Spring 2024

you can only pretend you’ve tamed the bad lands

By AJ Parker

when i was young, our house backed up
to pure, unadulterated desert

if we walked deep enough,
past the rattlesnake holes,

there was a big rubber tire
and a rusted red truck

filled with bullet holes.
it was my favorite thing to see

Saguaro skeletons laid in wait, their stems
riddled with holes woodpeckers carved out

nightly Sonoran sunsets conducted their funeral arrangements
decades early, since they’re supposed to live a hundred years,

until one day they lose an arm, a leg, and all their flowers,
food for zealous critters, as the decay at their base worsens,

it becomes half as big, a third, a fourth,
until the beasts are standing on a peg.

then they topple over and die once and for all,
tired of clinging to negligent beads of buried water

we’d return from the procession,
a spindle or two wiser, joyful from our exploits

now they’ve built houses on the wasteland
and filled the sand with succulents

and i wonder where that truck went
when nobody wanted it anymore

and what it was like to die
years before you were dead


A.J. Parker grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, then spent some time on the East Coast trying to make up for all that water she lost. She’s won journalistic awards from the CSPA, the AIPA, and the NSPA. Now, she’s venturing into the literary world. Her work has been published in Feminist Food Journal, Ink in Thirds, and more. You can follow her at @ashleyjadeparker on Instagram/Threads or @ashleyjadeparke on X/Twitter. Website: https://ashleyjadeparker.wixsite.com/author

Spring 2024