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FOUR WAY REVIEW

BONE ATLAS by Allison Zhang

by Allison Zhang / Wednesday, 12 November 2025 / Published in Featured Poetry, Issue 34, Poetry
Black and white photo of an Asian woman in white top, smiling at camera.

 

Seventeen pounds—
the gospel weight
of a skeleton.
Mine is lighter, I think.
It whistles in the wind.

The body, a country
I was told not to settle—
its borders or cities.

I dreamed I was salt,
crushed, dissolving in rain.

The nurses said hydrate,
singing it soft.
But thirst is a clever animal—
it waits behind your teeth,
and never dies.

Once, my reflection
refused to follow.
I named each vertebra
for saints I never prayed to.

I asked for nothing.
Even the air
felt extravagant.

Still, I walked
through winter—brittle,
unfractured.

 

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Tagged under: Allison Zhang, Poetry
Black and white photo of an Asian woman in white top, smiling at camera.

About Allison Zhang

Allison Zhang is a Chinese-American poet based in Los Angeles. She writes about inheritance and memory. She was a finalist for the Rattle Poetry Prize, and her work appears in The Baltimore Review, ONE ART, Sky Island Journal, and others.

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