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David Tisel grew up as an American expatriate in the Netherlands and Germany before moving to the U.S. at age 15. His poems often evoke a sense of place and in-between-ness, or nostalgia for the present moment. David is currently a graduate student in urban planning at MIT, and he lives in a cooperative house in Davis Square.
Little League in Viñales, Cuba
follow the right foul line out ten thousand
feet farther than a million dollar run
to that cliff face that’s jut stark and grey
like an old tile roof with trees for moss.
these teams share gloves and we choke back
love for a game meaning nothing and
everything between innings watching fielders toss
baseballs like ripe avocados against the clouds.
swinging for those mountain fences must mean taking
wing like the turkey vultures perched on a thermal
up to the bluffs—and that’s how the afternoon floats
and drifts with pitcher set and batter up at the top
of the fifth.
— David Tisel
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