Table of Contents
   Title Page
   Table of Contents
   Dedication
   Copyright
   A Girl's Tears, Her Songs
   On the Side of a Bike Path
   Not Yet
   Composition
   Burrs & Thistles
   Facts of Life
   I Saw What You Did
   Rough Hands
   Stars
   Natural Talent
   Obsession
   Don't You See
   Signs
   Strategy
   Exaggeration
   Meaning What?
   Consequence
   Full Price
   Jealousy
   Black Books
   Barriers
   Testing You
   The Big Chill
   First Kiss
   Anonymous Tug
   Paper Boat
   Fake Love
   The Invisible Girl
   Neighborhood
   Horses
   Playing Football
   Lazy Cupid
   For the Love of Dogs
   Little Puppy
   Pears
   Bossy Girl
   When I Lost You
   Time with You
   Sparks
   Home Alone, and Liking It
   A Boy’s Body, His Words
   Mirror
   The Second Button
   Open House
   Vegan for Your Love
   A Long Weekend Without You
   So Much Alike
   Fall Dance
   Country Music
   Beautiful Trouble
   Busted
   Tree Bark
   Simple Me
   A Certain Weakness
   The Koi at the Museum Pond
   The Birds and the Bees
   Boy Artist
   Rumors
   Faces
   Rationale
   A Lesson for Us
   Eternal Love
   Danger
   Time
   Pomegranate as My Heart
   Driftwood
   Getting to Know You
   Imagination
   A View of Heaven
   Forest of Boulders
   Leaving the Bookstore
   Love Medicine
   Spreading Love
   Mystery
   Hard Work
   Iowa Evening
   Playing Our Parts
   Out in Nature
   An Act of Kindness
   About the Author
   To Isabel Schon
   It’s 40–Love, and your serve
   Copyright © 2009 by Gary Soto
   All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Graphia, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Harcourt Children's Books, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 2009.
   Graphia and the Graphia logo are trademarks of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
   For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
   www.hmhbooks.com
   Test set in Berling FT Std
   Designed by Linda Lockowitz
   The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
   Soto, Gary
   Partly cloudy: poems of love and longing/Gary Soto.
   p. cm.
   1. Teenagers—Poetry. 2. First loves—Poetry. 3. Love poetry, American. 4. Young adult poetry, American. I. Title.
   PS3569.O72P37 2009
   811'. 54—dc22
   2008022267
   ISBN: 978-0-15-206301-6 hardcover
   ISBN: 978-0-547-57737-1 paperback
   Manufactured in the United States of America
   DOC 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
   4500335135
   A Girl's Tears, Her Songs
   On the Side of a Bike Path
   What was our future? I turned over
   Your hand and studied your palm.
   I noted two lines, one short, the other long.
   I looked at mine—three lines,
   One filled with sweat from our three-mile ride.
   I wondered to myself, Why three?
   Then I knew—you were the first
   To lie with me on a blanket,
   And two others would follow,
   Neither as beautiful.
   As you stood up,
   Shaking grass from your hair,
   I gripped your hand—pinched it, really.
   Months from now you will not be mine.
   Not Yet
   The weakest petals
   Blow from the flowering tree,
   And I think of myself
   As a part of that tree,
   My petals intact.
   Not yet, I tell you,
   We're young, just
   Coming into bloom,
   Our roots sinking
   Daily into the earth.
   Not yet, I tell you,
   I a small tree,
   You a taller, bending
   Tree. The sun
   Will roll over us,
   And if a cloud
   Of worry throws lightning,
   Let's remember our fear.
   Composition
   Cold day, cold without you,
   Ice hanging from the eaves like teeth
   And the sun riding out of town before I changed
   Out of my pajamas. To get warm, I opened a can
   Of alphabet soup, got it boiling,
   And poured it into a bowl. The bowl was warm
   As your hand. I liked that, steam curling
   As I carefully carried it to the table.
   I drank from the lip of the bowl,
   And used a chopstick to form I love you
   From the tangle of floating letters.
   I drank that sentence and began to glow.
   Burrs & Thistles
   What gifts do you bring me?
   I see you walking
   Across the baseball diamond,
   A stick like a sword
   Whacking at the tall grass.
   The tips of your shoes
   Will be green
   As our love is green,
   And your hair is the color
   Of wheat. You see me,
   And I wave.
   You drop your stick
   And run to me
   Like Mercury,
   Burrs, thistles, flakes
   Of grass hooking
   On your pant cuffs.
   Later, at our favorite
   Place at the river,
   I'll whisper, “Do you love me?”
   And think how other
   Girls want to grab
   You like those burrs
   And thistles. Jealous,
   I'll pluck every one of them
   And flick them into the wind...
   Facts of Life
   The bee will touch the flower,
   And the flower will not
   Complain. The weight
   Of the bee is like a teaspoon
   Of honey, and its wings
   Transparent as the boy in fifth period—
   He likes me, a bee hovering
   Above as we share a microscope.
   Am I his flower? We almost touch shoulders
   When we bend to look
   At the slide. We laugh.
   I'm then stung—he leaves
   My side and hovers over
   A hippie girl named Sunflower.
   In spring, boys don't last.
   I Saw What You Did
   You plunged your giant hand
   Into your pocket
   For dimes and nickels.
   Some pennies rolled
   Into t 
					     					 			he server's hand
   At McDonald's,
   The one place we can afford.
   I heard you stutter,
   “Chocolate, no, I mean—strawberry,”
   My favorite flavor.
   With two straws, we left
   To sit on a bench—
   Two pigeons stared at us.
   When we lowered our faces
   Toward that rosy milk shake,
   Our eyes locked on each other,
   And as we bumped heads,
   Both of us almost
   Choked from giggling.
   I saw what you did—
   You pretended to drink
   From the straw.
   You let me have most
   Of the milk shake.
   That was nice.
   You called me sweet,
   Strawberry sweet.
   Rough Hands
   Lotion is a slippery essence
   Applied on a winter day
   When an icy wind sings through the bare trees.
   But I prefer my hands rough.
   This way, when I hold yours,
   You won't slip away.
   Stars
   I was spooked by a possum, the crunch of leaves,
   Something going hoot, hoot in a tree.
   I jumped when a fish jumped in the creek—
   How you laughed your beautiful laugh.
   You were guiding me along that creek
   And finally up a hill to view the stars
   Set deep against the black, black sky.
   You held my hand. You said,
   “You're my star.” Here, I laughed.
   Was this some line? You kissed me,
   Then said the stars were really dead
   But their light was moving earthward
   And influencing everything from the seas
   To our love. Yes, you used the word love.
   I pulled my hair back.
   You pressed your body against mine.
   No longer scared of possums, the rustling leaves,
   Or the sounds in the trees,
   I was happy there was something called stars.
   Natural Talent
   You brought out a can of chicken noodle soup
   And set its contents in a pot
   Over the stove's collar of blue flames.
   “Wow,” I said, “you can cook.”
   The refrigerator's bulb shone on your handsome face
   When you brought out a block of cheese—
   You deftly cut little squares
   And placed them onto saltines.
   “Where did you learn all this?” I asked,
   And you shrugged your shoulders.
   I even liked how you turned on the kitchen faucet
   With your elbow—you had to keep
   Your fingers clean—and whittled little pieces
   Of salami. We ate looking at each other,
   Me so obviously in love. I asked, “Do you iron?”
   You nodded—god, you have shiny hair!
   After we ate, you asked me to take...
   To take off my blouse! “Slow down,” I said,
   Hands on my hips. Then I understood.
   You gave me a sweatshirt to wear
   While you sewed on my loose fourth button.
   Where did you learn this,
   Multitasking lover boy of mine?
   Obsession
   Three photos of you on the front of my binder,
   Two inside when I flip it open.
   Downloaded photos of you on my bedroom wall,
   In a locket my cat paws jealously,
   And in my diary I lock with a key.
   I'm obsessed with you. This spring wherever
   I turn I see you, even in the faces
   Of cumulus clouds I could pinch like a cheek.
   I had my eyes checked last week
   And the optometrist with beady eyes said,
   “A curious case. Young lady, there's a picture
   Of a boy at the back of your retinas.”
   Don't You See
   If only you would turn
   And see me. I think I'm nice,
   And you're nice, too.
   Does that mean we're compatible?
   And look! We go to the same
   School, at the same hour,
   And under the same sun.
   The blossoms are fluttering
   From the fruitless cherry tree.
   But is this fruitless? I'm flying
   In and out of your shadow,
   Stepping up steps,
   Down steps, slowing
   For water at the drinking fountain,
   And bending over to tie my shoe.
   If only you would turn
   And see me
   Seeing you.
   Signs
   At the beginning of baseball season,
   You spoke of the distance between like and love.
   This made me bite my lower lip in worry.
   I think you were telling me something—
   Are you done with me? Is your life all baseball?
   Or maybe there's another girl.
   I've seen your eyes slide away from me
   And look at others. Okay, I'm jealous.
   Now, from the bleachers, I watch each thing
   You do—touching your cap,
   Digging dirt from your cleats—and think
   You're telling me something,
   Like the third-base coach
   Touching his nose and mouth.
   Is that a sign for you to run?
   Strategy
   I went to class, sat in a chair
   That wobbled and rocked. Got up
   And changed seats.
   I got up again, and again.
   That's how I happened
   To sit next to you.
   Exaggeration
   I knew you were in love.
   At the restaurant you raced to get the door,
   And while the sign said PULL,
   You pushed, the heels of your shoes
   Losing traction. People gathered around us,
   Confused, as you begged, “No, no, let me!”
   But you pushed instead of pulled.
   Sweat glistened on your upper lip
   And your face—I can still see it—was red.
   You stopped. You informed the crowd, “It's stuck.”
   When a little old lady stepped up to open the door,
   Everyone rudely rushed in front of us—
   We had to wait twenty minutes for a table.
   Okay, I exaggerate. But not when I say
   I knew you were in love with me,
   And I with you, the boy pushing ahead in life.
   Meaning What?
   When I heard the phrase
   I long for you,
   I first thought it was bad grammar
   And then began to think,
   No, it's something like long book,
   Long movie, long drive to look
   At the mountains or the sea,
   Or it's Dad examining
   Every dinosaur bone and dinosaur egg
   At the Natural History Museum—
   Now that's long! But when I turned
   Thirteen, I finally understood,
   And so did my classmate Jennifer Lee,
   Her pretty face red for Brandon.
   I asked, “How do you say 'I long for you'
   In Mandarin?” and she said, "Wo xi huan ni."
   I really didn't understand what she was saying,
   But now I know what she meant.
   Consequence
   When a stone bridge fails,
   You can rebuild it with your hands.
   With love, when it falls,
   The rocks shoot sparks. Gossips
   Gather at the river's edge,
   Skipping stones across the water,
   Asking intently, “Who brought it down?”
   Full Price
   We missed the half-price
   Matinee. But that was okay.
   We walked around and 
					     					 			 did math
   In our heads, both of us poor
   But geniuses for figures.
   Then you helped a man
   Push a car barely alive
   On the fumes of precious gas.
   When the man tried to press
   Ten dollars into your palm,
   You said, “No, sir, no, we're fine.”
   We returned to the theater
   And looked up at the marquee—
   The movie was called Totally and Forever.
   You held my hand
   As you would have in the theater,
   And under the halo of lights
   I explained the plot.
   Jealousy
   In the hallway, I pass your ex-girlfriend,
   Tall as me, brown hair and eyes like me,
   And have to think, What's the difference?
   I think of her in your arms,
   And the cute things you said into her ear.
   What did you tell her? What secrets?
   When I turn to spy on her, I see she also turned—
   Tall as me, brown hair and eyes like me,
   And both of us baring our teeth.
   Black Books
   Each time I get a boyfriend,
   I buy a black book and promise myself
   To take notes. He's nice,
   He's not nice. He buys me a soda,
   He takes it back and drinks it all!
   His grilled teeth shine like a lie.
   He turns his pockets inside out—
   “I'm poor,” he claims,
   And my ten dollars flies from my hand
   To his. “We need gas money,” he says,
   But why am I always on the sidewalk
   Waving good-bye?
   Will I ever find the right boy?