Submit

show us your work

Subscribe

to the publication

ProForma

enter contest

Submit

show us your work

Subscribe

to the publication

ProForma

enter contest

POETRY

A Man of My Own Sex

Weston Richey

I ask it of the aliens with voice long
      & angry as the cornfields off I-
            43, throat rattling like my Ford’s

ol’ V8 driving down it when the fuckers
      stole me away. I want but one man,
            I hoarse toward their heads gray & far

too smooth: Only one, with body alike to this
      what can piss as I piss, chew tobacco, spit
            the leftovers into empty Mountain Dew bottles,

throat sturdy to holler soooooie pig pig
      to the sows or belt country road ballads
            at the stars, whiskey on one side, rifle

on the other in my flatbed—no need
      to think of inhuman eyes, jellied black,
            peering on the same salted dark expanse.

The aliens don’t say shit. Tiny
      mouths don’t quiver, no burbling, faces
            blank, just them dim washed-out

dockets beating at my skull
      like claw hammers. Screaming now, I beg:
            You never fell a deer what you don’t kill

or release! Not even God need be
      cruel enough to deny a being a shape
            it craves! Withhold every breath, every

breeze I’ve known! Each inch of wheat field,
      my amber! My squelching tires against fresh-
            boiled blacktop! Burn my country, my state,

the whole of the big blue, all of it
      from my brain! A world empty without
            the men I could love but never be—

no lung packed with tar nor
      finger dexterous with poker cards
            ever got my veins to flow with right

blood! Them bodies I loved,
      what stuffed Wranglers full with man,
            their muscles were made with some-

thing I could know but never feel—
      alien, alien! Show me a dark curl,
            generous thigh or haunch, a smile I might

have myself, a boot what might
      fit on my own foot! Only this
            & your mothership would be home!

The aliens close in but still
      they’re aliens. I cry, tears bitter gas
            station coffee—I cry, oh I wail, I

wail as a banjo. Still silence only,
      beer-can eyes, probe whirring mean
            like a drill, the finest Black & Decker.

Author Photo of Weston Richey
Weston Richey is a writer and academic. Weston earned a BA in philosophy and English from New York University and an MFA in creative writing from Rutgers University—Newark, and is now a PhD student in English at The University of Texas at Austin. Weston’s work has appeared elsewhere in Pigeon Pages, Strange Horizons, and FreezeRay Poetry.

More Poetry

Issue 16

The Judas Tree

Erica Wright is the author of seven books, including the poetry collection All the Bayou Stories End with Drowned (Black Lawrence Press) and the essay collection Snake (Bloomsbury). She was the poetry editor of Guernica for more than a decade.

Read More »
Issue 16

If I Erase My Body

Jennifer Whalen (she/her) is a poet & educator from the Northern Kentucky/Cincinnati, Ohio area. She is the author of the poetry collection Eveningful (2024), which was selected by Rick Barot as the winner of the 2022 Lightscatter Press Prize. Her poems can be found in Gulf Coast, Denver Quarterly, Southern Indiana Review, New South, Glass: A Journal for Poetry, The Boiler, & elsewhere. She previously served as writer-in-residence at Texas State University’s Clark House and currently teaches English at the University of Illinois Springfield.

Read More »
Issue 16

When I Grow Up I Want to Be the Culmination of Things I Took for Granted

Hiba Tahir is a YA author and 2022 graduate of the University of Arkansas MFA, where she received the Carolyn Walton Cole Endowment Fund, the J. Chester and Freda S. Johnson Graduate Fellowship, and the James T. Whitehead Award. She is a 2020 recipient of an Artists 360 Grant from Mid-America Arts Alliance and a 2021 Individual Artist Fellowship from the Arkansas Arts Council.

Read More »

More Poetry

The Judas Tree

Erica Wright is the author of seven books, including the poetry collection All the Bayou Stories End with Drowned (Black Lawrence Press) and the essay collection Snake (Bloomsbury). She was the poetry editor of Guernica for more than a decade.

Read More »

If I Erase My Body

Jennifer Whalen (she/her) is a poet & educator from the Northern Kentucky/Cincinnati, Ohio area. She is the author of the poetry collection Eveningful (2024), which was selected by Rick Barot as the winner of the 2022 Lightscatter Press Prize. Her poems can be found in Gulf Coast, Denver Quarterly, Southern Indiana Review, New South, Glass: A Journal for Poetry, The Boiler, & elsewhere. She previously served as writer-in-residence at Texas State University’s Clark House and currently teaches English at the University of Illinois Springfield.

Read More »

When I Grow Up I Want to Be the Culmination of Things I Took for Granted

Hiba Tahir is a YA author and 2022 graduate of the University of Arkansas MFA, where she received the Carolyn Walton Cole Endowment Fund, the J. Chester and Freda S. Johnson Graduate Fellowship, and the James T. Whitehead Award. She is a 2020 recipient of an Artists 360 Grant from Mid-America Arts Alliance and a 2021 Individual Artist Fellowship from the Arkansas Arts Council.

Read More »

Angels

Susannah Sheffer’s poetry collections are This Kind of Knowing (Cooper Dillon Books, 2013), Break and Enter (Kelsay Books, 2021), and a new book forthcoming from Cornerstone Press’s Portage Poetry Series in early 2025. Her nonfiction books include Fighting for Their Lives: Inside the Experience of Capital Defense Attorneys (Vanderbilt University Press, 2013). She lives in Western Massachusetts.

Read More »