Lit Fox Poetry Series

The Poet

Su-Yee Lin is a writer from New York with work published in The Offing, Bennington Review, Best Small Fictions, Nashville Review, Electric Literature, the Pushcart Prize anthology, and other literary journals.

Winter

2026

I WOULD LIKE TO START MY DAY WITH JOY

Biking downhill, wind

            blowing

                        bugs into my eyes. Song of cicadas

            thrumming, piano to crescendo

to piano again.

                        I saw a cormorant

                                    swallowing

                        an eel thrashing

up and down and side to side as though

            swinging would save it.

                        The terns yelling but

            at peace, quiet

in their bodies.

I think about

            these many lives I have not chosen.

My mother died

            those words that can(not) be

                        true

            yet are.

My mother died

            and the slow leak of air

                        out of my body this year

            finally ran out

leaving me empty of all

            but anger

                        and grief.

And yet, how much space they take

            inside a body

                        full and empty, shadow and body together

            How to choose joy then?

The Siberian wallflowers

            are blooming again

                        The milkweed too

            Soon the goldfinches will peck

away at the dried seeds of the echinacea

            I’m scared to forget to tell you.

                        As you would say, there’s always

            something going on, a miracle

there for the finding.

I am trying my hardest.

I’m not sure

            whether or not memory

                        is the enemy

            whether or not

burning the house down

            is the right way to go

                        wipe it all clean

            fresh slate ahead

They say

            feeling is knowing

                        a silent white room

            can be

a comfort

            the words a cipher

                        a distance that tells

            of no such thing

as common humanity

When the lake freezes

            tell the frogs to

                        bury themselves,

            slow their hearts

to die

            dreaming

                        of springtime joy.

All Poetry Series

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STRATAGEM

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THE SCIENCE OF LONGING

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