Two poems by Frank G. Karioris

Mother
by Joshua Horan

Compiling it together

Forget how to spell your own name
        the world has already begun its revolutions,

those diamonds on ears keep us lifting
        in cars parked alongside of the side of the road,

imperia as calluses on palms, those responses
        to expansions of sculptures of rose gardens

held to quiet adolescence dreams repurposed
        to those morningless moments of abstraction

off to the US of A, there has never been land
        without, only landedness as a created category.

Those pestilences that were held in tow
        now beget another in the form of yesterdays

abandoned like steel mills along rivers
        flooded to make room for new condos for new people.

Roads abandoned by cars for deer to
        retake as grasslands or watering holes or plains,

bed sheets on the floor next to books &
        an empty pack of Marlboro Gold crumpled in the corner,

the socks dirtied & unwashed until
        plants seeded begin to step out of the ground dirt.


those who’ll miss it are already gone

Two empty Modelo
        boxes and a flat basketball,
the trees have all been ripped away the field that
was once alive now flattened with only two white
                                                      trailers standing in for life.

Across the street they have torn the corner building down,
        which had protest signs for Antwon Rose.

“No trespassing” they tell me as I
walked by on public streets watching their fuckedness.

        The earlier rain turns to falling snow and
I’m dreaming of a White Christmas,
but not like Ocean Vuong does in Vietnam as people escape,
dreaming about white Christmas in the way
        that people are dying on the streets right here
tonight right now

in the way that Pittsburgh is always in the street
                                        right now right here
but it’s never everybody
it’s always somebody not nobody
        who they want to make nobody
but its somebody who’s always been there.
                                        Here.

Or, maybe, it is the same Christmas Ocean
                                                         speaks about, stretching across this
sea of peoples hoping for something better
                           & unceasingly being left behind.


Frank G. Karioris (he/they/him/them) is a writer and educator based in Pittsburgh whose writing addresses issues of friendship, masculinity, and gender. Their work has appeared or is forthcoming in Pittsburgh Poetry Journal, Collective Unrest, Maudlin House, Sooth Swarm Journal, and Crêpe & Penn amongst others. They are a regular contributor to Headline Poetry & Press.


Joshua Horan is a farmer and father living in rural Vermont. When not taking care of cows, his two wonderful boys Peter and Thomas, and his poet-wife Elisabeth Horan, he enjoys bird watching and taking nature photos. He is anti social media and impossible to find online.