The gulley behind the bowling alley
is a graveyard of rusted bicycle frames,
soda pop bottles and busted kites
Refinery boys march with matching lunch pails
and the chagrin worn is as plain as day
Most of them knocked up the girls
they knew from high school
and spend every weekend
working on muscle cars
that will never leave the blocks
Regurgitating the same bile
into a meat grinder
gets passed from fathers
down to their sons
Anything beyond blending in
with the rest of the herd
is seen as treason
The closest thing to gentrification
came when some fat cat
footed the bill for a new jail
Before you know it,
the years slip by
like dust between fingers
Despite its name,
there’s nothing to love
about Lovelock
Michael N. Thompson likes bacon, fantasy football and Doctor Who. His poetry has appeared in numerous literary journals including Word Riot, Toronto Quarterly and San Pedro River Review. He is the author of four poetry collections, the most recent being A Murder Of Crows (University Of Hell Press, 2014). His next collection, Days Of Swine And Roses, will also be released through University Of Hell Press in 2017. Michael currently resides among the pastures and pines of Northern California. http://www.michaelnthompson.com/