boys who would be future men squealed at new Pokemon. mimicked moves, karate'd birds flapping and winging and flinging OVER NINE THOUSAND! miles per hour and things eight-dollar K-B Toys always break blue mega man onto metal bunk bed swung CLANKCLUNK sprints'a from kitchen, lotsa surge, hi-ye-ho bullet train small-scale rail the basement digging digging through purple bin TREASURE! TREASURE! homemade pogs; on one side the cut-out cartoons from game manuals, Zero so cool his long blonde hair, red armor give me his sword no it's mine x-buster circular cutting rise to heroes controlled control was so easy yes, yes, think of life– death in digital terms those boys were the masters then the future men and their cold basement summers (originally published in Suburban Diaspora)
digital
Pretty Autumn Sunset
Blackbirds suspended in triumvirate.
Clouds in a sea of burnt clay
mold into a blanket, the bed
unmade. Every beautiful sunset,
look:
see the others on their phones
snap photos for strangers,
likers, digital lovers.
Lowball grandeur on a
five-inch screen.
It’s gone in a moment, anyway,
the pixelation of life,
bloated
and trapped
and yours.
Palm trees stand as windmills,
stilled, and they cannot fan
the vertical Culver sign,
risen like held smog.
Headlights on cars move
indistinguishably in time-lapse circles,
one after the other after the other.
(originally published in The Literary Commune – Issue #4, April 2015)