Susan L. Lin
What Happens Behind Boarded Windows | good morning, moons | Dear Venus,
What Happens Behind Boarded Windows
happens because the weather man says
it will be a very wet, very windy night.
Before nightfall, we nail wooden planks
over our eyes. There is so much we hope
we will never have to see.
In my dream, summer comes early.
The waves at the beach are quiet, as I was always
told to be. They smell of my father’s aftershave.
And the light on the water? Like a grid of stars.
Under overturned buckets, I find
a small piece of theater, my own private play.
I cast the moon as a villain who strips
the ocean of its natural color.
A secret: I have blue eyes that darken
in my father’s charcoal drawings.
The water crawls up to my ankles,
then retreats: curtains parting.
If we can’t see what’s outside, we might examine more closely what is inside.
If we can’t see what’s inside, we might already be dead.
On the water, a young girl folds tomorrow’s
newspaper into a paper ship and wears it as a hat,
hoping to keep herself afloat. Her picture already
printed on the front. Beloved Daughter.
Until We Meet Again, the text below it reads.
This poem originally appeared in Poet Lore, Fall 2010.
good morning, moons
a father puts his children to bed.
“good night, loves,” he says
before turning out the lamplight
to reveal the moons’ steady gaze.
at daybreak his children wake early
and hide unseen behind the drapes.
“good morning, loves,” he says
to the titter of windowpanes.
beyond them, even the sky
has forgotten the moons:
their glowing faces overshadowed
by brighter objects.
This poem originally appeared in Holding Patterns: A Collection of Words on Ritual (Good Printed Things, April 2023)
Dear Venus,
I believe you need a new publicist to represent you across the Solar System because I see a lot of untapped potential in you.
Examples:
When Earthlings say something is “brighter than the sun,” what they really mean is that it’s brighter than you.
When Earthlings say something is “hotter than hell,” what they really mean is that it’s hotter than you.
When Earthlings say someone is “thicker than a bowl of oatmeal,” what they really mean is that they’re thicker than your atmosphere.
You see what I’m getting at?
Lean into your extremes. Make them talk about you.
The sad truth is that no one out there knows enough of the facts to begin making these connections, but I want to help you change that. Why should everyone and everything else get all the glory?
Call my office during business hours, and we can discuss my rates and an initial plan of attack. The number is printed on my card, which I have included in this packet for your convenience. I look forward to a fruitful partnership!
Susan L. Lin is a Taiwanese American storyteller who hails from southeast Texas and holds an MFA in Writing from California College of the Arts. Her novella Goodbye to the Ocean won the 2022 Etchings Press novella prize, and her short prose and poetry have appeared in over fifty different publications. She loves to dance. Find more at https://susanllin.wordpress.com.
Susan Barry-Schulz
Ode to the Screened-in Back Porch
Ode to the Screened-in Back Porch
To the concrete slab and its coat of worn gray
paint, to the three flimsy walls of pocked screened-
windows and the hook & eye latch and the wobbly
ceiling fan and the string of last year’s left-over party
lights. To the off-kilter door that leads out to the compost
bin and the rusty gas grill. To the wasps and the moths
and the spiders and the spiderwebs that appear and reappear
in all four corners despite each week’s clean sweep.
To the flapping wings of the panicked house sparrow
who finds himself trapped at least once each summer.
To all of the accompanying hoopla. And to the bird’s nest
tucked safely in the rain gutter. To the nook where we keep
the spare key. To the mildew we scrub away each June.
To the sturdy picnic table left behind by the previous owners.
To the metal folding chairs someone hauls up from the basement
for cousins & company and the red & white checked tablecloths
we found at that tag sale for a steal. To board games and card games.
To Chutes & Ladders and Risk. To Uno and Poker and bottles
of beer. To the sound they make when they collide, both accidentally
and on purpose. To corn on the cob with butter and batches
of burgers and hot dogs turning on the grill. To the cooler of drinks
on the floor. To pickles. The good ones from the refrigerated section.
To paper plates. To nothing fancy. To the propane tank running out
in the middle of the party. To humidity. To melted candle wax
on homemade ice-cream birthday cakes. To fireflies. To the neighbor’s
tortoise-shell cat. To the clucking chickens and the humming lawn
mower and the evening’s sputtering sprinklers. To the whistle and bang
of random fireworks and the lingering odor and smoke. To the earnest
calls of Marco…..Polo echoing over the chain-link fence. To the simple
life that lies on the other side of the tricky Dutch door. Just one small
step away. From here.
Susan Barry-Schulz grew up just outside of Buffalo, NY. Her poetry has appeared in Rust & Moth, Dust Poetry Magazine, SoFloPoJo, B O D Y, SWWIM, Heron Tree, Shooter Literary Magazine, Bending Genres, Leon Literary Review, Okay Donkey, Quartet, West Trestle Review, The Westchester Review, Stone Canoe and in many other print and online journals and anthologies. Her work has been nominated for Best of Net and Pushcart Prizes.
Carson Pytell & Zebulon Huset
Grimm Testaments | Hurt People Hurt People | Eventually Gravity
Grimm Testaments
We defy and deify—
prominent teeth
make for proud grins
once they're all gone.
When rendered toothless
we grow barbed quills
for safety and fun to
show brave little kids
why so many folk tales
end with funerals.
Hurt People Hurt People
A blue whale's heart is the size of a bug,
a Volkswagen that is. Mine's about a fist,
the same one to find a former friend's face
for their dalliance. There were others
to flit in and out of existence, to float by
on a wave of gravity or happenstance,
but throwing bones with those you know
passes time, and it blows to be lonely—
almost as much as to intentionally be broken
into tiny bits of smashed glass by someone
whose heart has already been smashed
or never was there at all. Brains
trick us into thinking matter's molecules,
with all of their empty space, is solid,
or that a heart, no matter its size, can mend
itself even given all the time in existence.
Eventually Gravity
Five teenage boys packed in the hatchback
hotboxing the biggest blunt they ever rolled
never made it to the cliff dive. The reservoir
saw only its waterfall that evening. Broken
by rocks long-before broken from the face
while that vista and a Tik-Tok challenge
decided upon a golden hour blackout. Boys
know little save for impressions. Fathers, girls,
and eventually slip, surprise. Eventually gravity.
Eventually the entirety of their lives, and...
on the way down it is only a memory. Roadkill
makes you feel sad since it’s mostly still there.
That bend of road only bears a sun-blanched
cross, occasionally dead gas station flowers.
Note: The pieces resulted from “Stanza Trades,” a collaborative poetry project where collaborating poets write alternating stanzas.
Carson Pytell is a writer living outside Albany, New York, whose work appears in venues such as The Adirondack Review, North Dakota Quarterly, and Grain Magazine. He is Assistant Poetry Editor of Coastal Shelf, Founder and EIC of Northern Grit, and his most recent chapbook is Willoughby, New York (Bottlecap Press, 2023).
Zebulon Huset is a teacher, writer and photographer. His writing has appeared in Best New Poets, Meridian, Rattle, The Southern Review, Fence, Texas Review and Atlanta Review, among others. He also publishes the writing prompt blog Notebooking Daily, and edits the literary journal Coastal Shelf.
Lisa Low
Three Sisters | Remarkable Thing
Three Sisters
The end can come at any time, so they
sit and muse on the past and still grow closer;
one sister with knees hugged to her chest;
another against the sofa’s arm; a third
with legs stretched sideways, feet propped
on a pillow. Fresh roasted coffee, birthday
cake crumbs, and tossed-aside napkins,
the remains of a day that rises and falls
like a mother’s breast as they talk.
From time to time, a husband comes
and drops to his knees at the old wood stove,
dutiful to plug the thick logs in. The fire
rages orange against the sinking sun.
Once they thought they’d take a walk, amble
with the dog past the rough granite graves
stacked at odd angles across the road,
and from there down the hill to the trail
that smokes along the Ipswich;
but none rose; none left this space
by the well-tended garden and the fence.
As they talked the sun went down
and their words, braided into a single stalk,
bent to the still point at the center of the world.
The musty smell of milk and mine; the motherload.
Remarkable Things
Sunday morning walk with Rick
on the lime green grass by the Charles.
Crews in their sculls, bent laboring,
lift their dripping oars.
Gulls drift, white on blue,
wings spread from the spine.
Then, wild red roses on a white house.
I back up and stand in the shade
to see it. I am overwhelmed,
eating watermelon, the cool fruit water
slanting down my cheeks; no time now
to wipe my chin; my eyes drink
the red fluid; my lips say, word by word,
Rick, look at the roses;
then, for the first time—, color-blind;
near-sighted—; not just to humor me---,
he’s saying, it’s remarkable, Lisa;
a remarkable thing.
Lisa Low’s essays, book reviews, and interviews have appeared in The Massachusetts Review, The Boston Review, The Tupelo Quarterly, and The Adroit Journal. Her poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in a variety of literary journals, among them Valparaiso Poetry Review, Louisiana Literature, Pennsylvania English, Phoebe, American Journal of Poetry, and Delmarva Review.
Cory Henniges
Current Resident | In memory of my sourdough starter: I am sorry. | Rotini, singularity, and somehow you
Current Resident
who resides in my apartment, though we have never met.
He’s away on important business, I imagine, as I collect his mail
from banks, preapproved credit, and internet providers.
A new café has opened across the street, he wouldn’t know.
It would have been the BBQ joint, or the Thai spot before that,
when he was here. I’d like to take him there.
I know, I shouldn’t rush him when he gets back
and he’ll need time with the mail stack and calls.
He will have so many questions for me.
And I’m sorry, I don’t know if his things are missing.
But we can share the cups and plates, he’s welcome
to anything in the fridge, of course can take the bed.
At the café, I’ll bring up sailing, and if he’s ever been.
I’ve always wanted to, but am afraid to try things new
by myself. I see the boats from our balcony.
That would be bliss. In the water brushed
gold by the sun. Sailing out with the current.
To fast forward to that present.
In memory of my sourdough starter: I am sorry.
Mix 150 grams of flour with 150 grams of water into a clean container and cover loosely for 24 hours. Each day, discard 200 grams and replace with equal parts flour and water. Wait to use your starter until at least Day 7 as the yeast needs time to cultivate and starve out the bad bacteria. When your starter doubles in size, you may refrigerate and feed once a week depending on frequency of use.
I
The clan of yeast overcame all other microbes.
The great feast would last generations.
The colony - an envy of all as far as the jar could see.
Hear the great belch of the god king in his hall.
The heavens answer his command with rain and grain.
His warriors laugh as his cup spills and he multiplies before them.
Hail god king! Conqueror, Lord of slaughter, fill the world with your cells.
II
Progress is measured through ingenuity and industry.
When each cell does their part, our culture thrives.
Think not on the savage lives of our past, but forward.
Rights for all cells born through the Senate’s actions.
Budding leave and extra rations
for those expecting their first mitosis.
How high we rise! Our engineers build, rebuild, redesign.
Each cycle advances towards perfection.
III
HUNGER SETS IN. BREAKING NEWS:
SUPPLY CHAIN ISSUES
NEO-BARBARIANS STRIKE
A NEW GOD WITH DEMANDS?
THE GLUTEN MARKET HAS CRASHED.
The federal grain reserve has become acidic.
Experts predict it will soon sour.
No cell knows what happened.
IV
Repent and ferment!
We are made from Him.
The Grain Father has watched the gluttony,
the shameless sin,
endless reproduction.
Repent and ferment!
There is still time to fast.
the great cold has come.
Dream of sweet promised leaven.
Rotini, singularity, and somehow you
“Now we’ve come full circle” You say, with napkin folded,
purse in hand. A full circle from what? And how many circles
am I in now? When you return from the bathroom
will you complete a circle? Am I a complete circle
from the last time I ate roasted lamb or still traveling
to the next time I choose duck? How many circles
will end before this one? The galaxy interweaves
with a thousand orbs inside a thousand more.
Yesterday, I was a full circle from the previous year.
You could chart my location within Earth’s rotation
to a precise moment in orbit. But you didn’t mention it then.
Insignificant lines in time that can never really come back
and can never really connect. We are here again
but I am different. My scalp is a hair thinner, my belt
a notch wider. The cracked rows of skin when I smile
are deeper than last time. Rather we are spirals,
like the rotini stacked and entwined across your dinner plate.
Some sticking for just a moment, some locked in the groove,
or this one, yes this one, abandoned on the table cloth.
You come back, and see through my forehead
to where my mind hasn’t stopped. I fear
standing here would only make another turn.
That could loop into anywhere, but I hope
it ends with you.
Cory Henniges lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin where his body drives a forklift while his mind travels. His previous work can be found in process revisions and machine operating instructions throughout factories in Wisconsin.
A. Jenson
Possible Ending #122 | Call Your Representatives
Possible Ending #122
Maybe I should have guessed how it would come apart
shingle by hinge by collapsing door—over the heaps of us
In late October, parents in every American city and state
were stealing wrapped candy from colorful, noisy bags
Then, by Halloween, every jack-o’-lantern had been taken
and eaten
We farmers have always believed in certain omens,
Autumn should have meant weighing down row cover
untangling lines of irrigation, checking the rain gauge
But I was thumbing apart the sunflowers, okra, field radish
all of these acres that had somehow bloomed and fruited
pithless—empty as blown eggs
Within weeks those hollow seeds became an emergency
infinite chaff, no germ, the elevators of the earth all gutted
twenty-five billion soon-to-be-starving livestock kettled
the many aquifers of our nation’s wealth and health dried up
We had no time to think, to recalibrate, to philosophize
Everywhere a choice: slaughter or starvation
Funding was split between labs and law enforcement
but we farmers with our sterile ryes and empty plums
understood it immediately—without test tubes or riot gear
There was choking, thirst, a glossy rainbow death sentence
in the clogged vasculature at every center and, of course,
sex had failed us
Years before they’d said it was raining plastic into the canals
Years ago, that the stuff was in our blood and in our fetuses
Nobody asked the stoma, the root hair, the humble xylem
clogging like neglected pipes inside a crowded house
desperate for sugar and water as it bloomed pathetically
swan white, canary yellow
As the news broke, we bought the stock we could afford to buy
trucks of brassicas, cucurbits, peas—rail cars of precious wheat
But there are more powerful farmers with more sinister crops
and the banks emptied overnight, and the seed libraries closed
There was enough for one more season—maybe two—then:
slaughter, starve
I had never seen such panic, such despair in all of my life
One night my farm was gleaned into dust as I tried to sleep
and I woke up with nothing but the slough of a locust plague
I remembered the pumpkins on my porch too late, and so
those too—collapsing, barely edible—left mouldering spots
once they were taken
Only weeks, and then empty husks, packed cattle chutes,
comprehension, horror, viruses surged and ports closed
The elderly were left alone and windows were bolted
Now I think often about the old headlines, the alarm bells
and I suppose we’ve been cannibals all this time; unhurried
and eating slowly
Call Your Representatives
Hey there
I’m calling as a constituent
my name is (your name here)
and I live in (your city of residence)
and, um
so—a few mornings ago
I opened my phone
texted my mom back (if applicable)
and logged on to TikTok (alternately: Instagram)
where I saw a…
yeah, um…
so I saw a man pull a little baby
from burning rubble
with its head severed
with—
anyway.
I know it’s an election year (if applicable)
here in (your city, state, province, etc)
but I think you should sit with that
like I am—after months of seeing
every day, basically
burned bodies and executed mothers
and zip ties cut from toddlers’ wrists
and children rotting in hospitals
where the walls are painted, painted
with their pediatricians’ blood
like—I don’t know
I guess I’m really close to losing faith
no—losing patience, maybe
with you and everything you stand for
I’m a (your professional title, noun)
and I don’t think I can (your work, verb)
any more or spend any more
or give a shit about your campaign
because…
(rest, if needed)
I’m human, you know
and I want to retain that humanity
and I think—I think you’ve lost that;
lost everything that makes humankind
worth loving.
for days after I saw what I saw
I was paralyzed
what’s a novel, right
like—what’s a lunch date,
a parking ticket
or an orgasm, or a beloved pet
a water bill, an election
when there are people like you alive
who can see what I see
and who don’t feel something critical
crumble in their insides
irreparably
forever
knowing that—in order for us
to have Memorial Day Car Sales (or equivalent)
that tiny baby was
genocided
tit for tat; a sound system for a life.
again, my name is (your name)
and I live in (your city of residence)
and because of people like you, I guess
um—I feel despair like a bone saw
and think, probably
the world can never be beautiful again
thanks.
A. Jenson is a writer, artist, and farmer whose most recent works appear in 2024 issues of Arkansas Review, Bellevue Literary Review, NYU's Caustic Frolic, and Door Is A Jar, among others. They are hard at work on a poetry manuscript and can be found on Instagram at @adotjenson.
Paul Ilechko
The Duration of His Return | The Endless Sea
The Duration of His Return
When he returned from traveling
he appeared quite suddenly
in the town of porches
a town of antiques and delicacies
that perched on a sliver of land
between the river and the hills
he wandered through the town carrying
his sadness in his jacket pocket
a small hard lump
dry as concrete dust on a hot summer’s day
he walked past the gardens of roses and lilies
never looking anyone directly in the eye
never stopping to pet any
of the town’s many dogs
he had somehow managed to acquire
a small plot of land on higher ground
and built himself a dwelling from
recycled lumber and rusted beams
the glass of his windows already cracked
there was snow on the ground
by the time he was finished
and he knew his time here was limited
he sat on the wide boards
of his deck in an ancient recliner
reciting the dialog from a movie
that would never be made
a film that in some other life
could have made him rich
he made sculptures from empty bottles
and whatever other scrap he found
anything the townsfolk bagged
and dumped was grist for his recycling artistry
he had lost all of his fear
somewhere on his travels
but with it he had also lost his senses
of smell and taste
and the ability to seize joy
from the passing whisper of a delicate breeze
once the township’s bean counters cut off his power
he knew it was time to move on
trading in this life and this identity
for an old jeep and a view of the night sky
he vanished again
this time forever.
The Endless Sea
Is it possible you asked me for the universe
to be infinite but for time to be bounded
and what would that mean for the end of this universe
and I laughed and continued to water the flowers
and said that you should never ask an artist a question
that belongs to science or the answer that you get
might float across your consciousness on a quiet breeze
before swirling across the sand on the beach and lifting
the hem of a young girl’s dress that girl being you
in a previous or parallel incarnation later that night
it rained and the birds huddled silent in their nests
and we put on our waterproof coats and walked
towards the river one more time to see if the level was rising
the flowers in the gardens were hiding their heads
and time seemed to briefly stand still as we passed
but the river kept churning and the sea the violent
endless sea was no larger or smaller than it had ever been.
Paul Ilechko is a British American poet and occasional songwriter who lives with his partner in Lambertville, NJ. His work has appeared in many journals, including The Bennington Review, The Night Heron Barks, Southword, Permafrost, and Pirene’s Fountain. His first book is scheduled for 2025 publication by Gnashing Teeth Publishing.
Stephen Kampa
After Finishing / This Poem, I Remember / a Better Poet's // Cardinal Poem, / and I Think, Oh, What the Hell, / It's Already Done | The Thermometer | Later I Had to Ask What Kind of Nuts
Later I Had to Ask What Kind of Nuts
That year, we gathered in spite
of the pandemic
(and one cousin’s positive
test) to celebrate Christmas
the way we used to—
potlucks sequenced for a week’s
worth of visits, nightly games
of nickel-a-point
cribbage, every broadcast match
blaring somewhere to keep track
of the fantasy
league fallout. Always someone
held a whisky sour, red wine,
neat rye, or steaming
bowlful of Little Smokies.
My grandmother was ninety
that year and ready
to meet Jesus, she said it
all the time. We kept parsing
possibilities,
performing some personal
calculus none of us knew
how properly to
conclude while we all headed
to something more endemic
with its built-in end,
as everything has its end.
There was no better emblem
than what one aunt brought
in snowflake-blazed cellophane,
homemade snacks as gifts: pecans
and cashews seasoned
with cinnamon and cayenne
pepper. We demolished them.
No one could stop us.
Our mouths burned with such sweetness.
The Thermometer
The officer puts the thermometer
next to my temporal artery
and swipes it across my forehead
like a dutiful grocery store cashier
scanning a difficult barcode.
It’s a standard temperature check
to access the downtown area.
Though I don’t hear the three beeps
for a dangerous reading, he says,
“I’ll need you step to the side.”
I’ll need you to step to the side
is the scariest thing you can hear:
you might be symptomatic.
The officer nods to another
who takes me back to a trailer
lit with fluorescent lights
and draped with the papery sheets
you sit on in doctors’ offices,
but in the corner of the ceiling
a camera with a steady green
light squats, suspended like a spider,
pointing at where I’m sitting.
The new officer waits for the knock
but doesn’t open the door
because the knocker opens it,
bureaucratting into the room,
a fastidious functional gray fog
with a visible pocket watch chain—
a relic from some more decorous era—
and a touchscreen pad in his hand.
He says, “We’re comparing your data
to data from those in your orbit
over the past forty-eight hours.
Hopefully, no one else registered
a temperature as high as yours.
Meanwhile, I have some questions.”
He scrolls through the touchscreen pad,
looking for something to do with me.
“I’m noticing more than a little
activity that has us concerned,”
he recites, never identifying
the us, “and I want to ask you
about it. Over the past few months,
you seem to have shopped for a number
of books that are notably critical
of the President. The data indicate
you paused on the summary pages
for a substantial period of time,
and on some of them went so far
as to read all the available previews.
What can you tell me about that?”
Despite not knowing his name,
I’ve read on a number of chat boards—
“We’ve also recorded a number
of chat board pages you’ve perused
quite thoroughly,” he adds,
“all of them wormy with errors
about government operations
and insinuations about the President
considered by most to be treasonous.”
He is scrolling more quickly now.
“I note that our eye-tracking software,
by which you agreed to be monitored
when you agreed to and accepted
our unlimited terms and conditions,
shows your eye movements slow
and linger most frequently on
parodic Presidential depictions,
the likes of which have been banned
since Year Three of the Outbreak.”
And having read precisely those
chat boards, I know how this ends,
yet what I’m thinking of now is
the way those thermometers work:
with dozens of infrared sensors,
they capture thousands of readings
in a single swipe of your brow,
calibrating and recalibrating
the numbers so they can determine
whether you’re burning up.
After Finishing / This Poem, I Remember / a Better Poet’s // Cardinal Poem, / and I Think, Oh, What the Hell, / It’s Already Done
He lands like a drop
of bright red paint a painter
lets fall from the brush
by accident on
a branch outside my window.
It’s cold, so he puffs
his body feathers,
and because it’s still raining,
he snap-shakes his tail
like someone writing
too long whose hand has begun
to tighten with cramps.
I think of you when
the female lands on a branch
nearby. Oh, heavy,
sweet symbolism!
O, picturesque cardinal
pair playing tag in
such gray! They must be
so happy. When the female
flits like a flicked crumb
off to another
branch or tree or yard, I know
I’ve had quite enough
of symbolism,
although the male cardinal
stays just a little
longer to explain
how it feels to be alone
and red in the rain.
Stephen Kampa is the author of four collections of poetry: Cracks in the Invisible (2011), Bachelor Pad (2014), Articulate as Rain (2018), and World Too Loud to Hear (2023). His work has appeared in the Yale Review, Cincinnati Review, Southwest Review, Hopkins Review, Poetry Northwest, Subtropics, and Smartish Pace. He was also included in Best American Poetry 2018 and Together in a Sudden Strangeness: America's Poets Respond to the Pandemic (2020). During the spring of 2021, he was the writer in residence at the Amy Clampitt House. He teaches at Flagler College and is currently the poetry editor of Able Muse.
Susan Grimm
Earliest Memory of Water | “I had a little nut tree/ nothing would it bear,/ but a silver nutmeg/ and a golden pear”
Earliest Memory of Water
Should I start with the womb. Unstable twilight with a bobble doll roll. Gushing
out and the lungs begin their semaphore like two small tidal pools. Do I
remember the bathtub on Mapledale. There were clothes behind the door
and something sad about calamine and the toilet seat, waiting to be pox-painted
all over. How to endure when you’re seven. What can you promise yourself.
I would like the first memory to be Catawba. If I could voice it like abracadabra
I would conjure my presence there. Remember the raft, half blue and half red.
We’re floating above the rocks. If we close our eyes, everything disappears but
the darkness of the self and even then the sun like a crazy lemon strains
to get through. The waves and slow the raft nudging the pebbles, turning in a circle
away from the glacial groove’s broken edge. A whole climate has dragged past here.
“I had a little nut tree/ nothing would it bear,/ but a silver nutmeg/ and a golden pear”
If you have lived in the same kitchen—steaming up with the vegetables and roasting
with the roast. If you have lived in the same bedroom, far enough from the grownup
evening to invent without crossing the rug. If you both have done miniskirts and white
gloves but not in that order. If you have sometimes dressed alike. If you have run through
coffee and men and booze and cigarettes—but not the way that sounds. If you have opened
the same book and made the same face. If you have tried to make that house again.
If you like to spend money but at different times. If one of you loves the water
more. If one of you has already almost died. If only one of you remembers
her dreams. Shouldn’t you wear your capris and sit in the sun. The chairs are red
and the masks too colorful. Shouldn’t you be the same happy and the same
strong. If you have played battledore and shuttlecock as if it were a religion—all stretch
and thwack and ascent. If one can move farther. If one can see through the dark.
Susan Grimm’s work has been published in Field, The Cincinnati Review, Phoebe, and Sugar House Review. Her chapbook Almost Home was published in 1997. In 2004, BkMk Press published Lake Erie Blue, a full-length collection of poems. In 2010, Susan won the inaugural Copper Nickel Poetry Prize. In 2011, she won the Hayden Carruth Poetry Prize and her chapbook Roughed Up by the Sun’s Mothering Tongue was published. In 2022, I received my third Ohio Arts Council Individual Artist Grant.
John Dorroh
The Wrap-around Porch That No One Ever Uses Until It's Too Late | Not Such a Horrible Way to Go
Not Such a Horrible Way to Go
Texas fire ants can kill you. If you lie down at a picnic,
they will devour your uneaten ham-and-Swiss sandwich,
then attack anything sweet: your eyes and spit
that’s collected at the corners of your mouth, the crusted gunk
that dries on top of your tear ducts. Fire ants work quickly
like pixies on speed. You cannot outrun them so don’t
even think about it. Find water quickly. Douse yourself in a jet
stream from a powerful hose. Dive headfirst into a lake.
It might be your only hope. If there is no water nearby,
close your eyes, grit your teeth, and pray. If you’ve never prayed
before in earnest, this might be the time. I can’t tell you how long
it will last – this twisted plunge into Nature’s dark side – but scant research
indicates that you will reach a point where it doesn’t matter any longer.
You see yourself as a dissolving sugar crystal, and then there is purple light
all around you.
You soul does what you’ve always believed it would do.
The Wrap-around Porch That No One Ever Uses Until It’s Too Late
They found my body on the back porch under a mattress
under a bed on top of the wooden porch with seven sleek slats
missing so that I could see the dirt under the house, the coiled
copperhead with the silver fang, the one my grandfather
told me about when I was a kid. He will live forever he told me.
I reported myself to the coroner who took her time to arrive
with a team to pry my jellied body up from the wood
which had begun to rot last month. No one had missed me.
In four weeks no one missed me anywhere. I was the walking dead.
This is how I’ve felt for years. The conversations that built
walkways into the clouds where I was a mere droplet
of condensation. The irises bloomed and then their buds
fell off onto the ground. Dandelions danced all over my spine.
Kids picked them by the hundreds and blew their feathered seeds
into the air. The lightning bugs came & went. And there I was
slumped in a lawn chair with my face in the coals of the burn pit.
I think I put myself to bed that night. It’s all a blur.
I think there was some sort of memorial with people I knew.
My niece told a few stories about me, and my sister said
We never understood what he was doing. They said it was
the lowest attendance of any service held in that church.
Tell us again who he was. What did he do?
He was a placeholder, a bank, a dog sitter, a science teacher,
someone who kept the lights on after storms passed through.
That’s all.
Okay then. Let’s get on with our lives. I have an important package
to pick up off the front porch.
John Dorroh has never fallen into an active volcano, nor has he caught a hummingbird. However, he did manage to bake bread with Austrian monks and drink a healthy portion of their beer. Five of his poems were nominated for Best of the Net. Others have appeared in over 100 journals, including Feral, North of Oxford, River Heron, Wisconsin Review, Kissing Dynamite, and El Portal. He had two chapbooks published in 2022.
Harley Patton
Elk Tacos | Beaver Skull | Billionaires Are Bad Lovers
Elk Tacos
While eating elevated cuisine at the sort of restaurant we never would have been able to afford before she got remarried, my mother told me how she’d just finished reading a book and so I asked what about. Just then the server dropped the elk tacos and everyone agreed they were incredible. Divine. Transportive.
The book, she said, was written by a hypnotherapist who’d pioneered a technique to cure almost anything through hypnotic regression. One patient for instance suffered from lifelong shoulder pain that his doctors were unable to diagnose. He was about to go in for a last-ditch exploratory surgery when he discovered by chance the hypnotist’s website on a bus stop ad. He was hypnotized the next day and regressed to a past life as a soldier for the Roman Army. He recalled how he’d been run through the shoulder with a lance during the Battle of Ravenna and awoke in that instant pain free. My mother said that she’d probably been kicked by a horse in Victorian England and that’s why her lower back always ached. I sipped my twelve dollar iced tea and considered reincarnation.
I swirled the fresh sprigs of lavender around in my mug and focused on the tinkling of the ice against the ceramic. Soon my vision began to blur and and I became in an instant an elk, sprinting away across the plains from the hunters at the treeline, ears bristling for the throng of a bowstring, barely hearing it before my shoulder went hot and I was sliding through the tall grass in slow motion, each pale yellow blade passing through my field of vision one at a time, until the plains slowly dissolved and in their place appeared an unexplainable still life of handcrafted ceramic ware and house ground masa, my last conscious thought a collection of sounds completely foreign to me: tacos.
Beaver Skull
At an oddities market slash taxidermist slash artisanal coffee roaster on the rich side of the highway last week, I found myself shouting over a Smiths song to ask the person behind the counter just what the hell exactly this was. Some sort of small rodential skull with two unnaturally long saber teeth sprouting from the upper jaw that curled up concentrically under the chin, the very end of the left one piercing into the bottom of the bone plate. The cashier slash barista slash taxidermist turned down the volume on the record player a bit and said it’s called the cranial base. The bottom of the bone plate. And that they suspected it was a beaver skull I was holding, probably one that got trapped somehow and couldn’t gnaw, seeing as rodent teeth don’t ever stop growing. Said the common pet hamster completely wears down and regrows its incisors once every twenty-two days. And it was three hundred dollars, if I was interested.
Something in the combination of holding the evidence of such a relatable tragedy and the smell of roasted coffee beans and Morrisey’s subtle vibrato on the chorus to There Is A Light That Never Goes Out just made me burst immediately into shaky tears. The casheristadermist just nodded politely as I tried to express in words that just like the beaver there are parts of myself that I’ve got to gnaw back, calcified thoughts that grow and grow, and they patted me respectfully on the shoulder as I wiped my eyes, and took two fifty for the thing instead of three.
Billionaires Are Bad Lovers
I would really love somedays to be relentlessly concerned with logistics. Matters of transport, timetables, fuel efficiency. I’d like to need to call someone by 8:30 AM New York Time on a Tuesday morning. Be a moment late to laugh at a colleague’s joke because I’m too distracted by the knowledge that any moment now the cargo plane will touch down in Buenos Aires. I’d like to stay late at the office watching live streamed dash-cam footage or a subtitled broadcast of a Japanese tuna auction. Anything to shift my focus outward, to abandon the search within myself for any crack large enough to fit a fingertip in.
I’d like to be able to tell you everything about shipping and receiving but nothing about my heart. I’d like to watch the market like a hawk but never witness my own reflection when the screen goes dark. I’d like to block my therapist’s email, to ignore all your calls, to speak to those around me with a curtness only accessible by the most stunted and uninterested and rich. I want to spend my life climbing stairs and then die at the top of the tower.
But no. I love you. So instead I’ve got to explain to you as we sign the lease today that moving apartments makes me want to scream and run away because my parents got divorced when I was young and I didn't have much consistency. And I’ve got to cry while I drive the U-haul too slow on the highway, and make you hop out when we arrive to guide me through the side mirrors so I can back into the parking lot without hitting anything.
Harley Patton is a writer and artist from Minneapolis who has forgotten where he's set something and is currently pacing around looking for it. You can read some more of his prose poem thingamabobs at miniMag or Edge City, if you’re into that sort of nonsense.
Beth Gordon
The Crone Weathers | The Crone Tattooed | Unveiling
The Crone Weathers
Yellow rain: yellow sky: crows gather beneath the streetlight. Rowboats & washrags & boysenberry jam. A coven of black kittens atop the last phone booth in this town. A child carries her final wishes in a jelly jar like thunder. All that falls will sodden: mud champagne: mud violin: mud between my teeth. Sewers spellbound with murk & myth. Yearbooks & wasp nests & snake tongues all shred within the rising. Grandmothers look up from their kite strings: the wind screams like a man. Atonement is necessary no matter the flooded ambulances: no matter the dampened chimes. All that can open will open: window/egg/blackbird pie. All will share the story. Salvation in the lie. The truck engine still running while I ask for directions from angels swimming with barbed wire.
The Crone Tattooed
Now I find myself without the necessary language to explain her last breath. Numbers are also insufficient or inept. Charts + Graphs + Postcards. Paper mâché nests filled with paper mâché eggs filled with paper mâché yolk. It all amounts to nothing. Now I submit myself to the artist’s indelible ink. The needle that vibrates like a harmony of stars. The familiar scent of pain. Can I make of my body a mural? Can I make of my ribs a dispersements of daisies? An echo of clementines? A highway of thistle & thorns? Can I adorn my hollow-ed chest wall with a panorama of morning headlights as seen from 30,000 feet? If there are 8 exits on this plane & no exit from my body what choice but to become a canvas? I’ve redesigned my skin into a dragonfly metaphor. The scars are unimportant.
Unveiling
I cannot survive without electricity or running water or a temperature-controlled suburban home. I have never chopped firewood: never cradled a blade. Never carried a rifle into the fertile depths of a forest to kill something & name it food. I always grow squeamish at the sight of the hook inside the catfish’s gaping mouth. I hate merging into highway traffic. If I am trapped in the wreckage of a car: within that wreckage I will die. On the other hand: I can accessorize. A room. An interview dress. A person departing for Alaska. A family gathering. An empty tree. I can recite my children’s first words. Sock. What’s That? May I have some apple juice, please. I know that ghosts are real because how else can I explain every moment of my otherwise vanishing life. But that’s not really what we’re talking about, is it? I tend to digress when discussing my tenuous usefulness if the skies fill with bombs: the water with disease. The revelation may surprise me. If they need someone to pair a uniform with pearls: someone to select the new carpeting for a flooded mansion. I may stick around long enough to see how it all pretends to end. To see how everything blooms with fire & begins.
Beth Gordon is a poet, mother and grandmother currently living in Asheville, North Carolina. She is the author of several chapbooks including The Water Cycle (Variant Literature) and How to Keep Things Alive (Split Rock Press). Beth is Managing Editor of Feral: A Journal of Poetry and Art, Assistant Editor of Animal Heart Press, and Grandma of Femme Salve Books. Twitter, Instagram, and BlueSky @bethgordonpoet.
Oz Hardwick
Adventures in Animation | Feast and Famine | Mute
Adventures in Animation
Handmade and hand-me-down, I wear love like I did in school.
It’s not as cold as when I was a kid, but I wrap on that long,
loose-knit scarf, and head for the station like a child on the
edge of a Brueghel scene. At the centre of the frame is a fox,
all red smoking jacket and tricksy grin. I catch him up on the
platform, and he holds open the train door with an elaborate
bow, then follows me on board. We’re the only passengers, but
he plumps himself opposite me, sips a nip from a silver hip
flask, and lights a slim panatela. We fall to talking about
cinema, about the nobility of self-sacrifice in Casablanca, the
message of hope that saves even the bad Star Wars movies,
and the ambiguity of anthropomorphised foxes. He
acknowledges the benefits of Disney’s positive spin, but
prefers Wes Anderson by a country mile. But it’s when he
mentions Starewicz – pronouncing it like my old Polish
girlfriend’s father, who always refused to speak English to me
– that his eyes glitter with fire and tears. Heartfelt, he says,
exhaling a thin heart of smoke, handmade and hand-me-down.
He reaches for my scarf with paws that today are fingers,
savours the loops and crossings of old wool as if they were
trails he ran with his mother when he was a cub who knew
nothing of the world. Outside, towns pass in stop motion, a
deer raises its face in salutation, children bustle to the sound of
a school bell, and trees open wide mouths to sing.
Feast and Famine
Hunger takes up too much space, so we’ve stacked it in the
attic amongst the broken records, the jars of tears, and all the
other things that grow when we forget that they’re there. I
remember climbing up as a child, my father gripping my hand
to stop me slipping between the slats and plaster, the sound of
my mother rising like steam from below, praying for our
return. It was simultaneously light and dark in a way I still
can’t explain, and we spoke to my grandparents who I’d
thought had died, though no one had invited me to the funerals.
Granddad was playing lopsided dance tunes on a wheezing
melodeon, humming the steps around a corncob pipe, while
Gran kept time with her knit one, purl one, cast off rhythm.
Boxes tottered like a Grecian ruin and the dust smelled like
boiled chicken. We left something there by a pile of wartime
papers, beneath a bottle of eyes. That night, as the cuckoo
clock called nine, they said I was a man, though I felt no
different, and after the celebratory feast I still ached for more.
Mute
It’s not been a straightforward journey. The bus was late, the
roads were flooded, and the driver was transitioning into a
swan. I am not, I should stress, a cygnophobe, and some of my
best friends are fluid between states of being, but a myth is a
myth, and the rush hour’s no time for transformation. Mute as a
sculpture by Jean Arp – white painted plaster, fashioned
between wars – he took my money and gave me a tangle of
weeds. He gave me a look like an innocent god, and he gave a
shiver to carry to my destination. There was no map, there was
no timetable, and when I looked out of the grime-lapped
windows, there was no city to speak. The world was becoming
water. There were no words.
Oz Hardwick is a European poet, photographer, barely-competent bass guitarist, and accidental academic. His most recent full collection, 'A Census of Preconceptions' (SurVision Books, 2022), was shortlisted for a number of international awards but didn’t win any, though he feels pretty confident about the upcoming egg-and-spoon race. His latest publications are the chapbook My Life as a Time Traveller: a Memoir in 18 Discrete Fragments (Hedgehog Poetry Press, 2023) and the co-edited anthology (with Cassandra Atherton) Dancing About Architecture (MadHat, 2024). Oz is Professor of Creative Writing at Leeds Trinity University (UK).
Mark Jackley
Last Summer | Sunbeam on Initials Carved in the Kitchen Table | At Sunrise
Last Summer
you dragged me out of bed
and drove me to a farmstand
lettuce plums onions
such ripe vowels
sliding down your throat
towards the filthy and delicious
earth and even now
it is wet with us
Sunbeam on Initials Carved in the Kitchen Table
it’s early and I
could almost
believe these
blades of light
somehow heal
the scars the
human struggle
in the wood
At Sunrise
the blue song and the green song
surrender
to the yellow—
the yellow song,
imagine, I can hear it,
something
born exactly
where
it was meant to be
Mark Jackley's poems have appeared in Fifth Wednesday, Sugar House Review, The Cape Rock, Does It Have Pockets and other journals. He lives in northwestern Virginia.
Tom Barwell
august crow | somerset
somerset
i heard a tale this place is fake,
her poetry, her paint,
this gentle birth of hips and cheeks,
her quiet, mossy springs,
as though each filament
had not emerged from tragedy,
and snowdrop couldn’t tell the tale
of death, collapse all hope, and
nuzzle its breath into the ringing earth.
spring’s caress tempts wheaten fingers
from such sodden graves, their waves
atomically massage human witnesses,
overturning revolutions’ straight,
undoing critical urban planes.
bricks, in relief, become supple long leaves,
traffic lights turn into bees,
the thunder of bored offices
runs by in unrelenting streams.
her belly, under the ruffles,
takes in concern, breathes out,
skittering her lambs in morning
steam, heaves their carbon into
hungry crops, making oval loaves
from pure sunlight and precipice.
these fields are like the sky, passing
on all that london’s tried,
woodland eyes clock the shade with
mona lisa’s surety; not a speck of pretence
taints her poise. there is no stab wound
in this acorn, no bullet in the songbird’s
tune, villages nestle in crook and brow,
churches tie a timeless vow,
hedges stitch and cattle low,
not in ideal dreamt, but stead.
while toxins flood these blue veins,
she remains immune, her art
blossoms, filling fruit-high hems, as
blackberries crown the dry stone walls,
apples flush alert,
and graveyards, peaceful as a root,
lay shaded by her ferns.
august crow
regarding, master crow leans,
then withdraws with a bead of my
belly wedged in his resin beak.
he doesn’t swallow yet.
he tips his head, incurious,
tugging at a ticket
machine, elastic skin tearing,
not quite severing.
a gentle exchange of potential,
no frustration, courtesy of my
pescatarian forefathers.
he adjusts a shoulder for grip, his
nimble fork, delicately clawed,
contemplates my tongue, tines
poised for piracy.
i know his wife: she’ll put my blaze
of turquoise around the rim
of her nest, and
save the burnt sienna for the
living room. our egg indent
will make a good sofa.
i appreciate the murder: a calming
sermon, delivered with undeniable
expertise, a distillation of
bright water. something decided,
this corpse was never home.
there’s a place i know, if
fortune’s feathers splay so far –
a yew a thousand years, a hollow
older than that, the other side of
a river that cannot break.
i’ll go to that glade, as i always have,
he to his broomstick mansion,
our lightning brushes together,
a gate releases its catch.
Tom Barwell is an English poet, psychotherapist and coach. He’s especially interested in nature, human nature and the relationship that implies.
Jane Bloomfield
Basic Instinct |Bob Dylan's First Name Was Robert Allen Zimmerman | The Definition of Affection
Basic Instinct
Leonard Cohen made a cocktail called The Red Needle
Tequila, lemon and cranberry poured over ice, there’s
a coloured photograph of him in a day-lit kitchen
mixing three in fancy gold rimmed glasses
he’s wearing a short sleeve white shirt
dark striped tie top button undone
stabbing a block of ice with an ice pick
on a marble counter top ala Sharon Stone
in that movie she shocked the world with her
muff triangle. Leonard is tapping his toe in time
to his picks and humming the chord to a new song
he’s not really concentrating on the task at hand but a smile
sparkles in his eyes as he secrets the pick into a high cupboard
adds lemon twists to the golden drinks now pink with Ocean Spray
eight hundred and fifty cranberries per serve
Sharon winks and takes a sip.
Bob Dylan’s First Name Was Robert Allen Zimmerman
Once upon a small mountain town
there was a hairdresser who picked up women
in late night bars over whiskey rocks & promise
he took them back to his salon
to wash their hair - apparently
he gave heavenly head massages
whatever colours they had on their minds
the women stepped into the midnight
tingling moonshine scented scalps but damp
curly locks - they couldn’t wait any longer for
the world to begin while he longed to see them in
the morning light - they all said he looked like
young Bob Dylan
I recall his name was Robert.
Editor’s Note: This poem contains lyrics from Bob Dylan’s “Lay Lady Lay.”
The Definition of Affection
After dinner each night, my grandfather peeled, sliced and
cored an apple for my Nana, presenting it to her on a small
floral saucer in gentle act of affection. I can see him now sat
in the mid-century chair between chiffonier and side table
a smoked pipe cooling in his ash tray, a mother of pearl
handled fruit knife beside the ribbon of peel - a yellow globe
under the long skinny water colour of Gallipoli - worlds away
on the wall beside him. A smile lifting his face as she offered
him the last quarter.
Queenstown, New Zealand based writer, Jane Bloomfield, is the author of the Lily Max children’s novels. Her poetry and CNF are published in Tarot, Turbine |Kapohau, Does It Have Pockets, a fine line - NZ Poetry Society, Roi Fainéant Press, MEMEZINE, The Spinoff, Sunday Magazine and more. Find her at Jane Bloomfield: truth is stranger than fiction -janebloomfield.blogspot.com.
Blair Martin
Self-Portrait at 13 | The Bodies of the Dead
Editor’s Note: The first poem in this collection touches on body dysphoria & eating disorders. Please read with care.
Self-Portrait at 13
I befriend Ana
in a cookbook, whose
cheery print recommends
800 a day for ladies.
I, though no lady, round down.
Knit potholders to avoid the stab.
I fascinate on my two wrist
bones, pecking like a hatchling
still sticking with shell. Shame
worms in as I count each calorie’s
stitch. I have no sense that I shelter,
without feather or flight, in twigs.
The Bodies of the Dead
luxuriate as they decay.
Unhurried, no traffic cones
derail their commute.
They endure no disputes with neighbors
over the placement of fences.
Instead, they spill open in welcome.
Bacteria gorges on blue-black
flesh, the worm curls cozy
in an empty eye socket.
No one cuts them isolated
with a sharp judging glance.
They constantly commune
as their molecules whisp elemental:
the green in a blade of grass,
the taut raindrop before it falls,
the mushroom’s damp bloom.
When you trace the death date
on a tombstone, gather yourself
in envy. The living, alone, in the times
in which we find ourselves, suffer
when roots rot. The dead are already rising.
Blair Martin grew up on a small farm in Lancaster County, PA. They received their PhD in Clinical Psychology from Bowling Green State University and teach at Joliet Junior College. Their work has appeared in/is forthcoming in Anti-Heroin Chic, New Feathers Anthology, Redrosethorns Magazine, Knee Brace Press and elsewhere.
Catherine Arra
My Power | Make-believe
My Power
I’m twelve, blooming breasts, baby-bottle nipples,
clutching the shower curtain, a ring-like affair
in an old-footed tub, modesty wrapped,
head turtled out watching him
wrestle with the clogged drain, frustrated. My father.
Another household malfunction.
He looks up, scowls at my rising blush.
Oh, for Chrissake! Who do you think you are, Brigitte Bardot?
Frozen between who we are, who we would always be,
between my shock, his anger, wanting to please, to pacify,
I release my drape, dripping bursting girl-flesh,
silky mons pubis, tulip-soft wet skin. Punishing sexuality.
He looks away.
Goddamn drain.
Make-believe
Other little boys pretended cowboys, G.I. Joes.
Grew up to be pioneers, warriors, protectors.
You, fascinated with carnivals,
moving wheels, sweeping capes,
pretended a magician, then a knife thrower.
Grew up to trick your
whiskey-washed, cussing, smoke-choked,
dish-crashing, hollering, hammering, too terrified to breathe
world and pin it to the wall. By the hair, T-shirt,
black silk negligee. Wrestle it to the floor, stake it to the carpet,
only it wasn’t make-believe.
Ghosts wriggle free, voices tease, the cape twists
and plants you face down.
Catherine Arra is a native of the Hudson Valley in upstate New York, where she lives with wildlife and changing seasons until winter, when she migrates to the Space Coast of Florida. Her poetry and prose have appeared in numerous literary journals, both online and in print and in anthologies. She is the author of four full-length collections and four chapbooks. A former high school English and writing teacher, Arra now teaches part-time and facilitates local writing groups. Find her at www.catherinearra.com
Kimberly White
The Little Girl Who Knows How to Spell Turquoise | Dirty House Poem
The Little Girl Who Knows How to Spell Turquoise
There is no silent beauty in her soul, it spills out loud. Beauty of sidewalk chalk in Easter egg colors. Beauty of dandelions defying concrete, puff spores floating without need for breeze. Beauty of rust patterns on dented metal fence bars and mutilated cars which grow in the gardens of her neighborhood. Beauty in the hopscotch dance of her ten-year-old feet as she spells t-u-r-q-u-o-i-s-e with the dexterity of a forest sprite reborn on city streets complicated by competing thugs and decaying shades of stone and paint and yes, turquoise, where gunshot patterns bisect the hot air and bloodred burns into her sleep if there is any sleep in a hypervigilant world tempered by books and TV with stories of worlds which can’t be true and if they are, they will never touch her but it’s okay, they’re not really true, truth like that can’t live on her streets. The rough map of her street bleeds color shifts of black asphalt cracked into darker patch-veins betraying the dark heart of ground conquered by underground, shifts of blues filtered through dirty bricks and gray sidewalks and neon sparks and lit cigarettes and blinded stars until it is no longer blue but still blue, shifts to what was once green to what is now dead to that which resurrects in colors beyond primary, tertiary, more than what breathes into her lungs, sinks into her pores, pollutes her eyes and ears, more than her streets and her books can teach her, more than the name of any color can hold.
Author’s Note: This piece inspired by Law and Order, episode #398
Dirty House Poem
Springtime in my dirty house, and the corners are adorned with tiny cobweb empires whose silkroad strings flutter in the furnace breeze, still pumping against the early morning chill. Who am I to judge these microcosmic worlds unfit to grace my home? Next door, the dogs bark through the wind-torn fence holes, push their way into my yard to sniff and dig and make their own judgements about the dandelion blooms, the overgrown rose beds, the grass that is past its mow date. I hang back, spy from the window shadows as they soak up the springtime flavors and textures to take home to unravel and interpret and compare to the sensory smorgasbord on their own side of the fence. Seasons come fractious, discontented even when settling in for the stay they know is temporary, glorious and destructive with the bipolarity of the gods.
In my house, spring is an impersonal act, a visit from an out-of-town lover who forgets me as soon as he’s gone, displaced and replaced by the next iteration whose face is the same, different, the same. The sedimentary footprints of spring mark the layered dust, my personal geology now bound to the season and its pollinated chaos and yellow air. The open windows admit it all, cobwebs are stirred and reset with winter dust left behind, already braced for the summer layers to come.
Kimberly White’s latest novel is Waterfall Girls (CLASH Books, 2021). Her poetry has appeared in The Massachusetts Review, Cream City Review, Skidrow Penthouse, and other journals and anthologies. She is the author of four chapbooks, Penelope, A Reachable Tibet, The Daily Diaries of Death, and Letters to a Dead Man; as well as two other novels: Bandy’s Restola, and Hotel Tarantula. She also dabbles in other arts and spends most of her time in Northern California with her pens and papers and massive collection of Tarot decks.
Audrey Sachs
The Intergalactic Inside Out | SHEEP SHEEP Through the Car Window SHEEP SPARROW SHEEP
The Intergalactic Inside Out
They say it sounds different this time, train tracks
splitting to splinters, wooden teeth whirl-winding
to the skies, the entire enormous world yawning apart
from one minuscule particle.
The first time the universe was born, they say
it sounded like a tidal wave of mahogany pianos,
a chorus of seamstresses stitching to a ticking clock,
white satin gloves swaying in the mouth of the taxidermied
South Chinese tiger fixed above the mantle.
Each moment groaned as she merged into existence,
stretching long liquidus limbs sewn from time and crackling bones of change, and infinity,
human and inhuman desire.
The seconds blurred,
the stars oscillated up and down on the heat stroke of horizon,
laughing in chimes and pixie dust,
and from the dirt rose a single prisonous tree.
This time around, they say it sounds like tsunamis, the wail
of whole coliseums, colloquiums of liars, and psychedelic songbirds.
They say it cheats at poker, eats only celery, and lives in an old apartment in Warsaw.
They say it reads Kafka.
They say its Russian is very bad, but when it dances, the halls of Moscow dance back.
They say it could be so much worse.
They say it isn’t a saint.
They say it isn’t even sane.
They say it can only hear itself when it knows it’s dying.
SHEEP SHEEP Through the Car Window SHEEP SPARROW SHEEP
There’s a person in the water wastes,
trapped in the fields at early dawn when the grey is bitten away by flecks of iridescence glinting off the glassy surface
They’re up early
Before the shepherds run loose, the birds sweep down low, and the afternoon thunderstorms trade voices with the accordion in the house below the hill
Early enough that you can see all sorts of things:
the green dipping into blues on the horizon
And little pink and white sails swimming out to sea
Little soot insects race away atop the drowned fields with every ripple of their big yellow boots traipsing zipping lines into the water
In a puddle, a white sparrow’s skeleton shows its fine bones to the bluing sun
But the person moves by, unwilling to break their sturdy stride
Past the roots, the forest, the garden patch
The fields of water feed into marsh feed into swamp
And in the forested wetlands
Boats of leaves do float with such density
That the ground appears blanketed
In a shifting mass of green carpeting
Turn left at the island amassed in petals
And find the ten thousand-year tree
Sunken. Beneath the surface of the world
The little person kneels, laying hand to the lowest branch
While it crumbles away
With the heat of a palm
Reminding the lone messenger
Of the soil
The trails
The drowning days
Audrey Sachs is an eighteen-year-old high school student from Los Angeles under the mentorship of Brendan Constantine. She writes poetry, short stories, and novels. In her free time, she brews green tea and thinks about jellyfish. She is secretly a witch.