Kai Carlson-Wee, Second Place winner of Narrative’s 2017 Spring Story Contest, is a Jones Lecturer in poetry at Stanford University. A former Wallace Stegner Fellow, he received a BA in English from the University of Minnesota and an MFA in poetry from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Carlson-Wee lives in San Francisco.


See photographs from the travels that inspired these poems.

King and Other Poems

by Kai Carlson-Wee


King

                     for Nik Zeidlhack, 1981–2007

I go to the guardrail, looking out over the sea foam.
Looking out over the salmon heads breaking
the waves. Muscling back to the place of their birth.
Trapped in the floodlights, failing to leap up the dam.
Sometimes the clarity. Sometimes the clarity
and night-river steaming. Time standing still
in its permanent memory. Flies in the backwater
gathered to feed on the skin. The smell of the ocean.
The waters combining with other more powerful
waters. Riding away from whatever would save them,
knowing the other direction is pointless and not worth
suffering through. What holds us together but also
what trembles. The first time you look at an actual lion,
pacing the length of its cage. The small irreversible
ink stain breaking the face of whatever we skate on.

People on couch
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