99 Cent Dreams by Molly Zhu
My grandmother liked to say the best dreams are made from water
99 Cent Dreams
by Molly Zhu
99 Cent Dreams, I wanted to buy you, I wanted to buy America, really, hold everything plastic and star-spangled in my starfish hands, rows of dehydrated nail polish: garish, dried like a mud flat, like a side effect, color of the soul of a clown, color of my escape route to mainstream happiness. What’s funny is, it’s all junk, but only once you cross the threshold of the glaucoma gates. It’s the only gold you know when nose deep in a pile of blonde Barbies, their sun-stained boxes, exoskeleton of a metallic balloon family, papered poinsettias in mid-February, foam pool noodles like discarded bucatini… the most painful tragedy on my radar: a valentine, crushed up blue jolly rancher, those zip off shorts. My grandmother liked to say the best dreams are made from water, in a landlocked town she put sliced watermelon in a plastic bag, she put toasted almonds in a plastic bag, she put jewels in a flimsy case and flew across two oceans, actually three – actually, dreaming runs in the family, but what did I know of other lifetimes that could possibly hold me? Could only understand: graveyard, treasure trove, half-eroded dollar bills so soft like tissue paper… small town millionaire, I wanted to buy and buy everything and then forget about my riches by the time I woke up on Monday morning.
First published in ONLY POEMS (June, 2024)





Best poem on this site I've seen, I think, Brilliant.
I wanted to forget about my riches. That's pretty clever.