In a small California town, twelve-year-old Etan Hirsch has trouble talking when his life is shaken by earthquakes and the hospitalization of his mother.
a bunch or cluster of strands, as of grass, hair, etc.
THANK YOU, she yells, and goes inside,
and just then I see
the tufted white fur,
the bandit face of her dog,
standing at the window, tongue flying
in a wide doggy smile.
I know I’ve arrived when I smell
fresh coffee cake,
strawberries simmering;
see cookie dough rolled out
on long, flour-sprinkled tables,
chocolate-raisin babka,
and coconut macaroons.
I go to my backpack,
take out a notebook,
my mom’s notebook,
the edges frayed, the pages stuffed
with notes and magazine clippings,
grocery lists, and even receipts.
organisms interacting with their physical environment
I like the cracks in the old sidewalk,
how they fill with water when it rains.
Inside are tiny ecosystems,
snails and other animals living their own
tiny lives. I wonder if they see me.
I feel like sometimes I live
in my own ecosystem
that nobody else understands.
Even on the ship,
when things weren’t so nice
and they didn’t know if
they would even be allowed to stay,
Mrs. Li and my grandmother
tended the kids who were sick
and made sure that everyone had enough food.
a tablet that commemorates a person or achievement
Behind her are black-and-white photos
of gold rush camps, old San Francisco,
the Angel Island Immigration Station before it burned down,
with a plaque beneath it,
ELLIS ISLAND OF THE WEST.
paper cut to an appropriate size for writing letters
Mr. Katsaros’s hardware store is green with A’s posters,
pictures of all the players and Stomper the elephant.
But in Mr. Osaka’s stationery store,
everything is Giants.
and then “the incident” happened,
so now she goes to school at home.
She doesn’t really go anywhere
except sometimes to her cousins’ houses.
I want to ask her about the incident, but I stay quiet.