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POETRY

Ode to History

Campbell McGrath

At the crossroads 

I am lost 

and pull the car over and get out. 

Farms as far as the eye can see, 

fields of vegetables in brilliant sunlight.

No matter how hard I try

I will never create anything as beautiful as this

ripple of water 

cupped in a purple cabbage leaf. 

Hidden in the ditch 

is a puddle 

full of ducklings—fourteen 

or fifteen of them

surrounding their wide-eyed mother,

while yards away, 

motionless and imperturbable, stands 

the great blue heron 

that would snatch them 

in an instant.

Always the same question, 

an equation

of what is and what may be against 

what has been lost—is it 

worth the cost, 

will it be, how could it ever not be? 

Documents, maps 

imbued with ancient ink, chronicles 

and archives—the past 

is paper 

and the present, a match igniting 

what fires will come.

Artwork by Felix Quinonez

Born in Paraguay, in 2007 Felix Quinonez moved to NYC to attend Hunter College. There, he studied journalism and art, graduating in 2010. His writing has been published in the Hunts Point Express, My Culture Magazine, USA Today, and various online publications. Currently, he resides in Brooklyn with his amazing cat, Mancha, and badass rat, Rancha. The three of them make comics, battle zombies, watch movies, and listen to records.
Campbell McGrath is the author of eleven books of poetry, most recently Nouns & Verbs: New and Selected Poems, and XX: Poems for the Twentieth Century, a finalist for the 2017 Pulitzer Prize. His work has appeared in scores of literary journals and anthologies, as well as the New Yorker, Atlantic Magazine, Harper's and the New York Times. McGrath's writing has been recognized with some of the most prestigious awards in American letters, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Witter Bynner Fellowship from the Library of Congress, a United States Artists Fellowship, and a MacArthur Foundation "Genius Award." He lives with his wife in Miami Beach, and teaches in the MFA program at Florida International University.

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Michaela Brown is a Midwest transplant currently teaching English in Vigo, Spain. She is the first place recipient of the 2020 Marjorie Stover Short Story Prize and has previously been published in Unstamatic Magazine, Gone Lawn, The Daily Drunk, and elsewhere. You can find her on Twitter @mikienbrown.

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Arah Ko is a writer from Hawai’i and the author of Brine Orchid (YesYes Books 2025) and Animal Logic (Bull City Press 2025). Her work has appeared in American Poetry Review, Ninth Letter, The Threepenny Review, New Ohio Review, Poetry Northwest, and elsewhere. Arah edits at Surging Tide Magazine and is pursuing her Ph.D. in English at the University of Cincinnati. Catch her at arahko.com.

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