2021 Starshine and Clay Fellows:

Michael Frazier

Michael Frazier is a poet and high school teacher in Kanazawa, Japan. He received his BA from Gallatin at New York University, where he was the 2017 poet commencement speaker and a co-champion of the College Unions Poetry Slam Invitational. He has performed at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Nuyorican Poets Café and the Gallatin Arts Festival, among other venues. A reader for the Adroit Journal and an alumnus of the Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop, Frazier has poems published or forthcoming in Construction, the Visible Poetry Project, Day One, the Speakeasy Project and elsewhere. Ask him about his favorite anime and what Christ has done in his life.

After Marching at the Manhattan #BLM Protest for Alton Sterling
and Philando Castile, I Try to Pray  

but I do not know what to ask God. 
Venn diagram Him into an oval, 

overlap Him with my blackness. 
Where the two shapes intersect, 

opens a dark parted mouth 
taking its last breath. 

Relinquishing spirit 
before a crowd of witnesses, 

knowing it is finished 
but not done.


Asmaa Jama

Asmaa Jama is a Danish born Somali artist, poet and co-founder of Dhaqan Collective, a feminist art collective creating collaboratively with Somali elders and young people. They work between languages and write about ghosts, hauntings and archives. Last year, they were writer-in-residence at Arnolfini. They have been published in print and online in places like Ambit, Ifa Gallery, ANMLY and The Good Journal. Asmaa’s work has been translated into French, Swahili, Somali, Spanish and Portuguese. They are currently performing in Mailles, an internationally touring production. Most recently they were shortlisted for the Babel and Specimen Press translation prize, and were a recipient of The White Pube writer’s grant. Asmaa was a semi-finalist in spoken word competition BBC Words First and is an inaugural alumni of Obsidian Foundation

aan ku soo laabano awoowgay 

dear angel that took the form of a camel 
who wrote you into this world 
who will write you into the next 

meaning, what have you planned exactly 
where will you fold your wings 
whose mouth do you intend to hold your feathers 

who’s your testament, i am my abo’s 
living legacy 
to mean i have purpose 

today, abo 
the sun dapples your eyes 
tomorrow it could be the earth 
turning them copper 
your soft sockets, who will save them 

you told me, as we were crossing fields 
waan dhafray inaan meeshaan ku keeno 
meaning, abo 
you suffered the dust 
but you were no revolutionary 
not even half angelic 
you ran only to save your epidermis

look at your scars abo 
fine network, 
fine dashing, 
fine spilling, 
fine lining, 

whole leg as a bark, composite 
even in darkness 

i joke 
your leg was your ticket out 

you joke
i ran through kampala first, for you 

i joke 

you ran to save what needed saving, your marrow not my existence 

you joke 

i knew you’d be here, it was just a question of where you’d be formed 

abo, where? 
abo, somewhere that has never known the coldness of bones


Oak Morse

Poet and theater instructor Oak Morse was born and raised in Georgia. He was the winner of the 2017 Magpie Award for Poetry in Pulp Literature as well as a Semi-Finalist for the 2020 Pablo Neruda Prize for Poetry. Awarded the 2017 Hambidge Residency, Oak’s work has appeared in Strange Horizons, Pank, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Menacing Hedge, Nonconformist Mag, Gone Lawn, and elsewhere. Oak has a B.A. in Journalism from Georgia State University and he currently lives in Houston, Texas where he teaches creative writing and performance and leads a youth poetry troop, The Phoenix Fire-Spitters.

Mount Everest Be Jealous

I want shoulders bigger         than the Million Man March. 

They got to be pronounced         turtleneck assassination 

cotton squealing for mercy.         Funny, we’ll ransack our sanity

for a voice that says we could look better.          Whatever,

I don’t mind the heaviness,         even if it means difficulty balancing.

I want shoulders big enough         for a one-man football team.

Let sweat take years         to slide off my shoulders.

Ladies, don’t leave me alone,         tis the season for a new wave of sexy.

Each lift in the gym         is a millimeter closer to what we may never see;

genetics should change its name to bad news,         always reminding us 

of impossible heights.         I want shoulders that are a threat to goons 

before I can enter a room,         way too big for snapbacks to fit. 

I want custom fashions         to beg for my endorsement.        

Place me in a Vanity Fair spread           with only a pen and pad covering my privates.

Let me love and hate me.        Save me from fantasy.        

Gut out my bulky daydreams          of a woman waking up 

kissing me         on the back of my deltoid. 

Ban me from my image          or grant me shoulders mammoth enough 

to block it from me.          And self-esteem be asleep—       

says it ain’t got nothing to do with it.         Overcompensate my lack of happiness.   

Supplement my person with boulders         that belong on no human 

but far off in valleys        where my self-image 

sometimes may drift off through        mist and murk overstretching

of what’s sexy in this world,         but underneath, it all be too much,    

abundant and plentiful, too heavy for air to even pass through.


Ashunda Norris is an award winning filmmaker, feminist, archivist and poet living in Los Angeles. Her honors include fellowships from Cave Canem, the New York State Summer Writer’s Institute and a residency at The Lemon Tree House. Ashunda’s writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Fence, [PANK], Trampoline, La Presa, Bayou Magazine and elsewhere. Her most recent film work, MINO: A Diasporic Myth has screened nationally and internationally including in Amsterdam, Berlin and Nairobi, Kenya. The artist is a proud alumna of Paine College and Howard University. She holds MFAs in both Poetry and Screenwriting. Born and raised in the heart of rural, red clay Georgia, Ashunda loves hot water cornbread, obscure cinema, star gazing, the ocean and celestial Sirius.





The Gospel According to Mary Magdalene

CHAPTER 3

            THERE is no sin here 
                 in this new sun galaxy.
            2   Let us now praise the Negress who shall be blessed; 
            a beloved, a powerful, a holy.
            3   Form your own roots & look to the fruit 
            of the sky’s land to honor yourself.
            4   Be wary of a world chewing off its own truth. 
            5   Proclaim the mind a treasure of souls who answer
            with wisdom : desire is a bind of hot tempered weeping.
            6   Stand in your savior’s place as the disciple of 
            her lord’s unwavering voice.
            7   For if you believe in the spirit of Maat’s daughters,
            you are loved & belong to no one but yourself. 
            8   Hark mightily womxn : you, seven forms of seven
            souls wrathful, burning at the ills of this realm.
            9   For you are an empire of your own doing, a channel
            spilling forth greatness; kings ascending on high.

 

2021 Starshine and Clay Finalists:

Sacha Marvin Hodges is a writer, director, planner and architectural designer, from Virginia. A Callaloo and Cave Canem fellow, Hodges currently resides in the occupied Powhatan land known as Richmond, VA.

floc·ci·nau·ci·ni·hil·i·pil·i·fi·ca·tion: in two parts

or should the sermon go awry…

I.               the preamble: after patricia smith

i’ve watched the river undress.
joined its unholy           frenzy.
swam   under the sheets       &
snatched the old brass  clock
from fate's         decrepit
knuckles.
the river                  campy &
aroused whispers:
          i want my water back
—a dry effort
     having had enough
     of my shit.
it tries         to yank its gangly
offspring          out my lungs
             clothe
my grateful rage          my shy
blood.
  but the body        don’t oblige
    forks over
          the soul instead
—a black barter.
        an exchange of wet   hell
     damnation.    a fever   pitch
            weak thing
          honest birth. 
see it breathe
on accident        a doe’s first
steps           all encased
in a                      cavity
                               shepherd
  the wandering
        bones       anew.
speak not of the
cowardly          arsenal under
your teeth.       
click            click           click
to the tune      of the   bastard
unburdened.
      coddle      your  violent vacancy
like spoiled milk          in the
fridge           —a minor
infraction
but still a waste    
all the same.


Semein Washington is a 29 year old poet whose published work can be found in Light, Eye to the Telescope, Sijo: An International Journal of Poetry and Song, Sonder Midwest, and is forthcoming in Hawai’i Review. Semein's work is ecstatic poetry discussing topics of nature, science, religion, music, comic books, and human experience. He currently lives in Richmond, Virginia and teaches as an adjunct professor of English at John Tyler Community College.

I Remember Beringia Whole, 

deep in my mitochondria,
through the long chain of mothers
that brought me here today, 
as the taste of lousewort flowers
and lingonberry, the smell of Labrador Tea
blooming a spice box in the open tundra,
and of tanning caribou hide 
hanging beside my door.
The soles of my feet, the pads of my toes,
press into soft moss and liverwort
painting black soil a spectrum
of yellow-green and red. 
Cities of people creep by on the skyline,
spaced by months, in parties of twenty
at the most. Sometimes, I see the bones
they leave, the small hide drawbags 
discarded for holes worn through them. 
Sometimes, they walk to my fish camp,
surprised to find there is no family with me, 
and ask me questions in a dialect funny to my ears. 
Sometimes, I lead them to the men’s and women’s houses,
where they can rest a night, long enough to teach a dance
they do in the east. 


I remember Beringia whole
in the bee-loud summer and the winter without sound,
wondering why we need Minoan cities
to fit criteria for Atlantis, 
unaware of a million graves lapped up 
by the ocean, the glacial migration inland
of thousands upon thousands
of years settled,
writing songs to spontaneous laughter
on a hillside the water will expose
again in times as distant, 
beyond the memory of my name.


Rosa Castellano is a writer and teacher living in Richmond, VA, whose work has been supported by the Visual Arts Center of Virginia and by Tin House. She received a MFA in poetry from Virginia Commonwealth University and her work can be found or is forthcoming from the Southampton Review Online and The Coil

All is Telling

I am not a storyteller
but do not doubt
the brown and boney 
beginning—
the girl I was
in natted, terry-cloth 
shorts too short
hungry
sweating-hot, and lonely.
Who prayed a hurricane 
to launch the Loblolly
and send them spearing
through the walls 
of our Florida-green 
doublewide trailer.


Let me begin again
once upon a time
my dad drank
his K car into a tree.
In the yard, I squeezed 
into the crushed 
V of the hood 
a brown Alice 
in a ruffled metal 
Wonderland. Following 
the sun-heated steel 
to the cracked 
and shining glass
I raised my skinny arms 
and prayed.


I prayed the moss 
down from the trees
the father, from the house. 
I prayed until the stars 
that swum inside 
my twelve-year-old body 
flew out my eyes 
white hot 
as the sun 
burning steel
ripping cloth 
tearing 
thigh 
to scar. 


It’s a mouth 
that dark 
thumb of skin
a story, curious 
as the shine of glass 
on asphalt or the way 
wind can sometimes
come
from nothing.


Lysania Thomas is a brown, queer, woman storyteller, acclaimed as a two-time Southern Fried Poetry Slam Champion and four-time winner of Philadelphia Pride Poetry Slam. She is a highly regarded performer, host, workshop leader, and social justice education artist. Rooted in her various global communities, having spent her life at the intersection of arts, education and activism, Lysania’s work in youth development, LGBTQ+ advocacy and Prison Poetry (Reform) are the compass for her writing and passion. She has opened for the likes of Maya Angelou, Angela Davis, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, The Roots and many more. Lysania is currently working on her first book of poetry and resides in Portland, Oregon with her partner, child and pup, Jersey.

Korryn Gaines  

(In the Key of Nikki-Rosa

and like wit’ most storms that had traveled the chitlin’ circuit  
big mad, moonshine heavy breath, violently picketin’ bodies  
an' plywood for a once-love,  
to make 'em more puddle than monsoon, again.  

us kids unplugged what we hadn't broken, fully-- momma’s curlin’  
iron, the cable box, the t.v., the microwave, the oven.  
then sat still an’ waited for God to be almighty.  

waited for an almighty God to bully the devil out the sky, from the earth  and clear cross town where surely him and his lady friend could rekindle the kind of passion  that make a man go mad 'nough to dismantle his creator’s creations.  

waited an’ prayed and watched as the water rose and the big oak in the front yard split like  cherry blossom switches momma would braid and spit on.  

us  
prayed and waited  
in the musk of a darkness that trapped us and  
freed us, equally.  

"fix it, Lord." momma sang and rocked.  
just as the sidin’ on the house began to remove itself  
with all the help of a prepubescent, eager wind.  

us  
waited and prayed and watched momma believe and not.  
as each cord played wrong 'cross the sky like the earth flat.  
thunder echoed like Catfish hollerin’ out for Charlene on Friday nights when  he had too much juice and not enough reefer. and she come lookin’ for  momma to hide cause, “Catfish scary when he get all coked up like dat.”  

us prayin’ wit’ eyes tight like hide  
and seek, vocal cords clipped  
waitin’ for God, to be God.  

waitin’ for Catfish and Charlene to blast they Otis and Curtis and  
Luther and stank up our shared porch wit’ black and milds and paper  bag rum.  


for Ms. Linda, from ‘cross the way to tend to the vegetable garden  
the landlord said she can't have but "Baaaby!" she said, laughin’ 
so hard you could see all the well-polished gold caps in the back  of her mouth.  
prayin’ for Mookey to come ask to borrow sumin’ wit’ his stank tail.  

“fix it, Lord.” momma sang and rocked.  
momma not, and believin’.  

us waitin’ for permission to be  
scared, and to touch our momma  
like we hers.  

us is storm in the dark with the  
storm  

out the door and in. always tryin’ to get to  
the eye.  

us prayin’ eyes closed tight. vocal cords  
clipped i pray for the sun. not God. for  
honeysuckles and the candy lady. not God. for  
breakfast, school donuts and pizza. not God. for  
recess and English class. not God.  
for the quiet of Mrs. Glenda’s school-bus rides. not God.  
“fix it, Lord!” yeah, fix it Lord! “fix  
it, Lord!”
yeah, fix it Lord!  
but God don’t show  
up like God.  

Catfish play Otis and Luther and Curtis anyway. bring candles and candy wit’  a black hangin’ off his lips, reekin’ of reefer and paper bag rum, like usual.  an’ Ms. Glenda cry so hard 'bout her garden being drowned you  can see all her well-polished golds in the front of her mouth.  an’ Charlene come on Friday, like the Friday before the Friday before.  an’ Mookey come beggin’ like all the other days wit’ his stank tail still stankin’.  

an’ momma still believe, and  
not.  
and I begin to think maybe,  
wasn’t nothin’ for God to fix  
‘cept the sidin, which  
needed changin’  
anyways.