Local

And sometimes local is small grief — the corner store that closed, the oak felled for a parking lot — but even that loss becomes a kind of liturgy, recited under breath at block parties and book clubs. Local is luminous and ordinary: a constellation of tiny facts that, gathered, become home.

It is the atlas in a grandmother’s hands: creases that map stories of streetlights, stoops, the exact tilt of moon that sits familiar on your roof. Local is the alley cat’s insistence, the tire-squeal at midnight that sounds like a drummer keeping time with the heart of the block. And sometimes local is small grief — the

Local refuses to be neutral; it chooses allegiances — to the bakery that opens at dawn, to the park bench that holds afternoon confessions. It is a neighbor’s hand at the small of your back, a postcard folded into the crook of an old tree, stamped with a laugh you thought gone. Local is the alley cat’s insistence, the tire-squeal

Local tastes like tomato ripened on a stoop, still warm from sun; it hangs on the tongue with memory. It wears a cardigan of small kindnesses — who waters the fern at 12B, which kid learned to whistle? It remembers your laugh in the grocery line and knows where you hide your sorrow. Local tastes like tomato ripened on a stoop,

Skip to content