Sundress Reads: Review of earthwork

Sundress Logo is black and white featuring a bespectacled sheep sitting on a stool and drinking tea while reading.

Spanning decades and relationships, dream worlds and memories and therapy sessions, Jill Khoury’s soaring, elegiac collection earthwork (Switchback Books, 2024) invites readers into the volatile and immersive experience of grieving someone both beloved and dangerous. In Khoury’s case, that person is her mother, to whom this collection is dedicated. Through three sections, the speaker reckons with her childhood, adulthood, and the aftermath of her mother’s death. The collection is grounded in her mental return to this figure, both mythically large and emaciated in her mental and physical illness, still looming over the speaker’s days, nights, and conception of herself.

The collection begins with a prelude entitled night cultivars, in which the speaker as a child immediately demonstrates her lyric and material superpower: that of unceasing observation, dismissed by her mother. The speaker describes how, 

“the fractured

clay dirt

flowered

against a red

moon

bore a

scratchblossom

all thorns

and dolor

moaned from out

a low stump

when I put my ear

to it

oh

she says

that’s just

a weed

the wind.” (Khoury 1)

Quickly, the speaker gives the reader a medley of snippets illustrating fraught exchanges with her mother and the instability of their relationship. She remembers her mother in vignettes of mental decay: she flushes her meds, ceases to eat, doesn’t want her daughter to come visit her even as she says: “my mother’s whisper i would never do anything to hurt you / but this like so many of her communiques is a secret wrapped in a half-truth” (Khoury 5). 

Even in the anger sparked from this neglect, the speaker’s care for her mother transforms, but does not cease: in one poem she burns her mother’s old clothes; the next, she remarks on how, 

“she is 

so smaller

i just want

to hold her” (Khoury 13).

This angry tenderness and ebbing and flowing despair sucks the reader into the speaker’s complex, fearless voice with abandon.

The speaker, understandably, seeks an escape away from the all-encompassing presence of her mother, and finds it in her dreams. A motif that permeates this collection is the phrase “all aspects of the dream are aspects of the dreamer”; four poems spanning the collection bear this same title. Early on in earthwork, the speaker remembers one such dream about her mother’s mental and physical deterioration in spine-crawlingly visceral detail: “my mother is perched on the couch dying properly wrapped / like a molebeast in a baby blue blanket” (Khoury 18). She is jolted back to the present when “[her] therapist asks [her] what does dying properly mean” Khoury (18). As the daughter of a palliative care physician, I was struck by moments like these that paralleled end-of-life care. The speaker’s therapist, here, asks the foundational question of palliative care: how does one die well? And in exploring someone’s values at the end of their life, the question very quickly becomes, how does one live well? Khoury delves into this query from multiple vantage points in this collection, leaving no lead unturned as she studies her chronic illness, mental health, and survivorship of abuse along with her complicated relationship with her mother.

Through all this pain and mourning, the speaker has moments that elucidate an awareness of their own resilience – the strength needed to continue living with, and in spite of, her trauma. Khoury counters a fight brewing with her mother, who compares her garden to kindling, by asserting,  “i know something about surviving fire” (39). The dream motif continues as the speaker chooses to enter her mother’s bedroom in a dream, reminding herself: “it is important to remember / i choose this in dreams you are the chooser / you have the control” (Khoury 52). Her dreams, like her poetry, like her garden, become her sanctuaries, and in this the speaker illuminates a myriad of sites of refuge from the harm she’s experienced. 

In Part Three, Khoury wrenches the reader from graphic descriptions of the past to an immediately more factual tone in the present. The section’s opening poem begins, “i delivered the eulogy / otherwise she would not have had a eulogy” (47). She continues to describe, with a clear numbness of immediate grief, the barebones of transpired events: her mother’s clothes were “bagged donated / to a rural church” (Khoury 48); she leaves a voicemail matter-of-factly informing her mother that she “tried to end [herself] / with antipsychotics / & alcohol” (Khoury 49). Pivotally, too, in Part Three the speaker meets her past self instead of becoming her in memory. Rather than absorbing the self-loathing and hurt her younger self was forced to endure, the speaker bids her own goodbyes to her mother and, “[takes] the knife from [her] belt to extract / the image of the child who sits in [her] mother’s lap” (Khoury 63).

This book is not just about grief or trauma, but also where this long-lasting pain settles to live within our bodies. Khoury repeatedly reckons with what it means to relive your past with such vividness that it becomes difficult to differentiate where your memories end and the present begins. Like many memories of trauma, they sometimes cease to be memories at all, and become just a different kind of embodied experience re-lived intermittently. As the speaker describes in the present-tense an afternoon lying beside her mother on a beach, she interrupts her speech to chastise and remind herself:

“no

none of this

is happening

this happened

long ago

far away.” (Khoury 65)

By beginning to create some form of distance between her past and current self, the speaker shows us how she is able to come home to her present body.

The collection’s title, earthwork, betrays one of the speaker’s central coping strategies; noticing and nurturing the earth, a place she understands when nothing else makes sense. After a suicide attempt, she relates the difficulty in returning back to school:

“i can’t remember

the difference between

dactyl and anapest

been painting

a lot though

mostly abstracts

bees dance on the honeycomb

of my tongue

so many secrets

sickle

in my closed

mouth.” (Khoury 62)

Khoury makes sense of her turbulent world with natural imagery, as she seeks for an escape in her suicidality and encounters a different spiritual response: “i ask god to erase me please / he wants me to macerate these herbs instead / light stratifies into color” (56-57). Nature and gardens, here, become sites of creation to rival the speaker’s instinct towards self-hate and destruction. One of Khoury’s most astounding poetic talents is her ability to turn a violent verb like “macerate” to something reclamatory in the space of just a few lines. Nature rebuilds when it is destroyed, and herbs, macerated, have even more of a capacity to heal in their transformed state. 

In earthwork, Jillian Khoury dives into complex and living trauma, both experienced and inherited. Through it all, she retains tenderness for the mother who both raised her and harmed her, bending over backwards to attempt to understand her in memory as she did in life. This collection’s generous meditations on generational trauma will stay with me long after closing its pale-blue cover; at turns gentle, rageful, and vastly melancholic. Khoury encapsulated this range of the mixed bag we inherit from those who have loved and harmed us as she remembers her mother: “she hands me a box of her favorite earrings / some of these are tarnished” (8).

earthwork is available from Switchback Books


Catie Macauley (they/he/she) is a transmasculine aspiring poet living and working in Boston. They study Sociology, Environmental Studies, and English at Wellesley College, where they also compete on the Wellesley Whiptails frisbee team and perform with the Wellesley Shakespeare Society. A Best of the Net 2024 Nominee, his writing has appeared in brawl lit, The Wellesley News, and the Young Writer’s Project, among other publications. In their free time, Catie enjoys boxing, re-reading A Midsummer Night’s Dream , and buying far too many books at independent bookstores – primarily the Grolier Poetry Bookshop, where they are somehow lucky enough to work.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Hummingbird: Messages from My Ancestors by Diana Raab


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Hummingbird: Messages from My Ancestors by Diana Raab (Modern History Press 2024).

                               Hummingbird

I have fallen in love
with a hummingbird—
the way she arrives each day
at the red flowers outside my studio
and moves among the petals
as if the next has more to offer.

The nectar, oh, it oozes so gently
while other birds nuzzle their beaks
in curiosity.

She might think I’m foolish
to stare at her
in this wonder and amazement,
as she performs so naturally
and I pretend to be writing a new poem
Beseeching her for inspiration.

But, before I can grab her, she’s gone
On to the next chore, whatever it might be,
maybe reaching for the heavens or
seeking her ancestral friends who hold answers
from the beyond—which, in the end, is all we want.


Diana Raab (she/her), MFA, PhD, is a memoirist, poet, workshop leader, thought-leader and award-winning author of fourteen books. Her work has been widely published and anthologized. She frequently speaks and writes on writing for healing and transformation.
Her latest book is Hummingbird: Messages from My Ancestors, a memoir with reflection and writing prompts (Modern History Press, 2024).
Raab writes for Psychology Today, The Wisdom Daily, The Good Men Project, Thrive Global, and is a guest writer for many others. Visit her at: https://www.dianaraab.com.
Raab lives in Southern California.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.


Meet Our New Intern: Reina Maiden-Navarro

For a long time, I was told my writing was “proficient.” Not good, not even okay, but proficient. In fact, every single one of my papers was marked with this word in a large red scrawl. 

You see, my elementary school had a rather peculiar grading scale. It looked something like this:

A: Advanced (90–100%)

P: Proficient (80–89%)

B: Basic (70–79%)

BB: Below Basic (60–69%)

F: Failed (0–59%)

More than anything, I wanted to be an advanced writer. The words almost sparkled to me. My teachers never had anything bad to say, always praising my competency and citing my growth, but it never felt like I was good enough. Looking back, I now understand. I was primarily raised by my deaf and Spanish-speaking mother. While she always reinforced my reading habit, communicating my own thoughts in words and constructing my own sentences in English hadn’t always come easily to me. 

In my last year of elementary school, I finally received my first-ever “advanced” on a paper about Rosa Parks. My teacher, Ms. Brace, said it was the first time she heard my “voice” in an essay. 

Throughout my life, I’ve fallen in and out of love with the written word, but the whole time, I’ve learned to lead with my voice by imbuing my passion into my writing.

On the first floor of the Ayala Science Library at UC Irvine, I became an advanced writer professionally. For two years, I worked at my university’s writing center, serving as both a Writing Tutor and a Community Outreach Coordinator. It was the best part of my college experience. I met with hundreds of peers, many of whom were first-generation or international students. We bonded over language barriers and cultural storytelling. My favorite part was seeing the growth of my repeat students experienced over the course of a quarter or a year as they came into their identity as new writers. I finally understood what Ms. Brace meant about using my voice. I tried to help others do the same.

This passion for ushering in the stories of underrepresented writers is what led me to Sundress Publications. As I begin my role as an Editorial Intern, I hope to continue to use my story to connect with readers and find common ground with the authors I work with.


A white woman is standing in front of a tree in a grove. She has short, dark red hair. She is wearing a black dress with white trim and a blue graduation stole with the words "UC Irvine" embroidered on it with gold thread.

Reina Maiden-Navarro is an editor, writer, and photographer. She recently graduated from UC Irvine with a degree in Film & Media Studies and a minor in Creative Writing, cum laude. She also works as an Editor at Prompt and an Outreach Coordinator at Bookstr. If she is not reading or writing, she can be found traveling, painting, or baking cookies.

Interview with SG Huerta, Author of Burns

The book cover centers a person on the back of a rearing horse, backlit by a burning red fire that takes up the rest of the image. The author's name, SG Huerta, is placed in smaller text at the center-top while the book's title, Burns, is is splashed across the cover four times in separate horizontal rows each time, each with varying levels of transparency.

With the upcoming release of their debut poetry collection, Burns, SG Huerta spoke with Sundress Publications editorial intern Emma Goss about their poetic choices, pushing the limits of both English and Spanish in their poems, and the significance of memory, humor, and pain, in addition to what decolonialism means to them as a queer, nonbinary writer.

Emma Goss: How is repetition used as a rhetoric for pain in your collection?

SG Huerta: My use of repetition can represent rumination or perhaps wishful thinking, like in the poem “Hurtless.” In this poem, the ending devolves into messy repetitions of the phrase “some day this will hurt less.” Repetition is also familiar, and many of the poems talk about the repetition of toxic cycles. The cover of Burns also repeats the title, which I love. I think it represents these cycles as well.

EG: How does Spanish’s integration with English, such as in “latinxpoética” or “Mi tía texts me,” reflect your cultural narrative or experience with gender?

SGH: I have a complicated relationship with both languages, which the poem “latinxpoética” delves into. Early on in my writing life, I received a lot of pushback for including any Spanish in my poetry. I grew up bilingual so of course I was deeply impacted by that attempt at cultural erasure. Currently in my poetry, I try push the bounds of English and Spanish to make more room for queer multilingual and decolonial ways of being.

EG: Humor is employed very tenderly in many of the poems in Burns; can you speak to why humor was important to include in this collection?

SGH: Humor is a very important cultural value to me! I write about some difficult things I have been through, and I fully believe that sometimes you just have to laugh so you don’t cry. Sometimes tragedy can also lead to the comically absurd.

EG: Many of these poems utilize footnotes to contextualize and interrogate the beliefs society holds about gender and trans identities; how does including footnotes extend or inflate the pathos of these poems?

SGH: Footnotes are always fun to play around with. I think it adds another layer to the poem and complicates the reading experience. In “trans poetica” specifically, the footnotes show the hidden undercurrent of what’s happening to the speaker within the poem. The speaker can feel one way about their gender, but often other people have something to say. The footnotes are a way to contend with these different voices.

EG: Colonization is one of the most potent motifs in Burns. Can you speak to the myriad ways this motif strengthens many of your poems such as “My Phone Alerts Me About Queen Elizabeth IIʼs Platinum Jubilee” and “arte poética”?

SGH: Decolonialism is a lifelong ever-present commitment. These ideas appear in so many of my poems because I’m always considering its impact on our society broadly and my culture specifically. I can’t talk about Latinx heritage without talking about colonialism.

EG: Burns does not abide by a singular poetic form. How does playing with parentheses and experimenting with form allow certain poems, including “necropoetica,” “anthropoetica,” “ignorant american,” and “Some Issues,” to complicate issues of gender?

SGH: As a nonbinary person and poet, I definitely approach gender and poetic form the same way. I work with whatever fits the occasion, which usually involves queering language in some way. I’m a firm believer in trying different forms and presentations until you find what’s right, and what’s right can always change.

EG: Many of the most emotional and vulnerable poems in this collection delve into memories of your father and childhood. Can you speak to memories’ role in the collection?

SGH: Memory is my book’s best friend. A lot of these poems felt urgent to write and record; there are many memories that only I hold since my father has passed. However, these memories get complicated, because I don’t have anyone to corroborate them. I’m able to take poetic liberty and think of what works best in the world of the poem. The line between poetry and memory is there, but it is faint at times.


SG Huerta, a Xicanx writer, is the poetry editor of Abode Press, a Roots.Wounds.Words. fellow, and a Tin House alum. The author of two poetry chapbooks and the nonfiction chapbook GOOD GRIEF (fifth wheel press, 2025), their work has appeared in Honey Literary and elsewhere. Find them at sghuertawriting.com.

A pale-skinned woman is visible from the waist up in an interior background with blue walls. She has brown-rimmed glasses, long brown hair, bangs, and she is wearing a brown tube top and a small black bag on her shoulder.

Emma Goss (she/her/hers) is a senior English major with minors in Film and Linguistic Anthropology. A passionate reader, she prefers to always be juggling a poetry collection, a literary fiction novel, and an audiobook. Emma is especially drawn to poetry rooted in nature symbolism and metaphor. Some of her favorite collections include The Tradition by Jericho Brown, War of the Foxes by Richard Siken, What the Living Do by Marie Howe, and Jane: A Murder by Maggie Nelson. Her poetry has been published in Pangyrus Magazine and by the Princeton Leonard L. Milberg ’53 Poetry Contest. Originally from Los Angeles, she spends her time hiking local trails or browsing the poetry shelves at Barnes & Noble Studio City when not at Vassar.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Running Wild by Patricia McMillen


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Running Wild by Patricia McMillen (Finishing Line Press 2024).

Content Warning: domestic violence or child abuse

Listening to OCD

Since Prozac I can’t
keep the spice jars in
alphabetical

order. There’s a stack
of receipts for car
repairs on one end

table, unopened
mail on the other.
I forget people’s

zip codes, even the
names of their cats. Nights
I dream of pushing

a grocery cart
with one bent wheel, of
ironing men’s shirts

over and over
under a full moon,
while some days, I read

magazines without
clipping recipes,
I let milk go sour.


Patricia “Ti” McMillen is a musician, clown, community activist, and retired lawyer, with publications in journalism, biography, fiction and poetry. Honors include an Illinois Arts Council poetry fellowship (2002), Pushcart Prize nomination (2002), Masters degree (English) from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2005), and publication in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Patricia’s first full length poetry collection, Running Wild, was published by Finishing Line Press (Georgetown, KY) in 2024, and her poetry chapbook, Knife Lake Anthology in 2006 by Pudding House Publications (Columbus, OH). Knife Lake Anthology is now out of print.
Patricia relocated in 2025 from her home state of Illinois to Northern California, where there is sadly little public transportation, though more than enough wine. Her web address is www.knifelakeworld.com, and she posts frequently on facebook, X, the New York Times (as ChicagoPoetLawyer), and various other places under various other pseudonyms.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.


The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Running Wild by Patricia McMillen


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Running Wild by Patricia McMillen (Finishing Line Press 2024).

Forgiveness

is a hard woman insisting I spend
New Year’s Day writing an apology to her boyfriend

for things I don’t recall saying the night before, and if I did—
hell, he was drunk too. Holding up my karma as if she had

a direct line, knew even half
the things I’ve done wrong: breezing past

Salvation Army Santas, my pockets full of quarters; that day
I told the boss I was sick but just wanted to stay

home and watch TV; the sheepdog pup
I kicked. Forgiveness—ah,

forgiveness: how I wish her love were sap
that never stopped flowing, that I could tap

her like a maple tree in winter, set
my empty bucket at an angle, let

not a single drop of her sweetness run
off, flow away, across the frozen ground.


Patricia “Ti” McMillen is a musician, clown, community activist, and retired lawyer, with publications in journalism, biography, fiction and poetry. Honors include an Illinois Arts Council poetry fellowship (2002), Pushcart Prize nomination (2002), Masters degree (English) from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2005), and publication in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Patricia’s first full length poetry collection, Running Wild, was published by Finishing Line Press (Georgetown, KY) in 2024, and her poetry chapbook, Knife Lake Anthology in 2006 by Pudding House Publications (Columbus, OH). Knife Lake Anthology is now out of print.
Patricia relocated in 2025 from her home state of Illinois to Northern California, where there is sadly little public transportation, though more than enough wine. Her web address is www.knifelakeworld.com, and she posts frequently on facebook, X, the New York Times (as ChicagoPoetLawyer), and various other places under various other pseudonyms.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.


The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Running Wild by Patricia McMillen


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Running Wild by Patricia McMillen (Finishing Line Press 2024).

Fourth of July, Chicago

My mother told me “Lie down with dogs,
stand up with fleas.” That’s why at first I’m glad
to find his place is overrun with cats:


Persian, calico, tortoise, Manx, draped
like antimacassars across the arms
of rescued Victorian sofas, dozing


on windowsills, play-batting dustballs.
Salsa music rises from Clark Street, a pulse
as sullen as heat, drifts through the open window


on a breeze smelling of tortillas and yesterday’s
diesel exhaust. He’s beating me, slowly,
at strip chess. I lose a bishop, take


off one sock, lick salt from my upper lip.
Sweat rolls from my scalp, lodges in a brow.
He’s sweet, I think, sweet—but I’m so hip,


I’ve got no time for love, only enough
to tangle on a frayed bedspread covered
with cat hair, while far off, a lost dog howls.


Patricia “Ti” McMillen is a musician, clown, community activist, and retired lawyer, with publications in journalism, biography, fiction and poetry. Honors include an Illinois Arts Council poetry fellowship (2002), Pushcart Prize nomination (2002), Masters degree (English) from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2005), and publication in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Patricia’s first full length poetry collection, Running Wild, was published by Finishing Line Press (Georgetown, KY) in 2024, and her poetry chapbook, Knife Lake Anthology in 2006 by Pudding House Publications (Columbus, OH). Knife Lake Anthology is now out of print.
Patricia relocated in 2025 from her home state of Illinois to Northern California, where there is sadly little public transportation, though more than enough wine. Her web address is www.knifelakeworld.com, and she posts frequently on facebook, X, the New York Times (as ChicagoPoetLawyer), and various other places under various other pseudonyms.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.


The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Running Wild by Patricia McMillen


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Running Wild by Patricia McMillen (Finishing Line Press 2024).

Editor’s Note

I owe Esinam Bediako, Patricia ‘Ti’ McMillen, guest editor Maggie Rue Hess, and Sundress’s subscribers an apology. When I scheduled the posts of Ms. McMillen’s poems, I failed to update the author photo as usual. Ms. Bediako does not deserve to be incorrectly associated with another author’s work and Ms. McMillen deserves to be showcased accurately alongside her poems and receive the same recognition as our other featured authors. You deserve to see them respectively as such! The original and future posts have been corrected. I am deeply sorry for my error and hope that you are able to continue enjoying Ms. McMillen’s work.

Merrick Sloane, Managing Editor of The Wardrobe

Boy Crazy

If it wasn’t this one, copping
a feel beside the rusty
wheelbarrow in my father’s garage,
then that one, maybe, leaning in
for the kiss but first bending to pull
up socks that had slipped down
inside his shoes while I sat there
feeling foolish in too much lip gloss
on a stone bench behind the bowling alley
the weekend after Kennedy was shot.


Patricia “Ti” McMillen is a musician, clown, community activist, and retired lawyer, with publications in journalism, biography, fiction and poetry. Honors include an Illinois Arts Council poetry fellowship (2002), Pushcart Prize nomination (2002), Masters degree (English) from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2005), and publication in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Patricia’s first full length poetry collection, Running Wild, was published by Finishing Line Press (Georgetown, KY) in 2024, and her poetry chapbook, Knife Lake Anthology in 2006 by Pudding House Publications (Columbus, OH). Knife Lake Anthology is now out of print.
Patricia relocated in 2025 from her home state of Illinois to Northern California, where there is sadly little public transportation, though more than enough wine. Her web address is www.knifelakeworld.com, and she posts frequently on facebook, X, the New York Times (as ChicagoPoetLawyer), and various other places under various other pseudonyms.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.


Interview with Abdulrazaq Salihu, author of Quantum Entanglements with Notes on Loss

Ahead of the release of his e-chapbook, Quantum Entanglements with Notes on Loss, Abdulrazaq Salihu spoke with Sundress Publications editorial intern, Marian Kohng, about his work. Salihu discussed the connection between physical science and spiritual loss, how grief isolates yet undeniably connects one to everything outside of themself, and the importance of empty space to his work, whether in music or poetry.

Marian Kohng: What did you wish to convey when connecting the various theories of the universe with human emotions?

Abdulrazaq Salihu: I wanted to insist that grief is not small, not private, and not confined to the body that holds it. The language of physics, quantum entanglement, dark matter, and parallel universes gave me a vocabulary large enough to hold the magnitude of loss I was carrying. When someone dies, especially violently, the rupture feels cosmic. It rearranges gravity. It bends time. It changes how light enters the room. By aligning human emotion with theories of the universe, I was trying to say: what happens inside us is as real and consequential as what happens in the stars. Science and grief are both attempts to explain absence. Both ask: what remains when what we love disappears? In that sense, mourning is a form of physics because we are constantly measuring distances between who we were and who we have become after loss.

MK: Can you speak about the titles of your poems and the significance of them being the first thing readers see?


AS: Titles are thresholds. They are the first consent a reader gives a poem. I take them seriously because I want the reader to arrive already unsettled, already thinking, already leaning forward. Many of my titles function almost like philosophical propositions or prayer lines: “At the Laboratory, I Gave a Stranger My Faith” and “He Understood Qada’a Wal Qadr.” They ask the reader to slow down, to breathe differently, to accept that logic and belief, science and spirituality, will coexist without apology. The titles do not explain the poems; they prepare the nervous system for what is coming. In a book about loss, titles are also acts of care. They tell the reader: this grief has language, structure, and intention. You are not walking into chaos; you are walking into a carefully held silence and I think because titles are really the first thing the readers see, it’s the first determinant of impression, so if I can win with a title, I have won with the entire work.

MK: What is the role of music and silence and the juxtaposition between them?

AS: Music and silence are siblings in my work. Music is what we reach for when language fails; silence is what remains when even music collapses. In poems like “All the Things I Love, the Sands Have Covered with Memory,” music becomes a kind of inheritance. Voices of fathers, radios, communal songs. In Silence is a Ghost, silence becomes presence, something that follows you, occupies rooms, presses against the body. Music for me goes beyond songs, every syllable, punctuation, space, pause and rhythm constitutes what I regard as music, because it flickers the rhythm of the heart. I am interested in the moment when music stops and you are left alone with what you feel. In grief, silence is never empty. It is crowded with memory, regret, prayer, unfinished conversations. I use music to soften the entry into loss, and silence to show its aftermath.

MK: Can you speak about the intention behind the blanks and brackets in your poems?

AS: The blanks and brackets are where language admits defeat. They mark what cannot be safely spoken, what is culturally unsayable, what is too violent, too intimate, or too sacred to be named directly. In “Phantasmagoria with my Country Women as Stardust and Night Song,” the interruptions are not aesthetic tricks, they are ethical pauses. They give the reader space to breathe, to fill in meaning with their own grief, their own memory. Loss fractures speech. These gaps are faithful to that fracture. Sometimes, the most honest line in a poem is the one that refuses to exist.

MK: What part does a sense of belonging play in grief and healing?

AS: Belonging is really both wound and medicine. To belong deeply to a language, a family, a town like Sarkin Pawa means that loss does not happen alone. It reverberates. It’s really Ubuntu, that I am because you are, because we are. When someone dies, the community feels it in their bones, in their rituals, in their silences. Healing, for me, is not forgetting; it is remembering together. Language becomes a home when physical places are no longer safe. Family becomes a shelter even when it is fragile. Grief isolates, but belonging insists you do not carry this alone and that’s what belonging does. 

MK: Can you speak about the Greek mythology in “Thanatos Learns to Love Family Loosely”?

AS: Greek mythology allowed me to externalize grief, to give death a body, a personality, a seat at the table. Thanatos is not just death; he is death learning tenderness, restraint, love. By bringing gods like Hypnos, Nyx, Erebus into a domestic space, I was collapsing the distance between myth and everyday mourning. The first Greek character I learnt about was Medusa, from my sister, it was empathetic and fascinating what her story did to me, I felt she deserved so much better than the cruel world offered her so I read more myths and that was the start. It was my way of asking: what if death is not only cruel, but confused? What if even death has to learn how to leave gently?

MK: What message were you delivering by focusing on the human body in “At the Laboratory, I Gave a Stranger My Faith…”?

AS: The body is where belief becomes real. In that poem, the laboratory is not just scientific, it is spiritual. I wanted to explore what happens when faith is placed in another person’s hands, when destiny (Qada’a wal Qadr) is examined under fluorescent lights. The poem insists that science does not negate belief; it sharpens it. The body becomes a site of trust, vulnerability, and surrender. To offer your body or your faith is to accept uncertainty. That acceptance is not weakness; it is devotion, it’s a sacred promise. 

MK: How did you decide the tone of the last poem compared to the first?

AS: The first poem is communal, outward-facing, almost declarative. It introduces empathy as an act of survival. The last poem is quieter, heavier, more reflective. It understands that empathy does not save everyone, but it saves something; memory, dignity, witness. The book begins by reaching outward and ends by sitting still. That arc mirrors grief itself. You start by screaming; you end by listening.

MK: Can you speak about the mirroring of nature with emotions of loss?

AS: Nature does not mourn politely. It floods and withers. By personifying nature, I was refusing to sanitize grief. The earth reacts the way bodies do. Rivers carry absence. Night expands. Light hesitates. Loss is ecological, it disrupts systems. When a father dies, the weather changes inside a home. Nature becomes a language that does not lie and I’m a witness to all of this grief and climate change in moods.

MK: What does quantum entanglement mean in terms of grief and acceptance?

AS: Quantum entanglement suggests that once two particles are connected, distance no longer matters. That idea saved me. It allowed me to believe that death does not sever relationship, it rearranges it. In grief, acceptance does not mean letting go. It means learning a new physics of love. The dead are not gone; they are elsewhere, still influencing us, still shaping our movements. We remain entangled. Acceptance, then, is not closure. It is continuity without certainty. It is learning how to live knowing that love does not end, it only changes form.

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Abdulrazaq Salihu is a Nigerian poet and member of the Hilltop Creative Arts Foundation. He won the Splendor of Dawn Poetry Contest, BPKW Poetry Contest, Poetry Archive Poetry Contest, Masks Literary Magazine Poetry Award, Nigerian Prize for Teen Authors (Poetry), Hilltop Creative Writing Award, and others.

He has received fellowships and residencies from Imodeye Writers Enclave Writers Residency, SPRINg and elsewhere. His poetry is published/forthcoming in Uncanny, Bacopa, Consequence, South Florida poetry, Eunoia review, strange horizons, Unstamatic, Bracken, Poetry Quarter(ly), Rogue, B*k, Jupiter review, black moon magazine, Angime, Grub Street mag and elsewhere. He tweets @Arazaqsalihu, and his Instagram is @Abdulrazaq._salihu. He is the author of Constellations (polar sphere, 2022) and hiccups (polar sphere, 2022). 

Marian Kohng (she/her/hers) is a proud Korean American and an Editorial Intern at Sundress Publications and a Traffic Copy Editor at a local news station in Tucson, AZ. She also has a Bachelor’s in Neuroscience and Cognitive Science and a Master’s in Marketing. She loves to get lost in a good book and will read just about anything, including the back of the shampoo bottle.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Running Wild by Patricia McMillen


This selection, chosen by Guest Editor Maggie Rue Hess, is from Running Wild by Patricia McMillen (Finishing Line Press 2024).

Editor’s Note

I owe Esinam Bediako, Patricia ‘Ti’ McMillen, guest editor Maggie Rue Hess, and Sundress’s subscribers an apology. When I scheduled the posts of Ms. McMillen’s poems, I failed to update the author photo. Ms. Bediako does not deserve to be incorrectly associated with another author’s work and Ms. McMillen deserves to be showcased accurately alongside her poems and receive the same recognition as our other featured authors. You deserve to see them respectively as such! The original and future posts have been corrected. I am deeply sorry for my error and hope that you are able to continue enjoying Ms. McMillen’s work.

Merrick Sloane, Managing Editor of The Wardrobe

Little Sister

When I think how close I came
to losing you in the Monadnock Building
after my first eye doctor appointment,
Mom and I both stunned to hear him say
I needed glasses—would I never
dance Swan Lake?—both crying, waiting
for the elevator which though classy


had no operator, was uncomprehending
as a toaster or neuro-ophthalmologist,
and when it came, how you hopped right on
while we stood, watched those ornate
glass-and-brass doors bang shut, eight-year-old
you on one side with your pixie haircut,
Mom and thirteen-year-old me on the other:


O then did I become a woman, then know
what loss would be, and when, that same lifetime,
Mom and I still paralyzed on the seventh floor,
the same doors clanged open again, revealing you
untouched, unharmed, valiant in the elevator cab,


O then did we three keen in tragic unison
all the way out to Jackson Boulevard.


Patricia “Ti” McMillen is a musician, clown, community activist, and retired lawyer, with publications in journalism, biography, fiction and poetry. Honors include an Illinois Arts Council poetry fellowship (2002), Pushcart Prize nomination (2002), Masters degree (English) from the University of Illinois at Chicago (2005), and publication in numerous literary journals and anthologies. Patricia’s first full length poetry collection, Running Wild, was published by Finishing Line Press (Georgetown, KY) in 2024, and her poetry chapbook, Knife Lake Anthology in 2006 by Pudding House Publications (Columbus, OH). Knife Lake Anthology is now out of print.
Patricia relocated in 2025 from her home state of Illinois to Northern California, where there is sadly little public transportation, though more than enough wine. Her web address is www.knifelakeworld.com, and she posts frequently on facebook, X, the New York Times (as ChicagoPoetLawyer), and various other places under various other pseudonyms.

Maggie Rue Hess (she/her) is a PhD student living in Knoxville, Tennessee, with her partner and their crusty white dog. She serves as Poetry Co-Editor for Grist: A Journal of the Literary Arts. Her work has appeared in Rattle, Connecticut River Review, SWWIM, and other publications; her debut chapbook, The Bones That Map Us, was published by Belle Point Press in 2024. Maggie likes to share baked goods with friends and can be found on Instagram as @maggierue_.