This selection, chosen by guest editor nat raum, is from We Had Mansions by Mandy Shunnarah (Diode Editions, 2025).
only an american
Just like the Brits to rename our country with a P: a letter we don’t have, a sound our tongues wrestle to say. It’s not Palestine like old buddy, old pal, old friend, but Falastin. They’d know Arabic is phonetic if they could read, but that’s an occupier for you—unwelcome guest. We have names impossible to mispronounce & yet they expect the world to say it their way.
In their new country, my grandparents give their children “good American names” impossible to mispronounce by the native-born of this land. They called their first child, a daughter, Patricia—with a P. Because who would believe an umma & baba from Falastin would name their child with a letter their mouths refused to speak, damned to a lifetime calling her Badrisha.
Only an American would do that.
Mandy Shunnarah (they/them) is an Appalachian and Palestinian-American writer in Columbus, Ohio. Their essays, poetry, and short stories have been published in Electric Literature, The Rumpus, Black Warrior Review, and others. They won the Porter House Review 2024 Editor’s Prize in Poetry and are supported by the Ohio Arts Council, the Greater Columbus Arts Council, and the Sundress Academy for the Arts. Their first book, Midwest Shreds: Skating Through America’s Heartland, was released in 2024 from Belt Publishing, and their second book, a poetry collection titled We Had Mansions, was published by Diode Editions in 2025. Read more at mandyshunnarah.com.
nat raum (b. 1996) is a queer disabled artist, writer, and editor based on unceded Piscataway and Susquehannock land in Baltimore. They hold an MFA from the University of Baltimore and a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Past and upcoming publishers of their work include Poet Lore, beestung, Baltimore Beat, Split Lip Magazine, BRUISER, and others. Find them online at natraum.com.