
Diction front-loaded with shopworn sparkle (destiny adamantine jade infinite sunset horizon blossom heart gaze…) can reek of prefabricated verse, whereas speech treading on the heels of the quotidian can light your pants on fire. I ask myself what’s up with poems that come straight at me on first reading. Why does one cohere and stick when others don’t? Who cares? Celebrate it.
Without overquoting Winniebell Xinyu Zong’s “Bargains” (Poetry, June 2026), it’s possible to trace the arc of an affecting dialog between mother and daughter:
yuzi, where will mama live when baby grows up?
you asked me, your only baby.
mama in mama’s house, baby in baby’s!
[…]
baby always has a room in mama’s house.
does baby give mama the same?
[…]
we may be neighbors when i have my own family.
[…]
if we become neighbors, can we be so close
your door faces mine?
[…]
eighteen years later, near a swimming-pool-turned-
lotus-pond, you & i share a basin of crawfish,
[…]
between us, your new baby, sat by his screen.
[…]
we squat-sit, peel shells, let chili oil numb our
tongues. i am full. you persist; busy your chopsticks
in the remains. you ask again:
yuzi, if ma boil soup & want to bring you a bowl,
can ma find you before soup grows cold?
i pick off a rice grain stuck to your chin.
Eighteen years from the poem’s beginning mother and daughter squat dining near “your new baby,” a grandchild. The poem goes to the heart of a reversal that occurs, from when the child depends on the parent to when the parent depends on the child. For me it conveys affectingly, all the more for doing so in an offbeat fashion, how there’s just no way we can get from birth’s welcome mat to death’s door without help.
The matter-of-fact culmination, the poem’s last line, i pick off a rice grain stuck to your chin, evinces flair for telling by withholding, a delicate form of understatement that takes keen touch. The terse, level and plain can pack punch when rifled truly.
“Bargains” triggered for me that surge behind the eyeballs which I like to call “how sadness laughs.” I glimpse in it a negotiated love and constancy, surpassing creed and muscle, rallying themselves against life’s contingent frailty.
(c) 2026 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved










In Times of Tribal
To the pup’s ghost: Sic ‘em, boy! Oil on pizza box.
— If you ain’t white, we ain’t open.
(Dixie whistle.)
“Voter fraud” is not about fraud. It is about who votes and how. It is about the breadth and scope of the political community… about who can call themselves Americans — entitled to govern as equals — and who are mere subjects.
(Jamelle Bouie)
In times of tribal Jesus loves me,
This the Bible tells me so.
In this world in which we live in,
Love is weak and strong is woe.
Yes, Jesus loves me?
Yes, Jesus loves me!
Yes, Jesus loves me?
The Bible tells me so!
“New Republican Maps Split Up Black Voters in Three Southern States” (headline)
“Oh I wish I was in the land of cotton,
Old times there are not forgotten,
Look away, look away, look away…”
“Are you from Dixie? I said from Dixie!
Where those fields of cotton beckon to me.”
“Swanee, how I love ya, how I love ya,
My dear old Swanee!”
The tunes and lyrics, ingrained from toddlerhood by my mother’s sturdy alto, abide in my head like an unflagging hurdy gurdy. The Jesus one, abused by this bad boy, sends up a Sunday school staple. It has just occurred to me: Rather than post the Ten Commandments in Texas schools, as currently ordained, why not replace them with this forlorn and dated Sunday school ditty stranded also in my pysche:
“Jesus loves the little children,
All the children of the world.
Red and yellow, black and white,
They are precious in his sight,
Jesus loves the little children of the world!”
(c) 2026 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved