Category: Poetry

How Facebook Ruins Legends


Audio Version: Click to hear “How Facebook Ruins Legends”

Eric sends me a friend request
after his parole. He starts calling.
Sixteen. Seventeen times in a row.
When I do not answer, he leaves me
messages saying I have to talk to you;
I have to see you. There is the madness
in his voice that comes from needing
something forbidden. In the middle
of the night, he sends a text message:
Come sneak me out. He means
from the halfway house. He is addict;
I am crystal methamphetamine.

His brother, Michael, cannot spell.
His status updates are simple. They reek
of a straight man, cold beer, deer meat.
The smell of forced bachelorhood.
Where is the confident boy
with the balls to place his hand
on my school-bus riding thigh?
I know what you are, he said then.
Now he announces to the world:
99% DNA match. Guess I’m a daddy.

Joshua does not confirm me,
does not confirm he was my first.
He does not confirm how he
would touch me underneath
the blanket, how he wrote love
letters from Joplin, Missouri.
Yesterday a tornado ate the heart
of the town. Now Joplin
is gone. So is he.

Matt is military. We play
a game of chicken. Neither of us
click Add as Friend. He is Romeo
in army fatigues. I am Juliet
in starched pink shirt. Both believed
the other dead. The past is buried
and grass has grown over its grave.
You wouldn’t know the bones
of something spectacular
rest in peace beneath the dirt
where soldiers march to war.

© Bryan Borland

The Eclectica Interview: Philip F. Clark and Bryan Borland

A few months ago, at the urging of  online literary magazine Eclectica‘s Elizabeth Glixman, I had the pleasure of sitting down with Philip F. Clark to discuss poetry, publishing, and Sibling Rivalry Press. The interview has now been posted. Despite the fact that I don’t remember saying any of this, enjoy! (And many thanks to Eclectica!)

Moving Target 003 – Vlogging Jessie Carty


This vlog features:

FAT GIRL SWIMWEAR by Jessie Carty
from Fat Girl (Sibling Rivalry Press)

My mother taught me that fat women
went swimming. Maybe they didn’t
buy bathing suits; maybe they wore

proper undergarments under tank tops
and cut off pants but even so they’d
go to the river and float so I wonder,

25 years later, whether the outfit
was a choice or if it was worn because
of a lack of plus sized swimwear

in the stores we had to choose from:
Family Dollar, Kmart. I wonder where

she even bought her wardrobe
of polyester stretchy waist band pants
and the smock like button up, big

pocketed, flowered shirts that I find hard
to describe in any minute detail. I do recall
how proud she was one day when she

playfully tried on her husband’s jeans
shorts and found that she could button them.
She never complained or talked about

her weight. She never dieted but when
she finally lost some pounds before she knew
she was seriously ill, she welcomed her

smaller size
like any
other woman.

On Publishing Loria Taylor: The Journey to SOB

I first laid eyes on Loria Taylor when she moved from North Carolina to my Arkansas neighborhood when we were both in the 5th grade. If one got their hands on our yearbook from those days, my photo would reveal a basketball-like chubby face; Loria’s would demonstrate a perm-gone-wrong. Still, though we passed in the halls, counted each other out of swing-sets, and shared some mutual friends, we wouldn’t form our own bond until the 10th grade, when Mrs. Matheny assigned us to stage a production of Julius Caesar for our English class. Naturally, I was Caesar and Loria was some sort of witch.  The scene we were assigned involved ketchup as a blood-substitute. I was wearing a toga and socks: fashionable, if not entirely historically-accurate attire. When it came time to spread the ketchup around me in my key scene, when I was ready for my closeup, Loria intentionally aimed at my feet and ruined a perfectly good pair of socks and my acting debut.  So I did what any fifteen-year-old toga-clad boy would do. I spit in her hair.

We’ve been friends ever since.

Flash forward a couple of years to the illustrious Senior Awards Banquet at our High School.  We’d both taken Creative Writing and we’d both been awarded the title of “Most Likely to Win a Pulitzer.” But we couldn’t share what we both desperately wanted: the coveted Creative Writing Pendant (which was actually a plastic brooch etched with a tiny replica of a pencil). Because we were both unwittingly and unknowingly gay-men-in-training, Loria and I daydreamed of winning the Pendant, attaching it to our Calvin Klein denim vests and/or our National Young Leadership Conference T-shirts, and strolling through the local mall’s music store, where we’d fight over the sole copy of a bargain-bin George Michael cassette. (“He’s so dreamy,” Loria would sigh. “I’m going to marry him one day.”) Afterwards, we’d sit in the Cafe Court and sip Cokes while the winner of the Pendant would attract the jealous glances of passersby, a courageous few of which would approach and ask for an autograph. After all, by this time in 1997, Loria had written a story about a teenage girl smitten with a straight, English pop star and I’d completed a novel that read like a homoerotic Saved By the Bell episode.  In other words, the stakes were high, and our reputations were on the line.

In the end, I won the Pendant.

Suffice to say, Loria was crushed. She locked herself in her room for hours, listening to George sing “Careless Whisper” again and again.  To console her, I made a promise that when I became a famous writer with my own publishing company, I’d offer her a book contract with a miniscule royalty rate and multiple required speaking obligations. She would also have to let me make use of her swimming pool should, in her adult life, she have access to one.

Through her tears, she accepted my offer, and fourteen years later, I can finally announce that pre-orders are open for SOB by Loria Taylor.

I keep my promises.

Photos from the Atlanta Queer Literary Festival

Over three days, Chris and I just fell in LOVE with Atlanta, its people, its poets, its food (Iberian Pig, y’all!). I FINALLY got to meet Jessie Carty (and ambush her by pulling her up on stage to read from Fat Girl). I also had the pleasure of delivering one-half of the keynote address (the other half was delivered by my new soulmate, Theresa Davis).  To watch my keynote in its entirety, check out this post at the SRP blog. In the meantime, here’s a little photographic taste of AQLF, with captions (and MORE photos) to come.

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