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    Standards of Care
    The Sun InterviewBy Naomi PittsStandards of CareRolonda Donelson on Bias and Anti-Science Attitudes in Medicine

    The reason Black women were used to develop the field of gynecology was because they were no more than property. They weren’t seen as people; they were just seen as things. The controlling of Black women’s bodies started with chattel slavery, but it continues today.

    Milk
    Readers WriteBy Our ReadersMilk

    Pumped for an infant, spilled at the dinner table, used as a tear gas antidote

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Browse Sections

Poetry

    Poetry

    The Art Of Living

    My fly line unspools across the water like a long sentence / whose final punctuation is a grizzly hackle tied by a friend. / He clamped his fly vise to the branch of a fallen pine / right after we arrived by mule train at this Montana river.

    By Erik ReeceSeptember 2023
    The Art Of Living
    Poetry

    Total Solar

    We took our kids to City Hall Plaza / with its dead-on view / of South Mountain to watch / the moon eclipse our sun / in a certain way we’d been told / wouldn’t happen again / in our lifetime unless we traveled / to a far-off part of the globe.

    By John BargowskiSeptember 2023
    Poetry

    Poem In Which I Fail To Teach My Dog How To Fetch

    Here, I call, using the sweet voice the vet psychiatrist recommended, not the hell no one I prefer. Here, I call again.

    By Shuly Xóchitl CawoodAugust 2023
    Poetry

    The Only Ones

    Poems About Parents

    I failed at wisdom, nurture, / nature, separation, and calm. / I excelled at role model, if what / you wanted was wretched.

    — from “Old Mom,” by Jessica Barksdale

     

    What my father didn’t know when he drove / ten-year-old me in the bed of his pickup truck / to gun shows & shooting ranges, initiating me / into the art of the hunt, was that he was actually / teaching me how to write poems

    — from “Portrait Of The Poet As A Child,” by Elizabeth Knapp

     

    In my memories my godfather towers / over me, his deep baritone thundering / above us as we sing hymns during Sunday / service.

    — from “Small,” by Courtney LeBlanc

     

    My brother calls to say he’ll meet us / for lunch in a few hours, not to wait for him / if he’s late. He’s got to pick up Mom. / And though the crematorium / is near our hotel, he’ll take her ashes home / first.

    — from “Waiting In Cars,” by Jackleen Holton

    By Jessica Barksdale, Jackleen Holton, Elizabeth Knapp, Courtney LeBlancAugust 2023
    Poetry

    False Spring

    We know it can’t last. / It’s still February, and it always snows in March / and April and sometimes even in May. / We’ll take it, though, the hunks of ice / shrinking and sliding off the roof / into puddles that weren’t there yesterday

    By Kurt LuchsJuly 2023
    Poetry

    Some Quiet Evenings

    I go out to sit with them — thin / insects tuning their strings, / the night’s first bat casting / in the breeze — and remember / that evening, hot and windless, / a new lover stripping / my bed, spreading my sheets / on the moonless grass.

    By AE HinesJuly 2023
    Poetry

    Curve-Billed Thrasher

    The curve-billed thrasher digs the small purple potatoes / from the raised garden beds and ruins them. / He sets them back into the hollows in which they grew, / each speared neatly once through the heart.

    By Chera HammonsJune 2023
    Poetry

    Chasing Hawks

    After the radiation ruined her lungs, / and they’d drained fluid once a month, / then every other week, then every day, / my grandma said she wanted to go / home.

    By Dana SalvadorMay 2023
    Poetry

    Ode To The Man Who Gave Me A Dinosaur Notepad On Our Hinge Date

    Because he didn’t think girls don’t like dinosaurs. Because he didn’t assume / he was entitled to have sex with me because he bought me a taco. / Because our date was an hour. Because what he gave me was light / and easy to carry.

    By Emily SernakerApril 2023
    Poetry

    The Skull

    When he held it out, I ran / my fingers over the shredded / cartilage of the nasal cavity / and the sutures that fused together / the cranium, the tip of my finger / gone for a second when I poked it / inside a shadowy orbit

    By John BargowskiApril 2023
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