Alex Salinas

Alex Salinas Poems

1.

I'd read once that Salinas,
the surname that graces
every form of my identity, was born
in the salt mines of old Spain,
...

The part when I infiltrate the imperialist hive,
But not the part when my wings fall off

The part when I afford to shop at Target,
...

I dreamt I was translating a poem by
Roberto Bolaño but that his words
Resisted my touch, my gaze,
Squirted hot mescal into my dark eyes
...

As in dreams, as in life, in steaming black coffee
The faces fade, the bodies fade, heat fades

She critiqued Bolaño's books saying they lean
...

The Best Poem Of Alex Salinas

Salt

I'd read once that Salinas,
the surname that graces
every form of my identity, was born
in the salt mines of old Spain,
where many men
surely perished.
My uncle Henry, though I'd call him tio,
was a Salinas
if there ever was one,
the salt so strong in his blood,
you could almost taste it
when the spit
from his drunken mouth
landed on your lips
when he would talk up close to you.
At that point, though,
it was better to let it sit,
to ignore, than wipe the spittle off
or else.
When he was in those dark moods,
those frequent dark, drinking moods
and the spit from his mouth flowed free,
I would remind myself to listen,
laugh,
nod my head,
listen,
and remember that, as much as
our lives were different,
as much as our paths out of the mines
were not the same,
we were of the same
salt and blood.

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