing on this cloudless summer Wednesday, Milo and Sophie’s father eventually takes pity on me and invites us over for a swim.

I make Emma wait at the edge of the pool until chlorinated water nips at my waist and I am deep enough to catch her. She leaps into my arms and enthusiastically washes away any hopes I had of keeping my hair dry. I let her go and she bobs off in her vest like cork on a fishing line.

Mr. Jim is a tall, stocky man with a shiny head and firm handshake. He emerges from the sliding glass door in a pair of red swim trunks and wades into the pool behind me.

“So where did you say you go to college again?”

“Geneseo,” I respond distractedly. I am hesitant to make eye contact because watching a fearless three-year-old in a pool of school-aged children is like playing the game in which a marble is placed under one of three cups, and one must visually track the designated cup through a lengthy scrambling in order to receive the marble back at the end. Mr. Jim is determined, though, to have a real conversation. He is a stay-at-home dad, his wife works long hours, and he needs to exercise his adult voice before he is stuck speaking in sing-song for eternity.

“Oh, I hear that’s a great school. What are you going for?” Before I can answer, a stream of water invades my ear and we are caught in a firefight between Milo and Sophie. “Milo James, apologize to Miss Meghan!”

“Oh, just Meghan’s fine.”

“Miss” makes me feel formal and deceptive, like the rare days I switch out my jeans for a dress. The title seems to signify a presence I do not own. It is for people whose roles are stable and defined. Miss Cobb was my Kindergarten teacher, Miss Sharon my swim coach. Although I am nearly twenty, my identity is pockmarked by adolescent confusion and one too many perusals of Camus. We move towards the side of the pool and out of disputed territory.

“Anyway, I’m double-majoring in English and International Relations.” “So you want to be a teacher?” He glances down at seven-year-old Lydia,

Emma’s sister, who sees monkey bars where my limbs should be. Now she is wrapping her arms around my neck as she plants her feet securely on the shelves of my hips. I am grateful for her fairy-like build. I’m an English major who loves kids. Teaching could be fine.

“I have absolutely no idea.”

“That’s okay.” He lets a short, breathy laugh escape his smile and shakes his head. “I’m forty-two, and I still don’t know what I want to do.” He goes on to explain that he used to be an engineer but realized it wasn’t for him around the time Milo was born.

“Well, I’m sure your kids will look back one day and appreciate that you were there to raise them. As far as careers go, I’m sure you’ll figure it out.”

I wonder how Mr. Jim feels about being called “Mister.”

 

A few days after we go swimming, I leave my babysitting post to spend a week in South Carolina with my father’s family. One morning while I’m gone, the Hansens awake to discover Nemo, their beloved pet fish, floating in his tank. The children scoop him up with a net and tote him to the backyard for a proper burial beneath a maple tree. Milo and Sophie spot them from next door and hop off their swings to join the ragtag procession. Emma looks up at her friends to explain.

“Our fish just died.”

When Milo responds, the Hansens think they must have heard him wrong. He clears his throat and repeats himself.

“Our dad just died.”

 

A year has passed. Emma is four, and the two of us are growing dusty on the floor of her garage. It is a humid summer morning not unlike the ones that followed Mr. Jim’s heart attack, the ones spent rolling plastic trucks back and forth on the cool concrete with Milo and Sophie while adults unraveled like yarn dolls in the house next door.

Emma and I are playing horses, and I am in character as “Baby Horse.” I don’t know what prompts Mommy Horse to stop crouching on all fours and sit cross-legged in front of me. Our previous conversation consisted mostly of whinnies and the occasional snort. It is clear, though, by the wrinkles in her forehead and the whitening of her lips as she presses them together like hands in prayer that she has done some serious contemplation between trips to the trough and vet.

“Can you jump all the way to Heaven?” Where did that come from? “Um, nope.” I hesitate, trying to answer the way I believe her devout

Catholic mother would. “Only God can take you there.” “When you die?”

“Yes.”

She pauses, and I think the conversation is over. I realize now why so many privately cynical parents still drag their children to Sunday school each week. Who wants to explain to a kid the possibility that, when she’s done, she’s done?

“I wish we didn’t have God.” Curveball.

“Why?” I ask. She is silent. Her eyes are still like a forest. There are questions beneath rocks waiting to be upturned in muddy creek beds. There are answers beneath layers of leaves on the ground.

“Emma?”

“If we didn’t have God, we wouldn’t have to go to Heaven. I don’t want to die.”

We sit quietly for a moment. I absentmindedly poke some pits in the cement floor. She knows she is breakable now. She is beginning to see voids in the universe she once trusted, but my words cannot fill them for her. I could tell her that Heaven is a beautiful place. I could tell her that God loves her, and everything will be okay. I could tell her that no God doesn’t mean no dying. But it’s 80 degrees and loose stones are nesting in the flesh of my knees and I am too tired for logic or faith.

“Me neither.” I sigh.

I think about the cavities in the ground where Nemo and Mr. Jim have peeled and shriveled. I wonder how long it takes the earth to reclaim its territory.

 

My mother takes the passenger seat again. She has been forcing me to drive the twenty minutes to Emma’s house every morning. I have had my learner’s permit for three years, but few things give me more anxiety than the gargle of an engine and the sweaty leather of a steering wheel. I have barely come to terms with occupying my own body, and maneuvering a vehicle makes me feel as though I have grown a heavy metal shell. I take up more space, and space means responsibility. A larger region of existence lies within my immediate control; my clumsiness and inadequacy are amplified. I want to be small and inanimate, but the car expands my presence. My breath quickens as I jam the key into the ignition. While my foot is on the pedal, every inhale is a theft and every exhale an apology.

Half an hour later, I ring the doorbell and a chorus of shouts and giggles greets me in response. Emma and Lydia attempt to shove each other out of the way as they race to the door and tumble onto the patio.

I take them to the creek and they fight over who gets to release one of their captive frogs from its yellow pail prison. Lydia screams and Emma bites her sister on the arm. It turns out okay, though, and within an hour they make up over popsicles beneath the soothing draft of an overhead fan.

After lunch, we venture outside to look for bugs. Emma keeps a chrysalis in a small hand-held cage. I catch a glint of wonder in her eye as she picks up the container by the handle and holds it to the sky to examine the creature from a better angle. A soft but sudden wind rustles the branches. If God is anywhere, he is in the breeze of awe that passes across a child’s face when she sees something lovely for the first time.

When I finally sink in front of the glove compartment on the ride home, I no longer feel bloated and incompetent inside my mom’s blue Sienna. Nobody expects perfection. There is beauty in becoming something else.

 

My cheeks are swollen and my gums are torn in the hollows where my wisdom teeth once nestled. The first time I leave the house after surgery is to babysit. It’s just after New Year’s, and I haven’t seen Emma since the summer. Upon entering the Hansens’ front hall I am engulfed in a typhoon of questions and arms and leftover chili-breath. Mrs. Hansen explains my sore mouth to Emma and warns her not to touch my face. For the rest of the night, she takes it upon herself to guard my cheeks from unwanted contact.

“Daddy!” She addresses her father with the sharp tone of a parent commanding a child’s respect. Mr. Hansen, lanky in his white coveralls, pokes his head around the corner.

“What’s up, Emma?”

“You cannot touch Meghan’s cheeks.”

“Yes, Ma’am!” He obliges her pseudo-authority with a salute. I laugh to myself. If her father is touching my face at all, dental health is the least of my problems. She turns to me.

“Did you have to go to a doctor?” “Yep.”

“I go to a doctor and he puts the cold jelly on me because when I was born I had a space in my heart.”

When she was one month old, Emma’s first adoptive parents gave her back to the agency after they discovered her heart condition. The Hansens brought her home shortly after. Now she is five, the tissue has corrected itself, and I am secretly grateful for the medical detour that has brought her to a home where I can share in her endless cycle of stumbling and healing. The initial adoptive family was clearly not ready to bring a baby into their lives. What had they expected? A child is just a more honest version of an adult, covered in holes and patches.

Emma asks me to lie down with her until she falls asleep. As I tuck us both under the thick down comforter, she warns her stuffed animals not to bump me. Within ten minutes her breath becomes deep and slow, but I am not ready to peel myself out of bed just yet. Here we are, the two of us, bodies under construction. I smile as I think of how protective she became of my puffy face, causing a warm ache to radiate from the bruises on my lower jaw. It’s painful, this constant state of becoming in which we are never whole. Life chips away at us, ripping teeth from tender gums and children from the soft, warm torsos of their parents until faith in anything constant grows moth-eaten in old garages. But Emma does not shrink in her state of incompletion, nor does she apologize for her passionate if clumsy command of the space she occupies. My cheeks are throbbing from the grin stretching across my distended face in the dark. The more it hurts, the more I smile. She will walk where she pleases.


Meghan Kearns is a junior English Literature and International Relations double-major at SUNY Geneseo. She grew up in Orchard Park, New York, but her enthusiasm for travel has taught her that home can be found anywhere. She carries a strong conviction that everybody has a story worth writing. This is her first publication.

Broken Bucket Wisdom >>

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Megan Nolan

Supply Ice to Swelling

Palming wasps, I skate
diaphanous wingtips
into bookmarks—chaptering
leaflets of our existence: before
age ten & after

I stopped eating radishes (parsed
into cubes, fed to your dog
under the table). You spent snow
days at my hip: a helium
balloon brushing stucco

ceiling & refusing to pop.
I thought eating gummy worms
in my pudding was childish,
told you I had a dentist
appointment during your birthday—

I gifted sandbox leftovers
two days late & you saved me seashells
party-favored with nametags: you didn’t tear
mine apart—hail-stuck eyelashes
cracked goodbyes, you exhaled

your frost-breath smile. To cure
egos tattooed on scalps: slip
icicles through my hair & skim
those years for ladybugs hidden
on the undersides of leaves.


Megan Nolan is a senior at SUNY Geneseo and nearly finished with both of her majors: English (Creative Writing) and Communication. She is from Syracuse, New York and probably spends too much time playing video games. She would like to have tea with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to find out which Sherlock Holmes spin-offs he enjoys and which ones make him cringe.

<< 1 poem by Stephon Lawrence     

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Stephon Lawrence

Amuse-Bouche

The Atlantic floor litters
a décor of rotted bones laid
in fragments—arrows: femurs and phalanges
pierce feet. Dive further to bear
witness. Scattered mandibles are aftermath—dinner
guests carried utensils in their gums & watered mouths
over a main dish served rare & tender.
Saline-shake corneas: for best taste.
Sear the bottom, prepare carpal garnish,
let sit in coral trench.
Resurface as ragged tooth bends across jostled ulnas.
Shored; patella fins kick against a humorous pallet.
Forward strokes extend—clavicles
crack into oceanic crust.


Stephon Lawrence is a senior English (Creative Writing) major and Art History minor at SUNY Geneseo. She was born and bred in Brooklyn, New York, where her heart steadfastly remains. When she isn’t writing or camped out in Geneseo’s art studio, Stephon enjoys spending time with friends and watching 90’s post-apocalyptic anime. She was published in Gandy Dancer 1.2 and would like to have tea (spiked with whiskey) with Ernest Hemmingway.

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Joseph O’Connor

I Gave My Uncle Seashells for Ashtrays

Everyone has one
gay uncle
who has been neatly tucked
away.

Mine took me out for lobster—
smoothed a white cloth napkin across my thighs,
taught me how to snap my wrists

so the whole claw fell
clean into my lap. How to clench
nutcrackers until my knuckles burned

bright as Orion’s belt. I pucker a thin leg as he fingers
his cigarette. Blow fake smoke. How to get to the good meat: split the tail
open by cracking sideways. One day you will realize you are different

like me. The words spread as butter. A gulp of bread
at the bottom of my throat: my make-believe Adam’s apple
stoppering my speech. He orders my first

drink: Shirley temple, extra cherries. I suck it down
without thinking. Don’t let Uncle Johnny take you
to the bathroom. I cross my legs and squirm

like the bottom-feeders orgying
in the restaurant tank—he let me choose my own
red heart, to be boiled alive in clear heat,
to be cannibalized by no one other than myself.

Take a Lover Who Looks at You Like Maybe You are Magic

—Marty McConnell

We fucked like alchemists
teasing taboos underneath the planets. Experimentation

between two boys in a field testing warheads—a dipping sun transmutes
their curiosity: makeshift sundials pointing

no where in particular. He kissed
my mouths, kissed the inside

of my forearm. Doctors stick me
intravenous (he knows). Still searching for tonsils

floating in far-off pickle jars. Watch muscles convex
like when he carries in groceries.

Infinity is moon-crescent fingernails burning figure-eights
into my breast—he brands my obsession.

Like magicicada, we sleep seventeen years in darkness. Wake,
sing brazen through the night. Then fuck. Then die.

Our research hangs in the air, like spiders
crafting invisible silver in the night.

Pluck a shiny pube from his teeth and blow,
like dandelion seeds, like birthday candles.

Years of looking for the needle in my stack. And then you
torch it all to kingdom come, leaving nothing but a glowing
metal slice. It flies towards your magnetism.


Joseph O’Connor is a junior at SUNY Geneseo majoring in English with a concentration in Adolescent Education and minoring in Gender & Women’s Studies. He is the Vice President of Geneseo’s Pride Alliance, as well as the President of Geneseo’s LGBT and Advocacy club on campus. He hails from Lynbrook, New York and enjoys playing Seeker on Geneseo’s Quidditch team. He has been published in Geneseo’s OPUS and MiNT literary magazines.

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Andrea Springer

Croissant1

Screen Shot 2014-12-29 at 7.24.45 PM

Barbie’s Confrontation Dreamhouse

i.
Inhabiting a space of sandpaper
pissed off would be a nice change. I can’t
fathom how to grow tiny daggerstones

into my countenance, but I make mean
mental comebacks. My dearest hypothetical
is jackhammer sound ripping

ribbons through concrete. Larynx
charged with battery—enough volts
to damage trachea and sparring partner.

ii.
Amygdala Override—file under: renegade reactions—take hydrochloric responses & shove
them so far into subconscious that they chafe against superego. De-purse Pepto Bismol pink lip.
Fill pliable head with thoughts of being sexy doctor & sexy astronaut & sexy Susan B Anthony
to forcibly squeeze out irritants. Meld four surrounding digits into springloaded middle finger
& ensure that feet are too small, too soft, too stiletto-ready, to kick any ass. Keep composed.

iii.
I eye Skipper,
but contempt is hard
to manage with joy-painted
eyes. Through gapless
teeth, I cuss her

out, but my argument,
like my molded pink
plastic oven, or Fuchsia Summer
Fun Party Jacuzzi, lacks real

heat. I move to chuck my ultraviolet
vase at her, but the base
stuck: melded to my vanity.
Unopposable thumbs struggle to pluck

day-glo-green pansies, sharp
enough to puncture rubbery
face flesh, but this entire god
damned mansion is baby proofed.


Andrea Springer is a senior English major at SUNY Geneseo. She will be attending the University of Rochester in the fall to pursue a Master’s degree in Adolescent English Education with a specialization in literacy. She recommended a book to Matthea Harvey once and still writes about the moment in her diary.

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Sarah Corcoran

Recording, Day: Hour: Minute

00:00:00
he offers me a half eaten box of chocolates
because he got hungry on the way over. Later,
as I puke into the traffic of a highway, he lights
his cigarette with the sun

00:07:05
together we stand on the rooftop, two black birds
stuck in the inky tape of old answering machines.
I want to bottle lightning to ignite the brushfire
in my throat: the end of the tunnel

00:15:21
I press my pinky into my ear until the thoughts of him
stop, run my tongue along the edge of the scrap corner
holding his number

04:23:34
standing in my door jamb, he’s the static
of passing under a bridge in a hailstorm: whirring
dust orbs in diluted desk lamp haze.
I try to simulate my own electroshock therapy
by pressing the line of skin from wrist vein to foot arch
against the hot bulb to stop the panicked shivers

10:14:21
I suck at the rust-marrow of the shower vent with my teeth,
but only end up swallowing a wasp that makes my bones vibrate

15:14:21
our heels catch on cement split with dandelions. Standing
still will get us lost: the lull before the movie credits roll. I kneel
out the window of his car and watch the rain in horizontal motion,
we are a broken record playing the same line         lost
thirty miles back when we started to pick up speed

Seismic Fragmenting

I’d set out to discover the hazmat sign
around her tense, slim neck. To understand her

bobbing knee left me running my tongue
along her conchoidal fractures, torn between

a statue in her door jamb & giving her space
of a thousand bumblebees. Her geocached lipstick
smears made me a TNT stick lit from both ends.

I remember dry pine needles under her
bare toes, the crunch

of my molars against I need—. Her tight-lipped
smile lasted the 365 day trek without falling

to pieces I built, believing I could chart her
pink tint with fingers alone.


Sarah Corcoran is a junior at SUNY Geneseo studying International Relations and Spanish. For the most part, she enjoys the insanely large amount of snow in her hometown of Syracuse, New York and freezing her toes off skiing. If she could, she’d have tea with George R.R. Martin to find out how he will end his series.

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Madeline Herrick

Grandfather’s Clams Carved in the Spring

He sculpted ducks with a bead of sand
castled in his thumbnail like DNA.

I would watch wings unfold purple for hours,
my suit worn white from salted boats

that cradled circles in ballet dunes to whisper
recipes into my mother’s throat. Hollowed

shells became cups for her penciled revisions
on last year’s lasagna. I ran

corners through tousled-blonde
down: catalogued towels by who used them

first. Grandpa’s: white with a lighthouse
nestled on the corner & birds: a lookout

for stray drops of cocktail sauce missed by thick
clam tongues. Shellfish caught by chiseled necks

of swans on a workbench are marked February
for snow. Wood shavings fell like parmesan

on littlenecks to feed summer’s cousins:
names whittled into lungs exhale chlorinated

games of monopoly that lasted years.
But it’s okay. I remember you winning

me over with my own timber duck,
its eyes braised coal, lively & memorable

like a kitten chasing its tail.


Madeline Herrick is a senior at SUNY Geneseo, studying both English (Creative Writing) and Mathematics. She’s from Ballston Spa, New York and likes to travel as much as possible. She prefers coffee over tea, and she hopes that Mark Danielewski does as well.

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Anna Kushnir

Silence, I Discover, is Something You Can Actually Hear

—Haruki Murakami

Sleepy bodies amble out of seashells—hands light-switch: blue night
laps against windowpanes. Night-breath mingles in the bathroom as we scrub
teeth, white foam coalesces under the bulb, stretching cat peruses our ankles—waits

for breakfast. You tuck Murakami inside a blue & gold matryoshka: scintilla for rising
at dawn. Paws glint down the hand-scraped hardwood of your parents house,
follow us into the marble-kitchen, bare feet waltzing the way my parents do

while the kids are still asleep. We spend half an hour assembling & wrapping in silver
—the palinoia of tomato basil sandwiches. Boiling kettle-water steams down
inside a thermos of black tea, stir in raw honey & whole-lemon slices with silver

spoons—the heat travels up & through my hands. I watch bits of honeycomb & pollen
settle at the bottom, decide I want to be a bee-farmer like my uncle.
You laugh & tell me I’ve run from every bee I’ve met.

We trickle down each stone stair to the birch trees—you thumb through logic puzzles
& tuft up grass strands into neat combs. The sky is used bath-water. An egg-yolk sun wavers
above a hill. Rose-breasted Grosbeaks & Savannah Sparrows

come home for October. We open like nesting dolls—shedding
cable-knit layers. I wear a sarafan. Birdcalls warble un-mowed grass,
aster & goldenrod usher sunbeams to join our gökotta.


Anna Kushnir is a junior at SUNY Geneseo studying English and Adolescent Education. She hails from Croton-on-Hudson, New York and enjoys cooking, painting, and watching Miyazaki films in her spare time. She would love to have tea with Sylvia
Plath.

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