
pantoum in which my body becomes a locked door
By Kay Kassirer
“I become the client as I hand over a few hundreds to the jaw specialist / recognizing the irony of how quickly this money comes and goes”
Kay Kassirer (they/them) is a spoken word poet currently residing on the unceded lands of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations—colonially known as Vancouver. Their autobiographical poetry focuses on grief, disability, and sex work. Kay has toured internationally performing at venues like Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, Busboys and Poets, and the Bowery Poetry Club. They have competed at over a dozen national and international poetry slam festivals earning their place on several competitive final stages. Notably, Kay placed 2nd at Capturing Fire International Queer Slam (2016), and 3rd at both the Canadian Festival of Spoken Word (2018) and the Canadian Individual Poetry Slam (2019). Kay curated and edited A Whore’s Manifesto: An Anthology of Writing and Artwork by Sex Workers published by Thornapple Press. Their work has been featured in numerous places, including Button Poetry, Write About Now, Frontier, and Arc Poetry Magazine.
By Kay Kassirer
“I become the client as I hand over a few hundreds to the jaw specialist / recognizing the irony of how quickly this money comes and goes”