Roadside Blackberries

By ZACK STRAIT

There were other vehicles moving through the darkness behind us. But we didn’t notice. We forced our bodies into the brambles. We stood on our tiptoes, reached high above our heads like we were greedy for the stars that night. But we craved something attainable, we thought. We thought our need was for the wild summer blackberries. But we were foraging for another memory to sustain us through the evil days to come. And as we ate, the past ripened in clusters for us there among the thorns. I don’t know what my father thought about then, as we filled our bellies with those dark jewels, but I could almost taste my grandmother’s fruit cobbler. The blackberries, I remember, were perfect that night. They were plump and sweet. The juice didn’t stain our fingers or mouths. We ate and ate. How wonderful, how the earth offers such goodness to us without cost. And how awful.  

 

[Purchase Issue 28 here.]

 

Zack Strait lives with his wife and son in Georgia. His work has appeared in POETRY, Ploughshares, and Copper Nickel, among other journals.

Roadside Blackberries

Related Posts

Bruna Dantas Lobato

A New Kind of Campus Novel: Bruna Dantas Lobato on Her Debut Novel

BRUNA DANTAS LOBATO
But primarily, I wanted to write a contemporary long-distance relationship immigrant novel. I’ve always felt like a lot of immigrant novels didn’t capture my experience; those novels are about leaving something behind and going toward this other future. But I was trying to live two lives at once.

Read Excerpts by Finalists for the Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing 2024

NEWS AND EVENTS
We are thrilled to announce the finalists chosen for this year’s Restless Books Prize for New Immigrant Writing in fiction. In this ninth year of the prize, it has never felt more important to highlight themes of migration, displacement, unrest, alienation, self-determination—of seeking home, and all the reasons one leaves home to find a better way.

Annesha Mitha's headshot: A woman with long, dark hair and dark eye makeup wraps her arms around a brass pole, leaning her forehead against it. Wisps of hair fall across her face, which is in profile. The frame cuts off at her shoulders.

An Index of Earth Words

ANNESHA MITHA
This planet is mine and I belong to this planet. I know because when the dirt hits my tongue I feel almost joy. The earth here tastes like blood, which I haven’t tasted in many years, but I remember it, I remember being a child and cutting myself on an open can my mother had left in the kitchen, so long ago the memory comes to me as if from underwater.