Brock Kniles Better [Official]

Tucked beneath his mattress was a composition notebook. Not the usual kind—no pornography sketches, no gang hierarchies, no escape plans scrawled in urine and Kool-Aid. Brock’s notebook contained poems. Sonnets, mostly. Petrarchan, Shakespearean, the occasional villanelle. He’d discovered Shakespeare in the prison library during his fifth year, smuggled out The Sonnets inside a laundry bag. For a man whose every waking hour was a negotiation for violence, the rigid architecture of fourteen lines, iambic pentameter, and a volta became his religion.

“Kniles,” Harlow said, flicking a shank made from a melted toothbrush. “Hand over the notebook. And the letter.” brock kniles

He never wrote another sonnet. But every once in a while, during yard time, a new fish would approach him with a crumpled page and a question. And Brock Kniles, the failed fortress, would read their clumsy verses with a rust-colored gaze and say, quietly: “Change this word. It’s a good start. But the world’s kiss is indifferent. Make sure it hurts.” Tucked beneath his mattress was a composition notebook

Chavo laughed. “You think you get a vote?” Sonnets, mostly