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dayliGht

Page 5

by Roya Marsh


  To Joslyn & Marlene & Kevin & Matthew & Ampi & Meela & Will for lasting love and friendship that taught me the magic of platonic intimacy. The Alston, Rivas & Martinez families, y’all have been here from the beginning and you’re still here.

  Eddie, my first boyfriend, you are now, and forever will be, a true love of my life.

  Melody, we started out as close friends and are now family forever. #FreeNene ’til we say it backward!

  To Isabel & the Rodriguez family, for your constant love and support. Thank you for LJ, he’s the purest and warmest love.

  Noel, my brother and business partner, we’re basically married.

  Saquayah, I’ve never felt more supported than when I’m on your couch with a warm meal and some iced TP.

  Tay, you are always ready to love and super eager to learn. Thank you for showing up.

  Charlie Poems! You’ve been a rock even when you weren’t sturdy.

  Mel, in the last moments of this, you swooped in and gave the most necessary push. Shout out to G*D for the kind of love few think is possible.

  My endless love to the legendary artists and activists of Urban Word NYC. Sofia, Adam, Shanelle, Marissa, Sergio, Jose, MJ, Michael & ALL MY CHILDREN (Slam Dad loves you). Y’all have supported me and contributed to my growth as an artist and human in immeasurable ways.

  To the poets and writers who have pushed my pen: Amyra Leon, Katherine George, Steven Willis, Crystal Valentine, Christopher Shawn, Michael Lilley, Anthony McPherson, Paul Tran, Eboni Hogan, Imani Davis, Chelsea Alison, Zubaida Bello, Aaliyah Daniels, Nathaniel Swanson, Demetria Mack, Camryn Bruno, William Lohier, Danez Smith, sam sax, Paragraph, Jamie Lewis, Ebony Stewart (Dear Heart), Jon Sands, Amir Safi, Saraciea Fennell (you trusted my mouth and my heart), Venessa Marco, Edwin Bodney (& Myko), Tre G., Shihan Van Clief, Barbara Fant, Team Feels (Tariq Luthun, Jose Soto, RJ Walker), J.David Ockunzzi (you have the purest heart), Rebecca Gonzales (trampoline), Tongo Eisen-Martin, Joseph Sun Hernandez, Charlie Poems, Danny Matos, Thomas Fucaloro, Rob V., Chulisi, AR Garcia, Angy Abreu, Deria Matthews, Aarushi Agni, Caelan Nardone, Sharifa Rhodes-Pitts, and the countless others who have lifted, soothed, and endured me as I am, through morality and flaws.

  Dear reader: I am grateful for you & your attention. Because of you this book lives another day.

  A Note About the Author

  Roya Marsh, Roya Marsh, a Bronx, New York, native, is a nationally recognized poet, performer, educator, and activist. She is the Poet in Residence at Urban Word NYC, and she works feverishly toward LGBTQIA justice and dismantling white supremacy. Marsh’s work has been featured on NBC, BET, Button Poetry, Write About Now Poetry, Def Jam’s All Def Digital, and Lexus Verses and Flow, and in Poetry magazine, Flypaper Magazine, Frontier Poetry, The Village Voice, Nylon, HuffPost, and The BreakBeat Poets Volume 2: Black Girl Magic (2018). You can sign up for email updates here.

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  Contents

  TITLE PAGE

  COPYRIGHT NOTICE

  DEDICATION

  A NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR: ON BLACK BUTCH REPRESENTATION IN DAYLIGHT

  in broad dayliGht black girls look ghost

  in broad dayliGht black descendants look gall

  in broad dayliGht bruised black girls look goals

  in broad dayliGht black girls look gat

  in broad dayliGht black activists look gunshot

  in broad dayliGht black girls look gat II

  in broad dayliGht black moms look grieving

  in broad dayliGht black aunties with no man look damn good

  in broad dayliGht black saviors look grandma

  in broad dayliGht black daughters look gossip

  in broad dayliGht suicidal black girls look guilty

  in broad dayliGht black girls look grave

  in broad dayliGht battered black women look grazed

  in broad dayliGht black girls look grim

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look ground

  in broad dayliGht kinky black girls look g-spot

  in broad dayliGht black daughters look greedy

  in broad dayliGht black girls look gleeful

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look good enough to fuck

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look glow

  in broad dayliGht black catcalled dykes look grumpy

  in broad dayliGht black women look grouchy

  in broad dayliGht black bipolar girls look grimy

  in broad dayliGht black victims looked gagged

  homage to dyke girls with gap-tooth smiles

  in broad dayliGht black mfa candidates look glamorous

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look go

  in broad dayliGht black sisters look glass

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look gomorrah

  in broad dayliGht black queer femmes look gala

  in broad dayliGht black stars look like gyrochronology

  in broad dayliGht black dykes look grilled

  in broad dayliGht black abuse victims look gone

  in broad dayliGht black thrivers look growth

  in broad dayliGht black moms look swollen gland

  in broad dayliGht black lovers look guest

  what are the conditions of your freedom?

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  COPYRIGHT

  MCD × FSG Originals

  Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  120 Broadway, New York 10271

  Copyright © 2020 by Roya Marsh

  All rights reserved

  First edition, 2020

  E-book ISBN: 978-0-374-72211-1

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

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