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FOUR WAY REVIEW

BONE ATLAS by Allison Zhang

Wednesday, 12 November 2025 by Allison Zhang
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.

 

Allison ZhangPoetry
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  • Published in Featured Poetry, Issue 34, Poetry
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