‘Hannah Writes About What Usually Happens on Sunday But Particularly Last Sunday’ by Shannon Elizabeth Hardwick

In Less Than Six Days
by Shloka Shankar

Hannah Writes About What Usually Happens on Sunday But Particularly Last Sunday

Mother feeds the army 
of teenagers who touch her 

behind hedges. I watch my friend
undo bandages where her 

father last left his mark. She 
steals his cocaine in return & 

offers it to me. / Flying is not 
a religious experience, I said,

It is preservation. How 
my mother feeds everyone 

but me. / Is it like how you 
fuck a stranger to see if 

the body can distance itself 
from itself, she said & 

do you really believe 
you’re so lucky— 

that your parents never, not 
once, wanted you dead? 


Shannon Elizabeth Hardwick’s work has appeared in Salt Hill, The Texas Observer, Devil’s Lake, Four Way Review, Sugar House Review, SWWIM, and Huffington Post U.K., among others. A graduate from Sarah Lawrence College’s MFA program, Hardwick serves as the poetry editor for The Boiler Journal and her first full-length, Before Isadore, was published by Sundress Publications. She currently lives in a village outside Cambridge, England.


Shloka Shankar is a writer and visual artist from Bangalore, India. A Best of the Net nominee, her poems and artwork are forthcoming in talking about strawberries all of the time, NationalPoetryMonth.ca (AngelHousePress, 2020), Contemporary Haibun Online, Acorn, and Kissing Dynamite among others. Shloka is the founding editor of Sonic Boom, its imprint Yavanika Press, and Senior Editor at Human/Kind Journal