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When the Ghosts Come Ashore
When the Ghosts Come Ashore | Jacqui Germain
2 posts | 2 read
Jacqui Germain’s poems in When the Ghosts Come Ashore situate St. Louis as the archetypal American city: it’s here she explores the intersections of race, gender, and violence, here she finds the ghosts of those who still hunger for freedom. But Germain still carves out space for love. As Phillip B. Williams writes of these poems, “Placelessness is the place, leaving only the unsafety of flesh as a hideout. Black presences break from the margins and pierce through these hard lyrics.”
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quote
dreamingpoet

‘On this night, my body

unwound like a spool.

I was beneath a boy

who loved thread for all the things

he could make of it.‘

quote
Rehesina

Is your mouth really just a mass

burial for the burning sheets?