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July 8, 2024 / barton smock

Ethan Hawke letter 19, 070824

Letter 070824 bring your own body

Dear Ethan Hawke

Snowfall named the ache in this road after nothing. My son’s knees click on and off. God is a numbers game.
July 8, 2024 / barton smock

Upcoming readings for the ‘I think I can’t speak for everyone here’ series

Upcoming readings for the 'I think I can't speak for everyone here' series:

Saturday, July 13th, 3pm EST:
featured Zaynab Iliyasu Bobi and Saba Keramati


Saba Keramati is a Chinese-Iranian writer from California. She is the author of Self-Mythology (University of Arkansas Press, 2024), selected by Patricia Smith for the Miller Williams Poetry Series. She is also the poetry editor for Sundog Lit.

Zaynab Iliyasu Bobi, Frontier I, is a Nigerian-Hausa multidisciplinary artist, poet, and a licenced Medical Laboratory Scientist from Bobi. She is the author of the chapbook Cadaver of Red Roses (winner of the 2023 Derricotte/Eady Prize) and winner of the inaugural Folorunsho Editor’s Poetry Prize 2023, Labari Poetry Prize 2023, the inaugural Akachi Chukwuemeka Prize for Literature 2023, and Gimba Suleiman Hassan Gimba ESQ Poetry Prize, 2022 and the first beneficiary of Carolyn Micklem Scholarship. Her works have appeared or are forthcoming in Strange Horizons, FIYAH, Uncanny Magazine, Poetry Daily, Agbowo, Torch Literary Arts, Arc Poetry Magazine, and elsewhere. Her chapbook Uncensored Snapshots is forthcoming with Chestnut Review (April/June 2025). She is active on X @ZainabBobi.


Sunday, July 14th, 4pm EST:
featured Melissa Eleftherion and Kaylee Young-Eun Jeong


Melissa Eleftherion (she/they) is a writer, a librarian, and a visual artist. Born & raised in Brooklyn, she holds degrees from Brooklyn College, Mills College, and San Jose State University. They are the author of two poetry collections, field guide to autobiography (The Operating System, 2018), & gutter rainbows (Querencia Press, 2024), twelve chapbooks including abject sutures (above/ground press, 2024), & several books currently touring the rejection circuit. Her work has been widely published & featured in venues like Quarter after Eight, Sixth Finch, Entropy, & Barren Magazine. Melissa now lives in Northern California where she manages the Ukiah Branch Library, curates the LOBA Reading Series, and serves as Poet Laureate Emeritus of the City of Ukiah. Recent work is available at www.apoetlibrarian.wordpress.com.

Kaylee Young-Eun Jeong is from Oregon. Her poems can be found in ONLY POEMS, Shenandoah, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, and The Columbia Review, among others. She is a Wednesday's child.

Fliers for the readings:
July 8, 2024 / barton smock

7/7/24 ‘I think I can’t speak for everyone here’ series, featured readers William Erickson and Devan Murphy

Thanks to all who participated in/attended the reading yesterday. So special to hear William Erickson and Devan Murphy pray over seashells. A recording of the reading is here

Past readings are here

Please join us over Zoom at our readings throughout this month.
Please email bluejawedsnake@gmail.com with questions, comments, to request the Zoom link for a reading, and/or to sign-up for the open mic

Upcoming events:

Saturday, July 13th, 3pm EST:
featured Zaynab Iliyasu Bobi and Saba Keramati

Sunday, July 14th, 4pm EST:
featured Melissa Eleftherion and Kaylee Young-Eun Jeong

Friday, July 26th, 9pm EST:
featured Marylyn Tan and Angelique Zobitz
July 7, 2024 / barton smock

Ethan Hawke letter 18, 070724

Letter 070724

Dear Ethan Hawke

The healer’s secret diet confuses starvation. We live in houses, here, and share dancing videos that will touch three people at once in a cornfield. We bomb our unloaded guns and say things in singsong that are attuned to a cute, collateral resurrection. I drink and my ribs tell god.
July 5, 2024 / barton smock

empty agony machine

Sound
a silent
salt
in tadpole’s

kitten dream
July 5, 2024 / barton smock

Ethan Hawke letter 17, 070524

Letter 070524 silence denies perfecting god

Dear Ethan Hawke

What’s the longest name you’ve given to a cigarette? The shortest? I don’t name things anymore. Blue kids. The housefly that burns my shadow.
July 3, 2024 / barton smock

Ethan Hawke letter 16, 070324

Letter 070324 the office of the lower body 

Dear Ethan Hawke

We are this close to eating online a boneless god. It’s not hell, but there’s a neighbor boy who won’t stop putting wasps in his ear. Mothers can’t sleep if a shoe store is touching the earth and fathers strangle themselves long enough to win a fog machine. I buy a spider each morning from a child who tells me a spider is a button that a ghost can push. Death has a room nearby where blood doesn’t go everywhere. I put deer in front of most things now. Deer-hunger powers the angel’s flashlight. Deer-sorrow the boxcutter’s sex doll. Deer-deer the movies that remove nude scenes from other movies for not knowing the difference between the anorexic and the bulimic. Deer-mouth, deer-dream, etc. Remember our life.
July 2, 2024 / barton smock

simple god exits childhood machine

I go to find the bullet. It is never near the screaming. The angel of exit wounds strips for the angel of scars. A tattoo promises a birthmark that it’ll only learn one language. How old is a dog that dies on a star? Suicidal, on a bus, impossible. 
July 1, 2024 / barton smock

SIMPLE GOD exits CHILDHOOD

Waiting is also a ghost. Deep down, we know every inch of god’s body. For every make yourself small, there’s a bombmaker smaller.
July 1, 2024 / barton smock

edits, angers, etc

SIMPLE GOD EXITS CHILDHOOD

Lightning and earthquake feuding in an untouched doom where two angels, birthmark and bitemark, still dream of killing their tattooed sons.

I know this place. Place is a bomb that other bombs find.

~

The tattooed sons are in love. Son bitemark doesn’t have a tongue; birthmark does all the ironing. Their dead child speaks to them through a fishhook that is always hot.

~

Faith is an eating disorder. Mothers faint in threes.

I teach my brothers to suck in their stomachs and a junkyard refrigerator becomes our clock. We smell like a dead child. We smell blank. We search online for images of hands and for the word missingness. Flies made of wind and glass show us to our food.

Our eyes go without.

~

Our invaders had no language. Your mother was suicidal until she told you how moved she was by her own birth. The needle had its moment of recognition. A fetus opened its mouth in a paint can.

Replacement can be a city. But here it’s a form destroyed for being described.

~

So many dead bodies, and no one has died.
City of the predicted present.
The sons count hoofprints left on a whale.

~

Under the moon of a flat earth, they’re putting pills in baseballs. We’ve our choice of police siren. My Ohio horse could be your Ohio deer. We could be resurrected more than once to identify a child’s body. There is a language image does not know. Words sound different in hell.

~

I hate this city and its two sold houses. Every third angel is just a baby eating paper and being healthy for too long. Pain has a doorbell that turns blue when touched and another that turns blue when not. The last time you had sex this caterpillar had a ribcage. I don't always die. Sleep is the ghost of waiting.

~

Image is nothing more than the memory that our destroyers strip to.

I had an animal
that was naked
in dog years.

Bitemark speaks birthmark.

Keep amnesia young.

~

Ask
the dark
the outside
gets nothing

Mad about bread
I broke
my birthmark

There was no bomb

A paper doll was shopping online
for a free
spider’s web

Our perfect blood perfect
bomb
weather

~

Bats lose their teeth over sister bitemark.

Blue
here and there
skips

an apple. The bird

can’t get out
of the lake.

~

A thunderstorm turns on the microwave. We call it fixed and then listen all night to the bird in the broken dryer. We don’t blink for a year after a hand gets caught in a hand. We know it’s been a month since angel was on day two of having a ghost. Beyond that, the neighbor’s baby chooses one television over another. I can’t remember who I want to stop looking like.

~

Birthmark and bitemark go as footprints into the dream of an Ohio bullet-hole. I want sisters but none of them remember being born. Sometimes when I turn off the oven

tooth and pill have the same ghost.

I can’t say who death thinks it is. A swimmer distracted by water.

~

I drop my mother’s cup of fake blood as my father tries to find the movie scene that will give him his age. My thumb breaks in a past death. The mumbling of its break speaks a moral thing to the smallest body ever to be vividly isolated. I am hearing all of this through an eggshell that mom says belongs to the angel best known for keeping quiet about skin. Under my brother’s shirt there crawls a wasp that smells like god. None of the blood can be saved.

~

A ballerina bites my ear. I play dead but am not recognized doing so on land by a swimmer. I started writing because people didn’t watch the movies I recommended. Being kind to your children won’t work. Give god hair. Tell god it’s human for tattoo. A ballerina bites my ear because a ballerina cannot scream. In every Eden, a set of false teeth.

~

Real teeth, too, in Eden. I skip a rock and know it. Overhear with you how that baby isn’t going to shoot itself. Also overhear how terrible people often go to the bathroom more. Boy alone holds a dead rabbit over a junkyard toilet. Girl alone thinks it’s about to be alive. They’ll share almost nothing. A quick birth in a bitten place.

~

I speak the names of my brothers into the book of bitemarks. I have more arms and they more muscles and they more issues with their legs. I am so poor that my work does all the work. My tongue does nothing. It’s not possible to be obsessed with sex. With death. You’re born with a mask that no one saves. Everything makes god sick. Stop being alone.

~

I can’t imagine
knowing
my kids
are alive.

Ask the angel of birthmarks
if god
is cruel.

~

There’s no horse that a horse can’t be. The egg filled with skin came after touch. Tattoo before birthmark. How many sons you suppose god killed before that shit took. I cry on my brother. A very long line of prose comes to me about his most lost mosquito. Most lost mosquito.

~

Waiting is also a ghost. Deep down, we know every inch of god’s body. For every make yourself small, there’s a bombmaker smaller.

~

SIMPLE GOD EXITS CHILDHOOD MACHINE

My handwriting is described as a suicide note written by a scarecrow and my brother’s as a tattoo scratched off by a god trapped in a silent ambulance. We’re on different parts of the baby. I cry my pencil into a detailed sleep. My brother cries himself to hell. I recall a same life. He recalls a current. The baby is our brother, then our sister, then both. We see it in pieces. Every creature knows how long we’ve been here.

~

EXIT

We moved, and they shot us.
We didn’t move, and they shot us.
We cried, and they shot us.
We slept, and they shot us.
We had children, and their children shot us.
We were childless, and their children shot us.