ISSUE 13.1
FALL 2025
welcome
issue contents
> fiction
> nonfiction
> poetry
> art
contributors
interviews
our editors
Kenton K Yee
ODYSSEUS AS AN ABALONE
I was happy, hardened, minding
my algae on the seabed when
you yanked me up, pried open
my shell, cut me out, and found me
too hard and crunchy. So now
you’re smashing me. Yes, after
you’re done with the rock, I’ll be
mushroom-soft and lobster-chewy.
Butter, sear, and lemon me. I’ll best
any bovine’s tongue or boar’s belly.
Chew me, swallow me. The sooner
you do, the sooner your inner tube
will spurt me back to my algae
so I can rise, do the same to you.
Kenton K Yee‘s recent poems appear (or will soon) in Kenyon; Threepenny; Cincinnati; RHINO; Quarterly West; Poetry Northwest; Columbia Journal; Electric Literature; Poetry Wales; Stonecoast; Rattle and other venues. He writes from Northern California.
FB: @scrambled.k.eggs INSTA: @kentonkyeepoet
