Santa Fe Literary Review: Issue 2022

Page 87

ARACELIS GONZÁLEZ ASENDORF

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AT FIFTY-NINE

I light a candle to guide your way as you used to do for others. Come, I call you. Come sit in my kitchen the way I sat in yours. Look, I’ve made cafecito the way you taught me; dark, sweet, and foamy. I fill two small cups—thick, blue rimmed, white tasitas I bought at the bodega. I place María cookies on a plate: your favorite sweets. Ay, boba. I hear you suck air through your teeth making a chirping sound. There you are, I say. The you I want today. You at fifty-nine. Granddaughter, what do you want from this me? To know how you felt leaving your island behind and crossing the Florida Straits? Sad. Frightened. So frightened. We huddled in a boat as rain beat down, and my sons fought waves that tried to swallow us. Your mami held your small brother. I pressed your eightyear-old body tightly to my breasts, never letting go until we were safe. Don’t you remember? I remember an old woman. But, you were fifty-nine. No home, no money, salt water-ruined clothes. How did you cope starting over in a land whose language you couldn’t speak? Ay, niña, I did what I had to do. I followed my children. I cared for their children so they could work. I cooked for everybody so they could eat. In the evenings, when the house slept, I hemmed pants and dresses, and got paid by the piece. When you have nothing, every penny helps. That’s all. “Quiero más.” Tell me more. Chamomile soothes upset stomachs, sleeplessness, and broken hearts. Was your heart broken? Part of my heart was broken. Which part? The part that left behind my sisters, and my parents’ graves, and the house where I birthed my children. Mi casa, where I taught my babies who lived to talk, and bathed the ones who died for burial. What were your dreams? Desires? Ay, niña, don’t be foolish. What energy did I have for my dreams? With what time? I desired survival and rest. My heart dreamt for you. What did you do with those dreams? Look, I say, this year I’m fifty-nine. Now, I have your cushiony breasts. I, too, pressed my girl child to them as a storm tried to claim her. She fought blue pills and white powders that tried to drown her like waves. I held on fiercely, the way you taught me, through the tempest until she was safe. Santa Fe Literary Review

77


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MAIRA RODRIGUEZ 7 Ways to Hold On

3min
pages 130-132

RON RIEKKI 3 People Died

1min
pages 102-103

CAROL CASEY Unravelling

1min
pages 100-101

TAPAN SHARMA Old School

2min
page 96

CAMILLE FERGUSON Sonnet for Feel Good

1min
page 95

COREY MILLER No One Talks About Overpopulation

1min
page 83

SHERRE VERNON Raise Me Up

2min
pages 78-79

ELDER GIDEON #1

1min
page 69

ADAM TAVEL Fox Wake

1min
page 36

SHEENA CHAKERES: Original Work and An Artist's Statement

1min
pages 120-121

DAVID McCAHILL: Original Work and an Artist's Statement

2min
pages 80-81, 128-129

RENEE M. SCHELL Duplex: When I Don't Sleep, I Dream

1min
page 33

E.H. JACOBS Reading in Bed

1min
pages 106-107

EMEL KARAKOZAK Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

2min
pages 104-105, 116

SUZANNE SAMPLES Passing Through

10min
pages 110-115

LAURA PRITCHETT Bluestem

9min
pages 122-127

JOCELYN ULEVICUS Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 108-109

SHAGUFTA MULLA Reverberations

2min
pages 117-119

CAROL CASEY Unravelling

1min
pages 100-101

DESMOND TETTEH ATITIANTI Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 97-99

TAPAN SHARMA Old School

1min
page 96

CAMILLE FERGUSON Sonnet for Feel Good

1min
page 95

MIA NELSON Social Isolation

2min
pages 90-91

FRANZ JØRGEN NEUMANN Sailing Lessons

4min
pages 92-93

NANCY BEAUREGARD we don’t speak of the dying

2min
page 86

ARACELIS GONZÁLEZ ASENDORF At Fifty-Nine

2min
pages 87-88

STEPHEN ABBAN JUNIOR Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

2min
pages 84-85

JAMES GIFFORD Quibble Commons

1min
page 82

ANGELINA GEORGACOPOULOS Origami

5min
pages 65-67

ANANGSHA HALDAR A brown girl’s guide to skin

1min
pages 63-64

DARRYL LORENZO WELLINGTON Poetry Dedicated to Strangers, Lives and Others in Starry Disbelief

1min
pages 70-71

Interview: SFLR Speaks with Darryl Lorenzo Wellington

11min
pages 72-77

LESLIE ELENA NAVA Can I Hold Your Hand?

1min
page 62

EM BROUSSEAU Someone not Someone’s

9min
pages 55-59

HANNA MARIE DEAN WRIGHT Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 60-61, 89

WAYNE LEE Splinter

1min
page 54

LAUREN DANA SMITH Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

2min
pages 52-53, 68

BRANDON KILBOURNE Creation Myth

1min
page 45

JEN McCONNELL The Jumping-Off Point

9min
pages 46-51

TRIANA REID Lull

1min
page 44

EVONNE ELLIS Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 42-43, 94

KATHERINE GRAINGER Hiking With Willy and Grace

9min
pages 37-41

MADGE EVERS Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 34-35

LAURIE ANN DOYLE Roses and Formaldehyde

4min
pages 14-16

KATELYN ELWESS Impressions

14min
pages 25-32

LAURA JIN MAZZARO Go Back Inside

10min
pages 17-21

SENECA BASOALTO catch all the fires

2min
page 24

GRACE HERMAN Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 12-13

GERARD J. MARTÍNEZ Y VALENCIA Original Work and An Artist’s Statement

1min
pages 22-23

MICHAEL MARK If You Step on This Word Barefoot

1min
page 11
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