Lake Attire in Flint
A poem by Isaiah Diaz-Mays
Lake Attire in Flint
My best friend drowned here, the damp fields
enclosed by vast silos filled to brim
with tiny grains of sun. Pink tongues swallow lush
horizons that hover over irradiate fish
who splash around the weary lake as they butterfly
stroke turning droplets to glitter, in the same torso of
water where Black boys and girls dip their heads
bobbing for hope, searching for ancestral
guidance or a compass, or perhaps both,
or state legislation that’ll protect us from hawks
decorated in navy blue or sapphire suits, or perhaps
both. Perhaps when I grow up I’ll be able to afford
a suit and fill it with my body before my funeral,
likely the first and last time
I’ll wear a suit outside of church.
The same body nourished with bane each time
I take a sip from the weary lake, though I know
I shouldn’t, I still do, because what choice is left?
Water is churning more expensive than suits, and after all,
the lake is filled with radiant fish.
I take a nap on a dank patch next to a large silo. When I
wake I find my best friend, who never
really drowned, just lost his rod during a fishing trip
trying to catch the sun.

About the Author:
Isaiah Diaz-Mays, an Afro-Latino writer, scholar and journalist from Hudson County, New Jersey. A graduate from Dartmouth College’s master of arts in liberal studies program, Isaiah has been fortunate to participate in a handful of workshops including a fiction workshop at Tin House and a poetry manuscript workshop with Tupelo Press. Isaiah is a son, a big brother, r&b and hip-hop lover, and die hard Atlanta Falcons fan.
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May 24, 2024 at 10:05 AM
An excellent poem. Thank you for sharing it. ❤️
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April 26, 2024 at 6:13 PM
love this. wonderful complicated tone.
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April 26, 2024 at 1:01 PM
Cool poem! Radiant, like the fish.
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April 26, 2024 at 11:26 AM
This is a wonderful poem. Congratulations on this piece of work. I encourage you to submit to other reputable mid and upper level journals.
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