No Official Song This Summer by Tammy Smith

No Official Song This Summer

Not one crowd-pleasing hit blares
from car windows. No chorus of
cool breezes serenades beachcombers.
No anthem hot enough to climb
to the top of Billboard’s chart.
Gayle sings “misty taste of moonshine,
teardrop in my eye,” an old tune
we once hummed at the park, pumping
our legs toward the sky on a rickety
swing. The lyrics are so catchy,
I can smell the Blue Ridge Mountain air
and hear the rushing Shenandoah roll by.
For a moment, I consider moving to
West Virginia. My playlist is a fusion
of every high school heartbreak—
bitter, broken, stuck on replay, caught
between the advent of AI and the patience
it once took to send snail mail, to wait
in line for concert tickets my parents swore
would ruin my hearing. Remember tossing
pennies into mall fountains, or feeding
tokens at toll booths—the plunking swish,
cha-ching! when loose change landed.
Music isn’t dead, I tell Gayle’s girls,
but the oldest—who laughed at us for
fixing a cassette tape with a pencil—
slips in her earbuds when I compare
algorithms to streaming tides. Don’t mix
music with politics and ditch the expired
sunscreen, Gayle reminds me.
Hawaiian Tropic is too expensive now.
She sprays her three kids with the
CVS brand, because inflation means more
than just blowing up floats and hoping
they’ll last the whole season.

*

Tammy Smith is a poet and licensed clinical social worker from New Jersey. Her work, shaped by professional and lived experience in mental health, has appeared in Grand Little Things, Merion West, The New Verse News, and Eunoia Review.

Song by Lynne Thompson

Song

	I’ve learned to look forward 
	to the things I don’t know.
			
			Terrance Hayes
			“Everyday Mojo Letters to Yusef”

For such a smart girl, I’m not such a smart girl. I’ve 
gone everywhere but where shall I go to next? I’ve learned
languages and clouds and flags and the myriad ways to
cook a good duck l’orange, rice pilaf on the side because look,
we all try to game this treadmill, to find shortcuts forward
& past the planet we’ve fucked up, past all our venalities to
days we can ride a Murphy  chestnut in a meadow, look to the
seas and skies and wild lands as everyone’s bonus, to things
for which political brawls get low ratings, a place where I
respect your pronouns, you embrace my allusions and don’t
disparage the days I genuflect then sing, joyously: I don’t know

Note: Issac Burns Murphy (1861-1896), son of a slave, was a legendary African American jockey.

Lynne Thompson is Poet Laureate Emerita for the City of Los Angeles and received a Poet Laureate Fellowship from the Academy of American Poets. She’s the author of four collections of poetry, most recently, Blue on a Blue Palette (BOA Editions, 2024). Thompson is President of the Cave Canem Board of Directors and also sits on the Boards of the Poetry Foundation and Los Angeles Review of Books.