ISABELLE CORREA Desire Bronze statue in cowgirl, little puddle of tears on the hardwood floor, silo of wheat and lost lightning. Desire is fruit flies clinging to horse reins. Rattle and whip and frenzy. Charm my chemicals. Call me your most beloved ache, like hopes hatching under the feet of porcelain chickens, like the hair clip dotted by pink frogs when you were just a girl and didn’t know what a woman was. A woman is desire dressed in flames. Desire is a bask of crocodiles gutting the carnations in my chest. I come to you sorry from the hips, crawling uncocooned, brain burdened, bent solemn as a palm tree. Dismembered doll hunger. Teeth painted red. I am telling myself lies. I am terrified of love, its velvet-fucked hands. Forgive me for needing something to believe in—the moon, my mother, a kind true god who doesn’t wish me dead. Forgive me, desire, for living in your belly like an unsaid prayer.
★ Read our interview with Isabelle Correa on Letting Go of Narrative Sense: Poetry as Pathway to Intimacy ★








So much talent in one person. I’m thrilled she has a new book coming out soon!