Ryan Teitman was born in Philadelphia and is a Wallace Stegner Fellow in Poetry at Stanford University. He received his BA from Penn State University and worked as a newspaper reporter in and around Philadelphia before receiving an MFA and MA from Indiana University. His poems have appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Mid-American Review, Ninth Letter, Sycamore Review, and Washington Square, among other publications.
The days unfold
like maps. Fresh dirt
in the garden, black
as cake, grows warm.
...
I walk home through the city.
The stars wait behind the clouds
like an orchestra for a conductor
and windows yawn open
...
The songbird that escapes
from a burning house
will build its nest
in the shape of a cage.
...
A still night has its own cruel music:
the catch of bridge cables plucked
by stone-scented wind; the low, bent
hum of the Delaware, rippling like a singing saw.
...