2024 AWP Journals Off-Site Reading

Sundress Publications is pleased to announce that the readers for our 2024 AWP off-site journals reading, which include beestung, Rogue Agent, Doubleback Review, and The Wardrobe, include KB Brookins, Cat Ingrid Leeches, Crystal Odelle, Jess Sifa, Caitlin Cowan, Amy Haddad, Lenna Jawdat, Atia Sattar, Madeleine Barnes, Mary Hawley, Ania Payne, Remi Recchia, Asa Drake, and Jae Nichelle. The reading will take place on February 9th, 2024, from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM at Nimble Brewing Company 1735 Oak Street Kansas City, MO 64108.

beestung readers

KB Brookins is a writer, cultural worker, and artist from Texas. They are the author of How to Identify Yourself with a Wound (Kallisto Gaia Press 2022), Freedom House (Deep Vellum 2023), and Pretty (Alfred A. Knopf 2024). How to Identify Yourself with a Wound won the Saguaro Poetry Prize, the Writer’s League of Texas Discovery Prize, and a Stonewall Honor Book Award. Freedom House has received praise from Vogue, BookRiot, Autostraddle, and others. KB is a 2023 National Endowment of the Arts Fellow with writing published in Poets.org, Teen Vogue, Oxford American, and elsewhere. Follow them online at @earthtokb.

Cat Ingrid Leeches is a writer, editor, and adjunct. Their collection, I Wander the Earth, Hungry For Semen, is forthcoming from Carrion Bloom Books.

Crystal Odelle (they/she) is a queer trans storyteller and author of the chapbook Trans Studies (Gold Line Press, 2024). Their stories have appeared in Black Warrior Review, Split Lip Magazine, beestung, manywor(l)ds, Strange Horizons, and elsewhere. Crystal was a Tin House Scholar and Lambda Literary Fellow, nominated for Best of the Net, and anthologized in We’re Here: The Best Queer Speculative Fiction. She writes RPGs at Feverdream Games and serves as academic and administrative coordinator for the Department of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.

Jess Silfa is an Afro-Latine writer from the South Bronx. They graduated with an MFA in Fiction from Vanderbilt University and are currently a PhD student at the University of Cincinnati as a Yates Fellow. Jess is President of the Disabled and D/deaf Writers Caucus and has been published or has work forthcoming in ANMLY, beestung, Transition Magazine, and others.

Rogue Agent readers

Caitlin Cowan is the author of Happy Everything (Cornerstone Press, 2024). She has taught writing at UNT, Texas Woman’s University, and Interlochen Center for the Arts. Caitlin works in arts nonprofit administration for Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp, where she serves as Director of International Programs and as Chair of Creative Writing. Caitlin also serves as Poetry Co-Editor at Pleiades and writes PopPoetry, a weekly poetry and pop culture newsletter. She lives on Michigan’s west coast with her husband, their young daughter, and two mischievous cats. Find her at caitlincowan.com.

Amy Haddad is a poet, nurse, and Professor Emerita at Creighton University. Her poetry has been published in numerous journals, including Journal of Medical Humanities, Touch, Bellevue Literary Review, Pulse, Persimmon Tree, Annals of Internal Medicine, Aji Magazine, DASH, Oberon Poetry Magazine, and Rogue Agent. Her first chapbook, The Geography of Kitchens, was published by Finishing Line Press in August 2021. Her first poetry collection, An Otherwise Healthy Woman, was published by Backwaters Press in 2022. The collection won first place in the Creative Works category of the American Journal of Nursing 2022 Books of the Year Awards. You can learn more about her work at: www.amyhaddadpoetry.com.

Lenna Jawdat is a D.C.-based writer and psychotherapist. Her writing, which explores trauma, identity, and resilience, has appeared in Poet Lore, Passenger’s Journal, Rogue Agent, and Koukash Review, among others. She was a 2023 Sundress Academy for the Arts summer resident and 2021 Best of the Net nominee for her poem “Ode to the Psoas.” She is pursuing an MFA in Creative Writing at the Institute of American Indian Arts, where she is Poetry Co-Editor for Chapter House Journal. Lenna is currently working on a book-length visual documentary poem.

Atia Sattar is a Pakistani-born teacher, scholar, and meditator living in Los Angeles. Her writing explores the embodied intersections of gender, race, mindfulness, and motherhood. Her work has appeared in various publications, including Rogue AgentLion’s Roar, Tricycle, and The Cambridge Quarterly for Health Care Ethics. She is Associate Teaching Professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies at the University of Southern California.

Doubleback Review readers

Madeleine Barnes is a writer, artist, and PhD candidate at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. Her debut full-length poetry collection, You Do Not Have To Be Good, was published by Trio House Press in 2020. She is also the author of four chapbooks, most recently The Memory Dictionary (Ethel Press) and Women’s Work (Tolsun Books). Her dissertation-in-progress explores how women use textile work to survive and respond to violence. She earned her MFA at New York University. madeleinebarnes.com.

Mary Hawley is a fiction writer, poet, and literary translator. Her short stories have appeared in magazines such as Hypertext, The Saturday Evening Post, and Doubleback Review, and she received an Illinois Literary Award for fiction. Her translations (Spanish to English) of poetry and prose have appeared in The Common, TriQuarterly, and Deinos, and she is currently translating a trilogy of novels by the Uruguayan writer Sergio Altesor Licandro. She lives in Evanston, Illinois.

Ania Payne lives in Manhattan, Kansas, with her husband, Great Dane, husky, two tiger cats, and two backyard chickens. She teaches in the English Department at Kansas State University and has an MFA in Creative Nonfiction. She is the author of the chapbook Karma Animalia. She has previously been published in Bending Genres, The Rush, Panorama: The Journal of Intelligent Travel, Whiskey Island, The Rumpus, and elsewhere.

Remi Recchia (he/him), PhD, is a trans poet, essayist, and editor from Kalamazoo, Michigan. A five-time Pushcart Prize nominee, Remi’s work has appeared in World Literature TodayBest New Poets 2021, and Prairie Schooner, among others. Works include Quicksand/Stargazing (Cooper Dillon Books, 2021); Sober (Red Bird Chapbooks, 2022); Little Lenny Gets His Horns (Querencia Press, 2023); From Gold, Ghosts: Alchemy Erasures (Gasher Press, 2023); and Transmasculine Poetics: Filling the Gap in Literature & the Silences Around Us (Sundress Publications, forthcoming). Remi has been a Tin House Scholar and Thomas Lux Scholar. He holds an MFA in Poetry from Bowling Green State University.

The Wardrobe readers

Asa Drake is a Filipina American poet and author of the chapbook One Way to Listen (Gold Line Press, 2023). She has received fellowships and awards from the 92Y Discovery Poetry Contest, Tin House, and Idyllwild Arts. Her poems have been published with The Slowdown Podcast, The American Poetry ReviewThe Paris Review Daily, and The Georgia Review.

Louisiana-born and Portland-based Jae Nichelle is the author of God Themselves and the poetry chapbook The Porch (As Sanctuary). She was the inaugural poetry winner of the John Lewis Writing Award from the Georgia Writers Association, and her poetry has appeared in Best New Poets 2020The Washington Square ReviewThe OffingMuzzle Magazine, and elsewhere. She is also a slam poetry champion, and her spoken word poems have been featured by Write About Now, Speak Up Poetry Series, and Button Poetry. 

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon (BOA Editions Ltd. 2023).

content warning for violence against trans people, gun violence, murder

Jayne Thompson, 33, Mesa County, CO, May 9, 2020:
Misgendered for a Month

“Since she came out, life was very different,” Leopardi said. “Everything changed. A lot of things started weighing on her mentally.”

Being a cis-gender male, she said, was easy,
then, transitioning, people didn’t trust her as much.
Her children’s mother didn’t accept her change.
At the bar in Bisbee, Arizona, tourists were rude,
men would bump into her hoping for a fight.

No one knows what she was doing in Orchard Mesa
that day. Clearly, she was lost. Standing by the road
for over an hour with a stick across her arms
like a mannequin. She just stood there, doing nothing
illegal. But someone called 911 anyway. Worried, maybe.

Clearly, she was troubled. To the officer’s questions,
she was unresponsive, then aggressive, wielding a knife.

The cop who shot her took her for a man with a shaggy beard.
He said she lunged with the knife, so he shot her.
Multiple times, it turns out, even after she was down.
It was a month before they corrected her gender and name.

Jayne.

Her co-worker Liz said she doesn’t even know
where she’s buried. She said:

     Every night when I would
     drop her off at home, she would say,
     ‘Goodnight, I love you, Liz.’
     That would be the last thing
     we would say to each other.

Subhaga Crystal Bacon is a Queer poet living in rural northcentral Washington on unceded Methow land. She is the author of four collections of poetry. Her latest book, Transitory, is the recipient of the Isabella Gardner Award for Poetry, from BOA Editions, and was listed in the Library Journal’s list of Books to Read in 2023. She’s the author of Surrender of Water in Hidden Places, 2023, winner of the Red Flag Poetry Chapbook Prize, Blue Hunger, Methow Press, 2020, and Elegy with a Glass of Whiskey, winner of the A. Poulin New Poetry America Prize, BOA Editions, 2004. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, she’s a teaching artist working in schools and libraries with youth and adults, as well as private students. Her work appears in a variety of print and online journals including The Diode Poetry Journal, The Bellevue Literary Review, Indianapolis Review, Ghost City Review and others.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

2024 AWP Off-Site Reading

Sundress Publications is pleased to announce that the readers for our 2024 AWP off-site reading include Heather Bartlett, Sarah Renee Beach, Evelyn Berry, jason b. Crawford, Caleb Curtiss, and Amanda Galvan Huynh. The reading will take place on February 9th, 2024, from 8:00 PM to 9:00 PM at Nimble Brewing Company 1735 Oak Street Kansas City, MO 64108.

Heather Bartlett is a poet, writer, and professor. She is the author of the poetry collection Another Word for Hunger (Sundress Publications). Her poetry and prose can be found in print and online in journals such as Barrow Street, Lambda Literary, Ninth Letter, Quarterly West, RHINO Poetry, Poet Lore, and others. She teaches creative writing and writing studies at the State University of New York at Cortland and is the founding editor of the online literary magazine Hoxie Gorge Review. Find more of her work at heatherbartlett.com.  

Originally from Southeast Texas, Sarah Renee Beach received her MFA in Creative Writing from The New School, where she was awarded the Dean’s Merit Scholarship. Her debut poetry chapbook, Impact, won Sundress Publication’s 2022 Chapbook Contest. She now lives in Austin, TX, where she is the Program Director at the Writers’ League of Texas. More at sarahreneebeach.com.

Evelyn Berry is a trans, Southern writer, editor, and educator. She’s the author of Grief Slut (Sundress Publications, 2023). She’s a recipient of a 2023 National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship and lives in Columbia, South Carolina.

Shlagha Borah (she/her) is from Assam, India. Her work appears or is forthcoming in Bat City Review, EcoTheo Review, Salamander, Nashville Review, Florida Review, South Dakota Review, and elsewhere. She is a 2nd-year MFA candidate in Poetry at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, the Reading Series Coordinator at Sundress Academy for the Arts (SAFTA), and an Editorial Assistant at The Offing. She has received support for her work from Brooklyn Poets, SAFTA, and The Hambidge Center. She is the co-founder of Pink Freud, a student-led collective working towards making mental health accessible in India. 

jason b. crawford (They/He/She) born in Washington, D.C. and raised in Lansing, MI, is the author of Year of the Unicorn Kidz. They have poems in POETRY Magazine, The Cincinnati Review, Beloit Poetry Journal, and RHINO Poetry, among others. They are a 2023 Emerging Writers Fellow for Lambda Liteary and hold their MFA in Poetry from The New School. Their second collection, YEET!, is the winner of the Omnidawn 12st/2nd Book Prize and will be published in Fall 2025.

Caleb Curtiss is the author of Age of Forgiveness. His poetry appears in The Gettysburg Review, Image, The Southern Review, and elsewhere. 

Amanda Galvan Huynh (She/Her) is a Xicana writer and educator from Texas. She is the author of Where My Umbilical is Buried (Sundress Publications 2023) and Co-Editor of Of Color: Poets’ Ways of Making: An Anthology of Essayson Transformative Poetics (The Operating System 2019).

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon (BOA Editions Ltd. 2023).

content warning for violence against trans people, gun violence, murder

Brian “Egypt” Powers, 43, Akron, OH, June 13: An Acrostic

He knew so many people . . . He never met a stranger in his life.

Transgender is a blanket word for all who fall outside the
Realm of gender types. It’s not an indication that someone is
A person who’s changed their gender assignment or
Now uses they pronouns. No. One assigned male at birth
Still can use he pronouns and live a unique expression of
Gender beyond Gay. Brian was such a one. 6’4, sometimes
Eyebrows arched, and hair in unicorn braids of varied colors,
Now and then curls, or shaved short, and generally
Dressed for comfort. Brian who was also known in Akron as
Egypt. Staunch supporter of the LGBTQ+ community,
Recovering, and living stably, working as a cook, which he loved.

Paula Abdul back-up dancer was his childhood dream.
Even though it never came to pass, he still reminisced about it.
Racism, transphobia, or random violence, it’s still unclear who
Shot Egypt through the thighs and left him to die
On a bit of grass off the University of Ohio campus.
Nobody’s come forward to help solve the crime.

Subhaga Crystal Bacon is a Queer poet living in rural northcentral Washington on unceded Methow land. She is the author of four collections of poetry. Her latest book, Transitory, is the recipient of the Isabella Gardner Award for Poetry, from BOA Editions, and was listed in the Library Journal’s list of Books to Read in 2023. She’s the author of Surrender of Water in Hidden Places, 2023, winner of the Red Flag Poetry Chapbook Prize, Blue Hunger, Methow Press, 2020, and Elegy with a Glass of Whiskey, winner of the A. Poulin New Poetry America Prize, BOA Editions, 2004. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, she’s a teaching artist working in schools and libraries with youth and adults, as well as private students. Her work appears in a variety of print and online journals including The Diode Poetry Journal, The Bellevue Literary Review, Indianapolis Review, Ghost City Review and others.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon (BOA Editions Ltd. 2023).

content warning for violence against trans people, gun violence, murder, racial slurs, and racialized violence

Justice: An Acrostic

    (A Catalog of Trans Murders in the First Half of 2020)

Just driving a taxi in Oklahoma was deadly for Dustin Parker, 25.
Using the women’s bathroom killed Alexa, homeless in Puerto Rico—
social media led her killers to her. Yampi Mendez Arocho’s profile—Fuck love
tells his story; dead at 19. Monika Diamond, honored LGBTQ mothers through the
International Mother of the Year Pageant: misgendered, deadnamed, 34, North Carolina.
Caught with a stolen wig, in Harlem, Lexi, “Ebony” Sutton, 33, loved poetry and
everyone she met. Johanna Metzger, 25, self-taught musician who could play

just about any instrument, stabbed in Maryland. Serena Angelique Vasquez, 31,
using vacation time to visit her friend Layla Pelaez Sánchez, 21, in Puerto Rico, both
shot, their bodies burned. Then Penélope Díaz Ramírez, in the Baymon Correctional Center,
time done in a men’s prison. Nina Pop, in Missouri, 28, stabbed in her apartment.
I love myself now . . . looking at the pictures before I transitioned, Helle Jae O’Regan, 20,
cleaning the barbershop in Texas where she worked; stabbed. Tallahassee police accosted him
even though he had no weapons, said Stop moving, n----r, ending Tony McDade.

June 9, Rem’mie Fells, pulled from the Schuykill, legless; she lived her truth so loud
u could hear her a mile away
. An 18-year-old boy and 14-year-old girl led by an adult man
shot Riah Milton, home health worker, 25, in Ohio. Jayne Thompson, shot by police,
troubled in her transition in Colorado. Bail was refused for an 18-year-old student
in Chicago, who went home with Selena Reyes-Hernandez, and learning she was trans
came back later mad as hell, and shot her nine times. Brayla Stone, 17, Arkansas,
evidence of hate crime absent, was left in a car by another teen charged with a prior death.

Just an hour ago, arrested while I’m writing, the man who killed Merci Mack, 22, Dallas,
unless she released a video of them together, shot her multiple times. One of five found dead
since the start of July: Shaki Peters, 32, Amite, Louisiana; Bree Black, 27, July 3, shot
too. Summer Taylor, white, non-binary killed after a car drove into a crowd of protestors
in Seattle, Washington, on July 4 at the Black Femme March, not yet ruled a homicide, because
driving a car into a group of protestors, on Independence Day, is apparently
excusable or—what? Manslaughter?—binary loophole that says: not woman, not murder.

Subhaga Crystal Bacon is a Queer poet living in rural northcentral Washington on unceded Methow land. She is the author of four collections of poetry. Her latest book, Transitory, is the recipient of the Isabella Gardner Award for Poetry, from BOA Editions, and was listed in the Library Journal’s list of Books to Read in 2023. She’s the author of Surrender of Water in Hidden Places, 2023, winner of the Red Flag Poetry Chapbook Prize, Blue Hunger, Methow Press, 2020, and Elegy with a Glass of Whiskey, winner of the A. Poulin New Poetry America Prize, BOA Editions, 2004. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, she’s a teaching artist working in schools and libraries with youth and adults, as well as private students. Her work appears in a variety of print and online journals including The Diode Poetry Journal, The Bellevue Literary Review, Indianapolis Review, Ghost City Review and others.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon (BOA Editions Ltd. 2023).

content warning for transphobia and gun violence

Yampi Mendez Arocho, 19, Moca, Puerto Rico, March 5

Fuck love; I don’t believe in it anymore.

The day before you were killed, Yampi, this is what you wrote.
Now I’m left wondering, is that what the world gave you?

There’s not enough to answer the questions:

The woman who assaulted you five hours before?
Did you go home for help from your mother,
who reported the assault to the police?

Then you were dead.

This we know: shot twice in the face and twice in the back
in the community playground, in Moca, where you grew up.

The day before you were shot, a selfie in front of a mirror—

There’s a blue-eyed tiger tattooed on the back of your left hand,
a cross on your right forearm. Your shoulders are wide
under a turquoise shirt, diagonal lines of red flamingos

all rest on one leg. The nails on your slender fingers
are long. A thin rectangular pendant hangs on silver chain
down your chest. Your face is narrow, fox like.

Deeply set shadowed eyes look at your phone.

Flamingos represent an open heart, balance, grace.
Yampi, where is your gaze?

Subhaga Crystal Bacon is a Queer poet living in rural northcentral Washington on unceded Methow land. She is the author of four collections of poetry. Her latest book, Transitory, is the recipient of the Isabella Gardner Award for Poetry, from BOA Editions, and was listed in the Library Journal’s list of Books to Read in 2023. She’s the author of Surrender of Water in Hidden Places, 2023, winner of the Red Flag Poetry Chapbook Prize, Blue Hunger, Methow Press, 2020, and Elegy with a Glass of Whiskey, winner of the A. Poulin New Poetry America Prize, BOA Editions, 2004. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, she’s a teaching artist working in schools and libraries with youth and adults, as well as private students. Her work appears in a variety of print and online journals including The Diode Poetry Journal, The Bellevue Literary Review, Indianapolis Review, Ghost City Review and others.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from Transitory by Subhaga Crystal Bacon (BOA Editions Ltd. 2023).

I Have Room for You in Me: A Litany

For the handsome trans-woman and cis-gender wife,
for the suit and tie and heels, for the skirt and corset
and beard, I have room. No one can say a life is not right.
I have room for you in me. For the one whose father

loved her like a son until she became one, I have room
for you in me. For those who claim their own names,
break free from the limited born-as cocoon, for the one
with the wide-hipped sashay, big hands smoothing her dress,

I have room for you in me.

For him whose voice rings high, whose chest bears scars
under hair and ink, I have room. For the one who wears
their self-made clothes and hand-painted shoes, not trying to pass,
I have room for you in me. For the pregnant man, and woman father,

I have room for you in me. For the sex worker’s food
and rent. For the elderly boy’s sparse whiskers and soft eyes.
For the statuesque matron, the broad beamed man; for your lives
and your loves and your rights, I have room.

I have room for you in me.

Subhaga Crystal Bacon is a Queer poet living in rural northcentral Washington on unceded Methow land. She is the author of four collections of poetry. Her latest book, Transitory, is the recipient of the Isabella Gardner Award for Poetry, from BOA Editions, and was listed in the Library Journal’s list of Books to Read in 2023. She’s the author of Surrender of Water in Hidden Places, 2023, winner of the Red Flag Poetry Chapbook Prize, Blue Hunger, Methow Press, 2020, and Elegy with a Glass of Whiskey, winner of the A. Poulin New Poetry America Prize, BOA Editions, 2004. A Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee, she’s a teaching artist working in schools and libraries with youth and adults, as well as private students. Her work appears in a variety of print and online journals including The Diode Poetry Journal, The Bellevue Literary Review, Indianapolis Review, Ghost City Review and others.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: VOLO by Nathalie Handal


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from VOLO by Nathalie Handal (Diode Editions 2021).

Téssera

II
Aletheia

[ 4 ]
They ignore us
as if we aren’t part of history,

they walk past us
as if we didn’t show them

the moon, the sun,
and the soul,

as if we aren’t the most sensual
world in the world,

as if we don’t teach them
Regulus is the brightest star in Leo.

Yet whatever they try
we still stand,

we stand we stand we stand
and sing with a bassoon and bang.

Nathalie Handal was raised in Latin America, France and the Middle East, and educated in the United States, United Kingdom and Asia. Her recent poetry books include Life in A Country Album, the flash collection The Republics, the critically acclaimed Poet in Andalucía, and Love and Strange Horses. She is the author of eight plays, editor of two anthologies, and her flash essays and creative nonfiction have appeared in Vanity Fair, Guernica Magazine, The Guardian, The New York Times, The Nation, The Irish Times, among others. Handal is the recipient of awards from the PEN Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, Centro Andaluz de las Letras, Fondazione di Venezia, among others. She is Associate Professor of Practice in Literature & Creative Writing at New York University–AD, and writes the literary travel column ‘The City and the Writer’ for Words without Borders magazine.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: VOLO by Nathalie Handal


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from VOLO by Nathalie Handal (Diode Editions 2021).

Téssera

I
The Walls Have Not Fallen

for Bethlehem 1948
from New York via London 2020

[ 4 ]
Pompeii taught us nothing
but told us everything:

That all can erupt
and kill us

but we will
survive

in the city’s
houses, paintings, objects.

But what did the women say
of the hundred hours of harm?

What did the ancient Roman port
near my beloved Naples say

about the city’s faint music
that couldn’t be interrupted?

Should we ask a Pharaoh,
secret keeper or dreamer?

Who dies?
Who gets to survive?

When lips are drying
will the rain keep her exhalations,

like a necklace of water
around the sun?

Will we all fall silent
suddenly,

and wonder:
Had we heard the sounds

of the seagull?
When we walked away

did the sun’s rays on the bench
bend the beauty of the world?

Nathalie Handal was raised in Latin America, France and the Middle East, and educated in the United States, United Kingdom and Asia. Her recent poetry books include Life in A Country Album, the flash collection The Republics, the critically acclaimed Poet in Andalucía, and Love and Strange Horses. She is the author of eight plays, editor of two anthologies, and her flash essays and creative nonfiction have appeared in Vanity Fair, Guernica Magazine, The Guardian, The New York Times, The Nation, The Irish Times, among others. Handal is the recipient of awards from the PEN Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, Centro Andaluz de las Letras, Fondazione di Venezia, among others. She is Associate Professor of Practice in Literature & Creative Writing at New York University–AD, and writes the literary travel column ‘The City and the Writer’ for Words without Borders magazine.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.

The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: VOLO by Nathalie Handal


This selection, chosen by guest editor Valyntina Grenier, is from VOLO by Nathalie Handal (Diode Editions 2021).

Téssera

II
Aletheia

[ 2 ]
Suddenly, we remember
time is slanted inside

like statues tilted
after an earthquake.

Suddenly, Ophelia and Sappho
show us our sacred texts,

tell us to take our desires
to different cities

to surrender to them
differently—

how else can
we liberate

what’s been burning
for centuries?

What is real in the world?
What do we find

at the edge of the last gaze
of the heart?

What is divine in our bodies,
what is lost?

Nathalie Handal was raised in Latin America, France and the Middle East, and educated in the United States, United Kingdom and Asia. Her recent poetry books include Life in A Country Album, the flash collection The Republics, the critically acclaimed Poet in Andalucía, and Love and Strange Horses. She is the author of eight plays, editor of two anthologies, and her flash essays and creative nonfiction have appeared in Vanity Fair, Guernica Magazine, The Guardian, The New York Times, The Nation, The Irish Times, among others. Handal is the recipient of awards from the PEN Foundation, the Lannan Foundation, Centro Andaluz de las Letras, Fondazione di Venezia, among others. She is Associate Professor of Practice in Literature & Creative Writing at New York University–AD, and writes the literary travel column ‘The City and the Writer’ for Words without Borders magazine.

Valyntina Grenier is a multi-genre eco artist living with her wife in Tucson, AZ. She works with paint, ink, Neon, encaustic medium, recycled or repurposed materials and words.  She is the author of Honeymoon Shoes and the chapbooks, Fever Dream/ Take Heart and In Our Now. You’ll find her work in, Beyond Queer Words, Genre: Urban Arts, Impermanent Earth, Lana Turner, The Journal, Querencia, and The Wardrobe. Find her at valyntinagrenier.com or Insta @valyntinagrenier.