Bloodfruit by Abby Zhang

Bloodfruit by Abby Zhang

Author: Maggie Devers October 4, 2025 Duration: 3:28

Bloodfruit

Abby Zhang

Say it, like you used to peel blood oranges with your teeth, Ma.
The flesh splits soft and shivering under the pressure,
its rind stuck under your fingernails.
Juice spilling—
licking your lips with the same golden, bitter heat.
Let the pith cling to your hands, burrow there
like spoiled lace in the creases of your knuckles,
a ghost of a daughter you couldn’t bear to name.

Say it like an apology that came a heartbeat too late, sinking
into mildew buried beneath nailbeds, sour and white.
Too deep to name.
Too guilty to believe.
You can’t call it love
if the flower doesn’t survive the soil and dies trying—
You leave your shadow in the freezer beside the frostbitten peas,
between the birthday cake we never finished
and that bag of lentils you said you'd cook someday.
Your laugh long forgotten in the laundry with the whites,
now pink and fraying open at the edges.

I preserved your almost in girlhood,
placed it beside the sunflower head
I dried and nailed to the wall as a lesson in ache
in symmetry in what bends too far
trying to face the sun. The ache is old enough
to leave home but it lingers—

In the smell of citrus and ammonia,
in the violence in wanting something
at the exact moment it curdles.
The way rot hides sweet and ruin arrives tender.
The citrus flesh, bruised, half-fermented, half-forgiven,
slips in your palm, limp and leaking
through the fault lines as if even the fruit knew I was
mouth you left empty in late-night arguments,
over half-cold half-servings of tear-salted rice.

Say, Ma, you didn’t mean to ruin me.
Just once. Say it even if it’s a lie—
I’ll take the lie. I’ll eat it whole.
I’ve survived on less.
I’ll take the ghost back into my chest
and fold up her silences, moon-heavy.
Wrap her in the napkin you forgot to place
at my side of the table.

More from Abby Zhang ↓

  • @abbyz.320 on Instagram
  • She is the Cofounder and Editor in Chief of The Sixth House a youth-led lit magazine, based in Montréal.

Mentioned in this episode:

Write After: National Poetry Month with One Poem Only

Write After is a way to encourage poets to listen and write, and use National Poetry Month to highlight how listening to poetry makes us better poets. I know I write the best when I’m surrounded by beautiful poetry–it’s part of the reason I created this podcast, and I want to encourage others to share this practice. We'll get started in April. You can share to #WriteAfterOPO.

#WriteAfterOPO


Each day, One Poem Only offers a brief, deliberate pause. Hosted by Maggie Devers, this podcast is built on a simple, consistent premise: a single poem, read aloud, without analysis or introduction. It’s an audio space where the words themselves are the event, a performance meant to be absorbed in the few minutes it takes to hear it. The daily rhythm of the show creates a quiet ritual, a point of reflection woven into a busy life. You might hear a classic sonnet, a piece of modern free verse, or a work from a poet you’ve never encountered. The selection is varied, touching on themes from the natural world to the intricacies of human emotion, always leaving room for your own interpretation. The effect is cumulative; listening regularly becomes a subtle form of education in the sound and scope of poetry, and a small act of self-care. This isn't a lecture or a book club, but a performing art delivered directly to your ears. Maggie’s clear, thoughtful readings provide the only framework needed, allowing each poem to stand entirely on its own. The curtain falls, and the moment passes, but the podcast invites you to return tomorrow when a new piece takes center stage, offering another quiet moment, one poem only.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 355

One Poem Only
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