Thoughts on Punctuation

Matthew Zapruder

Staple the ghost to the pagewith your favorite symboland you might find out too muchor end up prosecutingwind for lack of commitmentwhen it blows the clouds arounddescribe the wind with precisiontorture it for a whileit will tell you what you knowsometimes I see the futureis just the past in a suitthat will never be in styleit wears your father's trilbyshadowing a face that answersyou with a semicolonlinking unrelated factslike a modern oraclea conglomerate employswhen I rattle on like thissaying useless things are truesuch as the Egyptians used marksshaped like cats to divide wordsplease slap me with a hyphenput me back on the shelfnext to that old wooden gameit had complicated rulesfor diagramming our thoughtsabout who we should becomeso we could leave them behindwe played it one whole winterso deeply absorbed we diedthen were reborn as commashappy to go on and on

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Matthew Zapruder is the author of five collections of poetry, most recently Father’s Day (Copper Canyon, 2019), as well as Why Poetry (Ecco, 2017) and Story of a Poem (Unnamed, 2023). He is editor at large at Wave Books, where he edits contemporary poetry, prose, and translations. From 2016-7 he held the annually rotating position of Editor of the Poetry Column for the New York Times Magazine, and was the Editor of Best American Poetry 2022. He teaches in the MFA in Creative Writing at Saint Mary’s College of California.

Cover of APR March/April 2023

March/April 2023

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Editor
Elizabeth Scanlon

The American Poetry Review is dedicated to reaching a worldwide audience with a diverse array of the best contemporary poetry and literary prose. APR also aims to expand the audience interested in poetry and literature, and to provide authors, especially poets, with a far-reaching forum in which to present their work.

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