Paisley Rekdal, winner of the 2018 Narrative Prize, is the author of the nonfiction works Real Toads, Imaginary Gardens (Norton, 2024); Appropriation: A Provocation; the essay collection The Night My Mother Met Bruce Lee; a memoir, Intimate, combining poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and photography; and several poetry collections, including Animal Eye, winner of the 2013 UNT Rilke Prize; Imaginary Vessels; and Nightingale. Rekdal teaches at the University of Utah, where she is also the creator and editor of an archive project entitled Mapping Salt Lake City.

Photograph by Austen Diamond.

Baucis and Philemon

by Paisley Rekdal

That there was a story of a girl
who changed into a tree to save herself
from love, the woman now recalls,
standing in the doorway of her guest
bedroom, staring at her son. It’s Friday,
late afternoon: the time during which
their son usually appeared, hair
stuck in greasy feathers to his scalp,
leaving a trail of small and large
things missing behind him: a silver
salt shaker, a laptop tablet, so that even now
her husband’s mouth hardens
whenever their son’s name is mentioned.

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