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Tomorrow's Voices Today

Nikolai Garcia: Two Poems

By Nikolai Garcia on September 11, 2019 in Poetry

4

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Ode to East Hollywood

East Hollywood, that lesser known Hollywood; bordering the neighborhoods of drug use and depression. It means no stars—not in the sky—nor on the sidewalk.

East Hollywood: a blunt-wrap package left in the bushes; a used condom near the 101 on-ramp; a half-eaten taco left out in the sun. East Hollywood, you are all the evidence from last night’s bender.

East Hollywood: where the aromas of pad thai and shrimp fried rice meet clouds of kush as you turn a corner, hearing someone say, “It smells like California.”

Speak Armenian to me, East Hollywood. Tell me why your palm trees look like they are fleeing west? And why the deer from Griffith Park don’t venture out onto your boulevards anymore?

East Hollywood is the carcass of a stadium-sized department store on the corner of Sunset and Western, left to rot before it could be completed.

East Hollywood, you are a prostitute on her day off; a homeless youth with a new pair of Jordans; my last two dollars spent on a lottery ticket.

East Hollywood is Bukowski-dropped classes from L.A. City College. East Hollywood, even White people won’t gentrify you anymore.

*

Felix the Cat is the Mayor of Los Angeles

I spend most days, atop a nopal, devouring
a snake. Sometimes, I substitute
the snake for a pupusa, and sometimes
with Korean BBQ.

Sometimes I substitute the nopal
for a train. My view extends
and I can see the Queen Mary sleeping.

Sometimes I substitute the train
for a bus. Some days the bus
is lonely except for empty beer
bottles and the smell of poetry.
But, some days the bus is packed
and I’m squeezed in with five
people in the back row
where we all fall asleep
and all have the same
dream of owning a Prius.

Sometimes I’m on the 110—the Harbor
freeway—with no harbor in sight;
just a million cars running
a gauntlet of giant palm trees
while Felix the Cat looks on.

Sometimes Florence doesn’t intersect
with Normandie and I can hear
flowers laughing in the park.

Sometimes the smog is so
thick you can’t see three inches
in front of you and the smog hides
police murders and handshakes
between businessmen and councilmen.

Sometimes a storm comes in
to substitute the smog for a rainbow.
Just kidding—it never rains here.

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About the author

Nikolai Garcia

Nikolai Garcia

Nikolai Garcia grew up in South Central Los Angeles; currently works with homeless youth in East Hollywood; and has been sleeping in Compton for the last fifteen years. His poems have been published in various journals and anthologies, and his first chapbook, Nuclear Shadows of Palm Trees, was released by DSTL Arts last fall. He’s a member of the Coleman Collective, and Assistant Editor for Dryland, a literary arts journal born in South Central Los Angeles.

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