Press Play to hear the author read their piece.

A Rotary Phone

It’s strange to buy machinery
that will last longer than you live,

discomfiting. Your mother

has a chairlift that takes her from
the living room to her upstairs bedroom.

You have a Lennox Whisper Heat

forced air furnace and air conditioning
system that does its job efficiently

and carries a lifetime warranty.

Your father’s old desk copies
have found their way to you.

Do they qualify as machinery,

their pages glued to chipboard
spines? They have an avian ability

to riffle and turn. (313) 862-6770

is chicken-scratched into his copy
of Hamlet. You picture a black

rotary phone in west Detroit.

It’s near midnight. Every phone
number is an elegy, or soon

will be. Every verb is

an anachronistic metaphor, you think
as you weigh dialing the number.


Press Play to hear the author read their piece.

A Blue Heron

I owe a constant debt to suddenness,
pale aster in the exurbs of the mind
to punctuate the pause after a line
about a heron choking down a fish.
There is no twitch before the heron’s lift
over the couple watching with their wine,
no point in this as harbinger or sign,
no way to cut a moment to its pith.

A walk around a chain of kettle lakes,
a ballgame on the radio at dusk,
the desiccated figure of an elm.
A terrier chases a ribbon snake.
I want to say we all do what we must.
I want to pray the well-wishers are well.


Cal Freeman (he/him) is the author of the books Fight Songs (Eyewear 2017) and Poolside at the Dearborn Inn (R&R Press 2022). His writing has appeared or is forthcoming in many journals, including Atticus Review, Image, The Poetry Review, Verse Daily, Under a Warm Green Linden, North American Review, Willow Springs, Oxford American, Berkeley Poetry Review, and Advanced Leisure. He is a recipient of the Devine Poetry Fellowship (judged by Terrance Hayes), winner of Passages North’s Neutrino Prize, and a finalist for the River Styx International Poetry Prize. Born and raised in Detroit, he teaches at Oakland University and serves as Writer-In-Residence with InsideOut Literary Arts Detroit. His chapbook of poems, Yelping the Tegmine, came out in 2024, and his hybrid full-length collection, The Weather of Our Names, will be released by Cornerstone Press in September.

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