Bigger than a Bread
Box
A man who thinks
about awe, stops
to think, just a moment;
in the canyon, armadillos
scuttle by like bald little
men, everywhere on their
toes. But he’s not
thinking
about them, their shyness;
he’s looking for the negative
spaces, needing a little more.
God’s Country
In another version
she makes him put his boots
outside in the evening
to air; she has war fatigue
but is not fearful, just
sometimes it’s good to
pray
she tells the baby’s small fists
at her lips. It takes a lonely,
an angry person to
live
on a mountain like
this;
it becomes easier to
mourn
people than to wait
for them.
Hunt
To
get out
of
his constant slice
this
house needs windows
arrow—
arrow—
Bionote
Kristin Abraham is the author of two chapbooks: Little Red Riding Hood Missed the Bus
(Subito Press, 2008), and Orange Reminds
You of Listening (Elixir Press, 2006); her full-length manuscript, The Disappearing Cowboy Trick, will be
published by Horse Less Press in 2013.
Additional poetry, lyric essays, and critical essays
have appeared in such places as Best New
Poets 2005, American Letters & Commentary, Rattle, Court Green, LIT, Columbia
Poetry Review, and The Journal. She currently teaches English at Laramie County Community College in Cheyenne, WY, and is editor-in-chief and poetry editor of the literary journal Spittoon.
[Posted on 22 November 2012]
[Posted on 22 November 2012]
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