A Tour of America

By MORIEL ROTHMAN-ZECHER

A bearded man stands in front of a black background, looking toward the left.

Photo courtesy of Jules Weitz.

America

This afternoon I am well, thank you.

Walking down Main Street in Danville, KY.

The heavy wind so sensuous.

Last night I fell-

ated four different men back in

Philadelphia season lush and slippery

with time and leaves.

Keep your eyes to yourself, yid.

As a kid, I pledged only to engage

in onanism on special holidays.

Luckily, America.

 

Sin has consequences, repent,

a laughing jackalope,

Las Vegas,

where all is rendered garish and tolerable

under the heaving slick of capital.

I wear my KN95 outdoors,

just to be the wind.

Fuck an aerosol.

I win 288 bones playing

Texas hold ‘em, I trick ‘em by

disguising myself as a hapless fairy

jewboy, oy vey, I say,

and wink,

what is again this thing,

a straight?

 

All night, I dream repentant bisexual dreams,

avenues strewn with redolent gladiolas.

 

In Nashville I walk through flooded streets.

The men wear ferrets, women drink beers

through purple straws.

The night is drenched in siren beats.

I wanna weep, but donna weep,

I am ready to go home,

but where?

 

In the elevator I look

from the mirrored doors

as the teens

keep saying to each other

you’re crazy

you guys are crazy

you’re so crazy

and this is how America was saved.

 

 

Moriel Rothman-Zecher is the author of the novels Before All the World, which was named an NPR Best Book of 2022, and Sadness Is a White Bird, which was a finalist for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize, and longlisted for the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize. Moriel’s work has been published in The American Poetry ReviewBarrelhouseColorado Review, The Common, Jewish Currents, Lit Hub, Nashville Review, The New York Times, Poetry Daily, The Paris Review’s Daily, ZYZZYVA, and elsewhere. Moriel is the recipient of the National Book Foundation’s ‘5 Under 35’ honor, two MacDowell Fellowships. Moriel teaches creative writing at Swarthmore College, as a Visiting Assistant Professor of English Literature and Creative Writing, and is also a member of the faculty of the Bennington Writing Seminars’ MFA Program. Moriel’s first book of poems, I Still Won’t Have Known, from which this poem is drawn, was recently acquired by and is forthcoming from BOA Editions.

From the beginning, The Common has brought you transportive writing and exciting new voices. We are committed to supporting writers and maintaining free, unrestricted access to our website, but we can’t do it without you. Become an integral part of our global community of readers and writers by donating today. No amount is too small. Thank you!

A Tour of America

Related Posts

The book cover of Michael Jerome Plunket's Zone Rouge. The cover features a cow atop a pile of rubble, with missiles sticking out.

Stop Being Precious About Process: Julian Zabalbeascoa interviews Michael James Plunkett

MICHAEL JEROME PLUNKETT
Years later, while transferring units in the Marine Corps, I kept noticing the strange dissonance between the bureaucratic language of my written orders and the very human Marines drafting them. That tension—between voice and duty, between past and present—helped me imagine the men doing the cleanup in Verdun. I started writing fake reports. Then the reports became a story. Then the story became a novel.

beach

“During the Drought,” “Sestina, Mount Mitchill,” “Dragonflies”

LIZA KATZ DUNCAN
”The earth, as blue and green / as a child’s drawing of the earth— // is this what disaster looks like? My love, think / of the dragonflies, each migratory trip / spanning generations. Imagine // that kind of faith: to leave a place behind / knowing a part of you will find its way back, / instinct outweighing desire.