The Way Out Is Through

 

The road uncurving through the field. I open

the app, the closest man (just the torso of a man—

some toned rancher?) is 38 miles away. I pass

slow-moving windmills turning wind into light

in some far-off city. I pass trucks carrying oil,

milk, a load of onions (mostly) covered by a tarp.

You’re hot, he says. We exchange pictures

of our erections. Messages from farther away:

Do you have a private place we can go? I pass

into Kansas, the road uncurving. A conveyor belt

moves corn into a silo. Slowly, a mechanical hand

waters a field. More pictures—he is very beautiful.

He invites me to stop. I will never see his face. I am

alone in the car. The emblem for the app is a mask.

Jim Whiteside

Jim Whiteside is the author of a chapbook Writing Your Name on the Glass (Bull City Press, 2019) and a former Wallace Stegner Fellow. His poems appear in The New York Times, POETRY, The Atlantic, Ploughshares, and Boston Review. He is a Visiting Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at Sewanee: The University of the South.

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Prelude: A Lump of Pure Sound

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Photographs from Syria and Palestine