We are the publisher, so all of our authors get five stars from us. Excerpts:
AT MR. JEFF’S MUSIC ACADEMY
A little girl on guitar, piano boy, sounds
being urged into the air like dust scaling
some unknown attic draft. Mr. Jeff knows
someday they’ll say something, but for now
he leans back and looks through the ceiling,
listens to the children explore the darkness
coming off each lone note, a kind of night
beyond their bed lit up for the first time.
They try their best to move them closer,
sensing the lure of attachments in the air,
some ghostly shapes of tune. But it’s no use—
the sharp edges of Mr. Jeff’s ears peel away
the dead skin of each attempt. He knows
no matter how many songs they finally fit
on the tip of each finger, one day they’ll be
called back, like him, to some single sound;
they’ll be forced to lie down in its poor
perfection and die in the dust of a message
only ever sent to themselves. It’s something
he must keep from them now, a lesson
only the audience of their own reflection
can teach, and only as they gradually begin
falling into the silence of an empty chair.
PSALM
As I sat marinating in thought, gospels falling
from their bones like scales off a mythical fish,
the little prophet in me stood outside his cave
sensing a kind of conversion was close,
a weakness as old as the sky. I felt myself
being pulled into the godlessness of answers,
faith fading into the hands of its own clock.
If what makes sense passes for prayer, some
small salvation was at hand, price reduced
to desire, a guarantee good until saved. When
it came to faith, too much was as weak as not
enough. Having lost interest, the little prophet
returned to his cave disappointed, holding
the bible of himself up against the testament
of stone, burning everything he’d heard
to stay warm. I decided to listen to a sermon
of silence, to follow something that only leads
to itself, something nameless. Like the Magi,
I’d stare at things only I could see. I’d appear
monkish and ready to return some other way.