Poems / June 10, 2025

Take Care

Michael Prior

she signed each letter. I carried them with me,
never imagining one day she would be never,
be dream, be archive, be Ziploc full of ash
in a Styrofoam urn. Careful, she carried so little:
the mother who left her, the stepmother
who kept her, a cardigan bright as a cardinal,
nearly four years in a prison camp fenced by pines
whose ragged canopies tore at the sky.
From her I learned to scull diagonally
across precarious water, to write longhand
a handful of words—mizu, obāsan, sumimasen
an artful way to arrange carnations in a glass.
Have I been careless with the past? How can we caretake
what remains? A closet stockpiled with sardines.
Silver coins squirreled in drawers. A picture of her
at New Year’s looking both delighted and sad.
For her, to care was to never be a bother.
To cake concealer over jaundice. To conceal the water
pooling under skin. I caressed her forehead
before they carried her away.

Michael Prior

More from The Nation

An internet cafe in Beijing, 2007.

Why We Misunderstand the Chinese Internet Why We Misunderstand the Chinese Internet

Journalist Yi-Ling Liu’s The Wall Dancers traces how the Internet affected daily life in China, showing how similar this corner of the Web is to the one experienced in the West.

Books & the Arts / Rebecca Liu

The Bad Vibes of “Wuthering Heights”

The Bad Vibes of “Wuthering Heights” The Bad Vibes of “Wuthering Heights”

Keeping its distance from the novel, Emerald Fennell’s film ends up offering us a mirror of our own times.

Books & the Arts / Sarah Chihaya

A fast-food restaurant in France, 1982.

Has Contemporary Fiction Ignored the Working Class? Has Contemporary Fiction Ignored the Working Class?

Claire Baglin’s bracing On the Clock gives its readers a close look at work behind the fry station, and in the process asks what experiences are missing from mainstream letters.

Books & the Arts / Rachel Vorona Cote

Werner Herzog, 1984.

Werner Herzog Between Fact and Fiction Werner Herzog Between Fact and Fiction

The German auteur’s recent book presents a strange, idiosyncratic vision of the concept of “truth,” one that defines how he sees the world and his art.

Books & the Arts / Lowry Pressly

Joshua Shaw’s “The Deluge towards Its Close,” 1813.

Do Humans Really Understand the World’s Disorderly Rivers?  Do Humans Really Understand the World’s Disorderly Rivers? 

In James C. Scott’s last book, In Praise of Floods, he questions the limits of human hegemony and our misplaced sense that we have any control over the Earth’s depleted watershed....

Books & the Arts / Daniel Sherrell

A worker holds lithium hydroxide at the Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile (SQM) chemical plant in Antofagasta, Chile, 2024.

The Scramble for Lithium The Scramble for Lithium

Thea Riofrancos’s Extraction tells the story of how a critical mineral became the focus of a worldwide battle over the future of green energy and, by extension, capitalism.

Books & the Arts / Casey A. Williams