poetry Anne Anthony poetry Anne Anthony

Amanda Hawk

I Googled My Grandmother's Old Apartment | Low Budget Monsters | The Mountains

I Googled My Grandmother’s Old Apartment

The apartment building had faded from warm yellows

to muted grays and blues.

My grandmother lived in the corner near the lawn.

I zoomed in with my Google binoculars

 

trying to find pixelated images of my grandmother.

To watch her turn the soil into petal jungles

and chat with the hummingbirds.

To see her hold ladybugs in her palms

 

while I sit at the Kmart patio table

admiring how she created another world.

With oversized pseudanthium and florets twisting

around the fence, windows and our feet.

 

I wanted to remember the sun

reflecting off her glasses into a blinding smile.

Decades had left a decaying fence, rotted wood, and a dried up lawn.

An empty frame in my grandmother’s old apartment window,

 

and she wasn’t a time stamp for the click of my mouse to find.

Her bright yellow and blue gardening vest erased

into vacancy and rental rates.

I imagined her garden had thrived, exploding

 

into white headed daisies and pink roses

that wrapped around the buildings.

Violet irises popped from the door jambs

and big red poppies blossomed into garden thrones.

 

My grandmother would be humming and spraying the flowers

without the slick slug memory loss

eating away the leaves of her recollections.

Before our names wilted and shriveled beneath her tongue

 

and she got moved into the nursing home

with locked windows and a guard rail bed.

Her life boxed up and plucked from the apartment

to be piled into a moving truck or donation van.

 

Knowing beady eyed dementia watched her leave,

and it raced to her garden yanking each plant out by its root

leaving a graveyard of dried up leaves and dandelions.

 

Low Budget Monsters

My mother went to see A Werewolf in London

while I grew inside her womb,

and I was born howling under a full moon.

 

My mornings were reserved for sarcastic cartoon rabbits

and spinach obsessed sailors.

Nights were booked for horror flick cocktails of bubbling

 

forehead transformations and chopping mall shopping sprees.

My mother couldn’t afford movie tickets

and we settled on the late night B-rated hours.

 

We ritualized popcorn and puffed sleeping bags

as mother clicked off the electric bills

and indulged in some gruesome past time

 

from a double shift task list.

We pulled on 3-D glasses

and slipped into a red and blue backdrop,

 

and the monsters reached out

to touch my cheek.

We watched the world end

 

in a choose your own adventure ranging from comets

that turned humans into dust filled shoes

to houses dragged into the bowels of hell.

 

She would quick snap cover my eyes

when the frothing wolves or masked madmen entered the screen.

I absorbed the sound of the school girl screams,

 

thumping blades, and blood drip soundtracks.

It poured under my skin.

But I learned tentacles couldn’t reach me

 

from the pause button of the VCR,

and the poltergeist couldn’t come

out of a black television screen.

 

I reserved the sounds

of my mother’s hitched breaths

and lashed out snarls for my nightmares.

 

The nightly news oozed

underneath doors with shark jaw current events

and crashed into my mother’s single income.

 

She got possessed by the static wing flicker taglines

spilling out of the news anchor’s blubberous pink lips

to swarm the newsstands and mother couldn’t escape

 

the fanged trolls of war, politics and taxes.

Stress was a boogeyman that clung to the wrinkles around her eyes

and rested in her clenched fists.

 

But it festered in my dreams, it haunted me with her bloodshot eyes

and her curled upper lip exposing her angst stained teeth.

She kept turning on our nocturnal creepy crawlies

 

for dopamine rescues and survival tactics.

I absorbed each thrashing claw and final girl triumph,

until I learned how to laugh through fear.

The Mountains

My mother was born

from sharp ridges and tumbling peaks.

With a mouth full of pine needles and mudslides,

she had callus hand history and back road adventures.

 

When I splintered from her trunk

she had expected me to be a carbon copy.

A piece of her parents’ depression era survival

and wilderness inspired dogma.

She anticipated me to roll into her rustic storyline

with dust covered boots, ready to wrestle down the sun.

 

I was dandelion pappuses and cumulus clouds,

tumbling onto summer breezes

and chasing after the owls,

flying from my eyes to the moon.

I had fallen in love with the curls and twists of words

and pressed my petals between pages.

 

My mother wanted me to be the pinnacle

of glacier coolness and frostbitten reserve.

She erupted every day, shook our house,

trying to shift my range, to mold me

into the perfect mountain.

 

Each temper earthquake drove a wedge

between her hands and mine, and I learned

mother wasn’t the word for gentle.

Every crack of her lips sent mudslides of disappointment,

her gnarled tongue carving out new insults.

 

She taught me about tectonic plates.

With enough pressure and force

two bodies could be pushed apart,

and "I love you" couldn’t echo

through her chasm of expectations

built over decades.

 

 

My mother was born from the mountains.

Made from craggy boulders and snow-capped summits.

I turned forty and we had only spoken a handful of times,

and still, I found dandelion seeds in my hair

and chased after owls.


Amanda Hawk is Best of the Net and Pushcart Prize-nominated Poet. She lives in Seattle between the roaring planes and the city’s neon lights. Amanda has been featured in multiple journals including Volney Road Review, Rogue Agent and the winnow. She released her first chapbook, Rain Stained City, in 2023. She is one of six Puget Sound writers to have their work featured in City of Edmond's Poet's Perspective in 2023.

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Susan Shea

Pulsations | Buyer Beware | Fancy

Pulsations

It was the you me you me time

after the divorce, when you

clung to me like a koala baby

 

living in our down-sized home

now an apartment, too small

for our stuff but just right for

our expanding gratitude

 

we were hearing ourselves

laugh out loud like newborns

 

when a booming sound shook

the floor beneath us again

and again, we adjusted

to the unexpected

 

finally realizing it had a beat

like a drum we'd never heard

                       

glad to find out that the

downstairs neighbor was just

practicing to perform with the

Pipes and Drums Band for

the NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade

                                               

a fitting call out as we looked

over our four-leafed clovers

                                               

waiting in our new days

Buyer Beware

As I walk through

the lake-size barn

of antiques, the dealers

look up at me

like beady-eyed fish from

under the thin ice I walk on

 

hoping one of their items

will make me want to

bring back, or be with

a loved one

from the other side, but

           

maybe I will just find

the bright

green deck prism

I have been seeking

                                   

so I can catch light

stretch out its life

anywhere

I hope to go

          

Fancy

I stood waiting for you

on the other side

of your many-layered

 

beveled glass door

looking through angles

carrying rainbows in

different directions

 

looking inside I saw

a funhouse gathering of

living room distortions

odd bits, moved sideways

in half, into shards

through this mad world door

 

your lovely decor seemed

to be acting

strange and confused

 

until you opened your portal

wearing your tiny mauve smile

that was just the right size to

fit into one of these slanted

figments of your invitation

 


Susan Shea is a retired school psychologist who was raised in New York City, and is now living in a forest in Pennsylvania. Since she has returned to writing poetry last year, her poems have been accepted by: Across the Margin, Feminine Collective, The Avalon Literary Review, Persimmon Tree Literary Magazine, Ekstasis, Triggerfish Critical Review, Amethyst Review, Poemeleon Poetry and others.

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Catherine Edmunds

Chess            

Angus McLintock has memorised every argument

in Claude F Bloodgood’s seminal work, The Tactical Grob,

not because it’s his favourite opening, but because

his chess books have been disappearing.

 

When challenged, Angela looks at him

like he’s an idiot. He once took part in a simultaneous

against a Polgar, but this carries little weight. Angela

still thwarts his every move. She won’t play chess,

 

but happily sends him off to congresses.

‘Have a nice time dear. Toodle-pip.’

She offers to make sandwiches.

‘Oh, I’ll get something with Brian.

We’ll go down the pub.’

 

He’s away this week, Leeds, tough to get a foothold,

but Brian and the gang look to him to make his mark.

He’ll do it—he loves to grind an opponent down.

It’s the one thing that brings him satisfaction.

 

He wonders what Angela does when he’s away.

She says she’s writing a book, but she hides the page

when he passes, and the document is password protected.

One time he asked what she’s writing; she said it’s like

that fifty shades book, only rather than grey,

it’s emphatically chequer-board. Black and white,

weighted pieces, a classic Staunton set.

 

She laughs at him,

Says ‘Staunton’ again, smacks her lips.

‘Green baize bottoms’.

 

In Leeds, he downs his pint of John Smiths

goes back to analysing Brian’s last county game,

understands what’s gone wrong

and is patience itself, explaining.

Party Games, and after

I’ve managed to wangle a trip to the front

to pin the tail on the donkey.

We’re ready to kiss, kick or torture;

they watch, they loathe, but there’s no fear,

just flesh wounds, raspberry jelly.

 

Why are you so proud of me?

I survived, that’s all, shrouded in dust,

led by dead men. I hear a drumroll,

buffaloes thundering over the plain, and so begins

the next war. The first shells pass over

wearing party hats, doctors walk quickly

through wards spreading tinsel and fear,

a stinking mule trails human blood

and exchanges of names: truth, dare or compromise.

 

The lady in the front row leaves,

thoughtful, a little bit sad, like rhubarb.

This Syrian crispness troubles her, but it

keeps on digging. One day she’ll find

an ancient perambulator to take her home.

Nobody hears the explosion that kills them.

 

I’d give a lot to live with the children

riding abandoned Afghani tanks, I long

for a big Suffolk breeze, for clouds

the colour of mussel shells.

 

A shutter bangs in the wind, a burnt-out truck

at the roadside—still alive or just pretending?

If we could edit our lives there’d be no risk, no fun.

 

There’s a need for frivolity, balloons, it’s been

too long since I last pulled apart a barn owl pellet

to play with the bones of voles. The grief is sharp

on the faces of those who stand in hard, bitter silence,

who claim these games are not murder.

Lamb Stew

Let me tell you about my mother’s lamb stew:

never wholesome, warming, rich with fat, 

but thin as water, fragments of boiled rag,

bulbous white barley, lukewarm.

 

I went round last week and she served a hot meal—

aubergines, peppers, tomatoes, onions,

stewed in good olive oil, fragrant with thyme,

bursting with nutmeg and moschokarido.

 

She’d swapped my dad for an ancient Greek,

black eyes set deep in leathery wrinkles.

She told me they weren’t cadavers yet; 

he pinched her arm, and she giggled, girlish,

 

but I miss toast, made from soft sliced bread

losing its crust an hour before anyone’s up.

I miss canned tomatoes, charred and acidic. 

I don’t think Mother misses my dad, not yet— 

but I miss lamb stew: thin as water, clear as love. 


Catherine Edmunds is a writer, artist, and professional musician from North-East England, whose poetry has appeared in many journals, including Aesthetica, Crannóg, Poetry Scotland and Ambit. She was the 2020 winner of the Robert Graves Poetry Prize.

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Regina YC García

Retrograde

A sister-friend came to me today saying that she felt “off kilter,”

like the world was playing tricks—car wrecked, insurance not covering

all of what she wanted, what she needed for it to cover, having paid

consistently, faithfully, over these years. I told her, as we have

the same number of birthdays, mine before hers, that

 

“55 is a time! It’s a whole mess, Honey!”

 

we laughed

 

Then, I told her that it is surely “Mercury in retrograde”

 

and we laughed some more

 

Then yielding to our indoctrination…

 

“Naw, Girl!”

 

doubling over

steeped in religiosity

having been brought up in “The Word”

 

I sometimes forget that so much of the God of our Ancients is wrapped in stars

and winds and cleansing water and purging fires in the least rigid of ways, talking, moving

earth and skies, rescuing

 

even when we forget the promised power. We revert to westernized boxes of place destiny

fixed time

 

But God has the world in God’s hands, power flowing to and through

 

Of course, she then reminded me of the time that we had our brooms balanced upright in the

middle

of our kitchen floors, a test of magical prowess. She took hers down before I did…said it

“creeped her out.”  It was a joke, and I loved to take them (jokes) far, but in truth, this

monument of my inherent power somehow made me feel more able… more free. It stayed…a long time

 

It was not removed before I said it could be. Nobody dared. 

Its ever-standing presence lifted me, emboldened me, and reminded me

that there really was something in me…

 

Maybe like a too often smothered power

 

Science, magic, Black girls

God

DeEvolution: Class

Consider…

This ground

These skies

The mighty rolling waters

The small quiet streams

The towering trees

The lowly underbrush

 

Imagine…

What they have seen

What they have heard

What they have felt

Upon despair descending

Tensing in terror

Drowning in disbelief

Raising the alarm

Splintering earth

while whirling winds

Call the air as witness

 

Wonder…

How have we come to this?

What have we done to us?

To others?

Negating the wholeness

The many parts of our stories

Our truths

 

Remember…

The dismemberment

one from another

Removing and reordering

what was never meant to be

& never willing to know

that we, all of us,

were All shaped

in the beginning

from formless, colorless, borderless

mouthless breath

born down through time

 

Children of energy and grace

Crowned in flesh

Once glorious grass

 

Now…

Segmented

Useless

Murderous

Class

AfroCarolina Land,  Sea, & Stew

We are land, sprawling soul, & skin

steeped in Carolina sand & soil

It has built us in the best of times

covered us  in the worst

Our hearts beat telltale notes, we are

of  this place, these banks–outer, inner, & beyond

We are water, fluid & flowing, shimmering…

sometimes rising as waves of knowing

showing the world that our depth is more

than deep; it is complex-water wailing, water

washing, water witnessing, singing through sounds

The sea, a birth canal that has spit us upon the shores

reminded us to breathe, to cry, but not to die

We are these– fed holy fish, tomato broth, bacon,

potatoes, asked by earth & ocean to trust, to believe,

to be made whole, misted & sanctified by the voices

 of our people, this sand, & the tides that rock in & out


 Regina YC García is an award-winning Poet, Language Artist, and English Professor from Greenville, NC. She is the 2021 1st place winner of the DAR American Heritage Poetry Award, a 2024 Pushcart Nominee, a 2021 and 2023 semifinalist for the NCLR James Applewhite Poetry Competition, and a Finalist in the Lit/South Awards. She has been published in a wide variety of journals, reviews and anthologies to include The South Florida Poetry Journal, The Elevation Review, Main Street Rag, Amistad, Kakalak, Black Joy Unbound, and many others. She has also contributed to documentaries and musical and literary arrangements to include the Sacred 9 Project (Tulane University) and an Emmy award winning episode of the PBS art show Muse. Her debut chapbook, The Firetalker's Daughter, was released in March 2023 by Finishing Line Press.

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Amy Raasch

Dia de los Muertos

On the Day of the Dead, marigolds jam

my parking meter. City of L.A., don’t worry:

it still took my money & my illusions the dead are not

here with me sipping a Holy Molé Mocha spiced

by barista Nicely. A woman in hot pants, crocheted

lion-tail and filigreed metal wings like resonator guitars

made by the French luthier I met at that party in the Valley

wobbles by. Wrapped around her like a handcuff,

a burnt caramel flan of a man with strawberry schnapps

cheeks spits out a loose tooth, grins blood, pockets

his masterpiece. He’s MY animal, she wheezes

& winks one leathered lid at the neighborhood cat

who hunts crickets, butterflies, and squirrels the way

the ocean hunts a drowning man, the sun hunts

the burning boy with wings, a woman hunts a zygote

before it cleaves. On Main, men swing cranes

and sledgehammers, eat sandwiches with their legs dangling

fifty feet in the air. They never see the knit-tailed crone

climb the scaffolding & leap from a suspended girder,

flapping & calling for the impossible bird with the lion body

to dive down her throat and let her animal go.

 

Keep a black dress handy.

My neighbors Devo and Alex

drink rosé at 10 a.m.,

compliment my dress as I pass.

 

So Marilyn meets Jackie O.

I tell them I am going to a funeral,

bringing glamour to the dead.

 

But the dead have their own glamour,

swim their own black-bodied water.

My four-inch heels trespass their dirt.

 

White roses tossed, I kick them off,

let August pavement singe my feet

& hobble like a broken dancer

 

across the cemetery lot, spike heels

clasped in one fist like the necks

of two black swans. Santa Ana winds

 

spin tiny cyclones across graves. 

It’s too dry to cry. I’m too thirsty too drink.

My old black convertible spits upholstery

 

like foam on waves. The West hangs

from the mirror like a dirty rabbit’s foot.

The sky looks lucky as a worm on a hook.

Bela Lugosi is buried here and so is Sharon Tate.

Smiling in sunglasses,

mourners take photographs

at a funeral.

 

I consider how taking pictures

of my cat in the sun

the day before he died

 

was and was not

like taking photographs

at a funeral.

Performance Art, Venice Beach

Mary, black-bobbed,

pomegranate-kneed

& once lovely, pops up

from inside a trash can

like a Jack-in-the-Box

yelling,

Women are trash! Women are trash!

 

Skin leatherbrown in the sun,

her teeth gleam

white as grains of rice

the Boardwalk huckster

inscribes with names

of tourists

who pay only

 

if they can watch.

I quote Mary

when I steal her bit

and put it in my show.

99-seat theatre doesn’t pay

            but whenever I see her,

I slip her 20 bucks.


Amy Raasch learned to drive in Detroit but has lived in Los Angeles for many years and is thus fluent in both automatic and stick shift. She makes up her own tunings on guitar, plays piano like a monkey at a typewriter and sounds pretty good on flute. She makes records, movies, theatrical multimedia shows and a damn fine banana bread. Her writing has appeared in The Los Angeles Times, The American Journal of Poetry, ANMLY, F(r)iction, and a pile of large black sketch books you are instructed to burn when she dies. She holds a BA from The University of Michigan and an MFA from Bennington Writing Seminars. amyraasch.com

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Wilson R. M. Taylor

Sixth Ave Slalom

I sidestep a sweating middle-aged man carrying skis

into UPS, hopscotch in and out of the gutter to escape

an Uber Eats e-bike doing thirty the wrong way.

Last week we went camping in Rhode Island,

ended up awake past midnight on rocky dirt, a man

in the next tent shouting into the phone about his stolen

 

Amazon package. Two workers in blue jumpsuits

plant a tree outside Trader Joe’s. The man in ragged black

always holding the door opens it and says, “God bless.”

 

I’ve never seen anyone give him change. I browse

the produce; I don’t buy him anything. On the sidewalk

on the way home, blue graffiti: SEA LEVEL 2050—

 

this island’s known for conquest. I put away

my frozen dinner. The onion I bought is rotten,

but I’m a good citizen: I’ll place it in the compost bin.


Family Farms, Cotswolds, UK

Walking the Monarch’s Way my parents and I learn

every manner by which to enter and exit a field:

kissing-gates, stiles, cattle guards, openings in hedges.

 

On our first day we emerge from the woods, crest

a slow, sweeping hill, and surprise the mothers

and their calves in the hollow on the other side.

 

“They’ll startle if you walk between them,” you say.

I inch closer for a picture. I’ve been waiting for the right

moment to tell you: “She’s moving in with me this fall.”

 

You’re silent as we leave the meadow, path indented

by old horseshoes. Maybe you’re thinking of my headlong

dash, hands in pockets, that cost me two front teeth.

 

That night, couples smile and dance in the pub window:

who they are, were, might be, all overlaid—and at their center,

glittering, a half-illuminated self. Tomorrow we’ll continue

 

this argument without speaking of it; I’ll point to

blackberry bushes dotting the slope, tart sweetness

between the bristles, “Should I pick some?” and you’ll say,

 

“I don’t think they’re ripe—not quite, not yet.”

Afterlife

The pool gleams, clean and skeletal;

fallen leaves fill black trash bags.

Tomorrow a man will add chlorine,

 

I’ll text my friends. We’ll jump into

the cool blue, capture our bodies

in midair, sky injected with sunlight—

 

my cigarette sheds dead galaxies

into the night. The screen goes

dark. Light lingers. We look out

 

for what outlasts, burn sand

to technicolor: a mirage

repeated on and off, immortal.


Wilson R. M. Taylor is a poet and writer living in New York City. His work appears in Chronogram, Every Day Fiction, an anthology from Wising Up Press, and a few other journals and magazines. He is a winner of the 2024 Alpine Fellowship Poetry Prize. For more, please visit https://wilsontaylor19.wixsite.com/wilsonrmtaylor.

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Caitlin Upshall

An Ode to Lost Girls

I want to write a poem for the girls who were never found. Who remain unnamed on 20/20

specials and live in the asterisks of Wikipedia pages. Who accepted a ride home and talked to

a stranger and went to a party or who took the long way home and spent time with friends

they trusted and never missed a family event. I want to take Megan’s law and give it a new

name every day until there are no names left, in lieu of flowers and in memory of empty

caskets.

For every documentary on a man called monster, we will plant a flower until a forest grows.

We will pick a day as anniversary and dig up plants under a bright sky, unearth roots that

have never touched a body. That is to say; I want to write a poem for the forests that cover

forgotten girls like blankets, like they’re still at home, like they were never taken, like they

will still be called by name tomorrow.

Coffee order on a Sunday morning 

Salted caramel macchiato with skim milk, always iced

because you stay skinnier that way. A lid fastened

tight like your lips, curved into one of five approved

expressions. You try feigning vulnerability without

smudging your lipstick.

 

“No pastry, thank you.” The sermon is on forgiveness

and you start the morning annoyed that you can taste coffee

in your drink. Ground beans are not ground enough,

the caramel sauce is stuck beneath ice. 

You can’t see the congregation when the music

starts. The spotlight blinds you like God’s love with

a click track. Your face is on four enormous screens, acne

and freckles buried beneath heavy concealer. 

 

“We are not a megachurch,” the pastor says,

“because we are more personal. More real.” 

 

“No straw.” You adjust your bible, careful to carry it with the

cover facing out. After the service, a woman you do not know

tells you to wear longer dresses so you do not distract her

husband while he worships. You write down notes for the

next spontaneous prayer and brush your hair in a toilet stall. 

“No, no straw,” you say again. “I brought my own.” Can you tell

I’m better than most other people? Can you tell me that I’m enough? 


Caitlin Upshall (she/her/hers) holds a B.A. in English from Western Washington University and is currently based in the United Kingdom. When she's not writing, she enjoys most things dinosaur-related and trivia nights. You can find her on Instagram at @CaitlinUpshall or at www.caitlinupshall.com.

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Anne Rankin

The Illusion of Finding the Therapeutic Dose

      If many remedies are prescribed for an illness, you may be certain the illness has no cure.

      —A. P. Chekhov, The Cherry Orchard

 

Too many weeks after the pills finally convinced me

to swallow, the meds begin to work:

My brain inhales

the flames of their mystery dance—

 

& music’s a Thing again. Birds singing

could be(?) spilling the secrets of Eden,

or something that golden.

I imagine bEEs knEE-dEEp

in the swollen dust of pollen. Foods persuade me

of their close resemblance to mann(aah). I get

how the day lilies prEEn for the sun,

listen hard for the sweet WOW-

ness in everything, ingest all

the hues I can muster. Whatever

can be gathered by way of perception

gleams & whist!les, is cool or s(of)t

to the touch—however I prefer to take it in.

Clouds find a way to leave, finally

see their EXIT→ signs.

I remember the reason not to say

why I always feel like dying.

 

But            all of this will be short-lived.

Doses will slowly be raised, yet

brain will fall,/fail

to understand the point

of rising. Bit by bit, colors will slip

loose from their textures,

& sounds begin to dim

their wits;

the only way to discern the world

is through a straw—

paper, of course.

Back to the bell jar again, forgetting

there was ever air available,

misplacing my motive to breathe.

 

                                                               Still,

the opening act is quite a thrill,

when happiness seems so doable,

& all my senses rise from their dead(end)ness,

my will to live drenched in the hopes

of the moon-fed dew, so relieved

to get to be without a clue

. . . what comes next.

 

On the Other Side of Blood

The blood I remember most is out-of-nowhere blood, the muddy feel of it

in my mouth that night the tornado smacked our house & spit

me out. The grass was gone—ripped up & replaced by a bloodied

field of stuff that didn’t belong. I was six. In shock. In the dark. The sky

raced to empty all the rain it held at once. My jaw tore away

from the leash of its bones & didn’t know why. Only seconds before,

 

I’d been standing warm & dry in the dining room, wondering

why the street lights had gone from on to dark. In the wounds

of weeks that followed, I mazed my way alone

through two surgeries & dozens of little roommates

fussed over by moms & dads who studied the crusted blood on my face

with a mixture of pity & forced cheer—while

my parents never came to see me after that first night.

 

That first night, all I knew was Something had moved me

from the dining room to this moment of blood,

sitting cold & wet in the front yard’s remains,

an ice-driven rain stitching clothes to my skin

as I gingerly moved my first two fingers

around the mess where my teeth used to be.

 

Later I realized what the blood was,

the hows & whys of its liquid scream.

That first night, I couldn’t tell you

what the blood tasted like—

I’d swallowed a river of fear.

As I watched myself outside myself,

 

waves of shock shook me into knowing

the grownup meaning of blood

& a bitter truth:

what had been ripped out

was Something More than

eight baby teeth.

 

Blood was a dream I was in.

On the other side of waking

was a storm I could not name.

Dog Gone Grief

After he died, my dog became

a completely different sort of person.

What his death unleashed

has left him rather low.

He sleeps more than ever before:

so tired his sighs collect and comprise

his only form of exercise.

Most days, you’ll find he’s kind

of glued to the floor (or

couch, as I’d never say No).

And he only jumps

up for meals, and rarely even

for those, since he eats less

than normal much so.

(But seems to weigh more?)

He looks over at his toys

like he doesn’t understand

something he used to

be able to know.

Plus that ball he adored,

the one for him alone

I’d happily, lovingly

throw and throw—

it just won’t let go.

 

Still growls at strangers, though.

He will always do that. 


Anne Rankin’s poems have appeared in The Healing Muse, Hole in the Head Review, Atlanta Review, Comstock Review, Whale Road Review, and Kelp Journal. She has work forthcoming in The Bluebird Word, kern, Boomer Lit Magazine, Rattle, and Maine Public Radio’s Poems from Here. She lives in Brunswick, Maine.

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Christian Hanz Lozada

Writing for the Mixed Race | At The End of The Dark Hallway

Writing for the Mixed Race


At The End of The Long Dark Hallway

is our craft room. When we bought the house,

Nani and I fought for it. She wanted it as the guest room,

and maybe, if God or some other source of miracles wills it,

the baby’s room. I wanted it for the craft room.

It has the biggest windows in the house,

its own glass entrance and all the natural light needed

to write, to paint, to build, to create everything but a child.

 

Six months into the house, and I’m the only one that uses

the room. I write poems like this one. And when I leave

the room, down the long dark hallway, towards the bathroom

I can see my silhouette in the mirror above the sink.

I’m all shadow, bald, and big almost shapeless, almost.

I think I’m seeing Colonel Kurtz in Apocalypse Now, haunted

by futility, mortality, and the unspoken definitions of impotence.

  


Christian Hanz Lozada is the son of an immigrant Filipino and a descendant of the Southern Confederacy. He knows the shape of hope and exclusion. He authored the poetry collection He’s a Color, Until He’s Not and co-authored Leave with More Than You Came With. His poems have appeared in journals from California to Australia with stops in Hawaii, Korea, and the United Kingdom. Christian has featured at the Autry Museum and Beyond Baroque. He lives in San Pedro, CA and uses his MFA to teach his neighbors and their kids at Los Angeles Harbor College.

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John Grey

May's Eternal Life | Our Nightly News, Conversation Style

May’s Eternal Life

So the time for death drew near,

the body imploding,

the head immersed in thirty years before,

but a sock needed mending,

the ceiling paint was peeling.

Someone had to do something.

Being dead was no help.

So wrinkled arthritic hands set to work

with needle and thread,

brush and can of paint.

The sock could be worn again.

The ceiling would look like new.

She finished the day exhausted,

seated at the kitchen table,

coughing up blood into a handkerchief.

She reckoned, surely, this must be it.

But then a handkerchief needed cleaning.

Our Nightly News, Conversation Style

So we start with the weather

but move quickly onto the stories of the day -

the Middle East, American politics, Wall Street.

 

Then we get on to the more personal -

my married life, your relationships.

 

And we typically end-up with sports -

the disappointments,

the optimism that will be more disappointments later.

 

To each other,

we’re the nightly news.

 

The only difference is

in the puff pieces.

Instead of a new baby panda

at the Washington Zoo,

I provide a brief update

on a new favorite restaurant.

In lieu of the Kardashians,

you bless me with

a minute or two

of someone called Angela.

 

And we don't break for commercials.

Just for another sip of beer…

more taste, less filling.

 

 


John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing, North Dakota Quarterly and Lost Pilots. Latest books, Between Two Fires, Covert and Memory Outside The Head are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in California Quarterly, Seventh Quarry, La Presa and Doubly Mad.

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Trish Hopkinson

Aftermath ~ 48 Hours | Intensive Care | To My Unconscious Son |Back to Life

Aftermath: ~48 Hours

The hallways stink of chemical

cleansers & bleach, too bright,

brighter than the dim rooms

where vampires fill tubes with your blood

 

every four hours. I write

on the whiteboard: 4am blood test.

I write it in red. They take your blood

to a lab before they taste it. They season it

 

with salt for flavor—your sodium 

entirely too low, your glands wrecked,

knocked senseless by pavement.

The nurses are confused. They think

 

you’re the monster. I think they are

Annie Wilkes. They tether your feet

to the bed & Velcro your wrists to rails

to keep you from pulling

 

staples out of your head

with your fingernails. They think

your chipped black nail polish means

you’re an angry young man.

 

They ask: Is he an angry young man?

I scream in my head: No, he’s a peaceful vegan.

The scream pounds the walls

of my skull with your fists.

 

Your head aches when Nurse Wilkes

is late. It hurts so much you cry.

I write it in red. I write the type

& time: Tylenol: 6am, 12pm, 6pm, 12am

 

Oxycodone: 8am, 12pm, 4pm, 8pm, 12am

Shift change: 7am / Doctors rounds: 9am

All must go on the whiteboard. All

staff names must be spelled correctly.

 

I fold down the back cushions

on the sofa & lie here

while you are still. Scrubs walk by

pushing a cart. I look at the clock:

 

4:13am. I look at the whiteboard.

A couple of hours before Tylenol,

I roll to my side & cover my feet,

close my eyes, look at the clock

 

& whiteboard. Scrubs walk by

without a cart. Machines hum.

Something beeps. I close

my eyes, look at the red.


Intensive Care

IV might fail     heart rate might lower     aide might be late for their shift     man next door with whom you share a nurse      might go into cardiac arrest      just before your medication is due     you might wake up angry     you might wake frightened     you might not          I might stand bedside      monitoring every machine   listening in on the staff   making sure    to make sure      breaks           are important     I’m sure    I ate quickly in the cafeteria   I’m sure my panic remained     what if what might happen is preventable    what if    I’m the one to prevent it     press the call button      ask a question      insist on another scan     something as simple      as walking five minutes away     some small luxury becomes        the split second shim      between life      & letting it slip

 

To My Unconscious Son

Is it wrong for me

to be grateful your face is unharmed?

You, laid out on a tilted hospital bed.

Me, not knowing where your mind is now

—if you are at all, if you will wake.

 

Your body will heal

if your brain does—the brace holding

your neck, mattress supporting your fractured

vertebrae and pelvis, pillow indented

where your skull has been sewn and stapled.

 

I’m selfish

in this moment, relieved even, that I can see

your calm expression without visible injury.

If someone saw you now, they’d think

you were sleeping; they’d not know

 

the peril your body is in,

wouldn’t know you aren’t dreaming—or are you?

Will you be able to tell me what you are thinking

if you are thinking at all in these hours

of absence from the living?

 

I didn’t know whom

to call this morning—extended family,

close friends. I know I should be telling someone

where we are, what has happened.

But I just want to wait—

 

I somehow don’t think

about the chance you may not be the same,

that the last time we spoke will have been

the last time. No, my imagination

won’t let me wander to the worst.

 

There seems no possibility

for any other outcome. I don’t stop

looking at you, your skin still warm, without

the paleness of one who is dying—somehow

that’s enough to let me know

 

here in this room

with the clock clicking and scent of disinfectant

—a mother and son alone but for the hum

of machines and shuffling of strangers

on the other side of the door and

 

the sunrise edging in.


Back to Life

You buy your first bicycle since the pickup truck assault.                    

It’s matte black, the color of asphalt.

You name it Deathwish.

I wish you’d named it Unridden.

You post photos of you standing beside it,

helmet on your head, six months healed.

Your sense of humor still intact.                        Mine, not so much.

I tell myself, your odds are better now.         But odds

are not the same as probability.           The risk

    of being killed skydiving

is one in a hundred thousand.

    Dying in a car? Fifteen times more likely

                          than on a bike.

What are the statistics

          for outliving one’s children?

   In 2015, there were 818 bicyclist deaths—

almost 819, still

     less than 2% of traffic fatalities

               but not less than the number of times

       I feared

         you wouldn’t make it home.

How many breaths     did it take           to revive you?

How many pumps on                     your chest?

Some stranger’s palm thrusting                        into your ribs,

their lifeline drawing                         your line of fate.

I’m relieved you can’t recognize

   the one who saved you,

      don’t remember

     your body tossed into the air        like a coin on a bet.

Note: These poems were previously published in A Godless Ascends (Lithic Press, 2024)


Trish Hopkinson is a poet and advocate for the literary arts. You can find her online at SelfishPoet.com and in western Colorado where she runs the regional poetry group Rock Canyon Poets and is a board member of the International Women's Writing Guild. Her poetry has been published in Sugar House Review, TAB: The Journal of Poetry & Poetics, and The Penn Review; and her most recent book, A Godless Ascends, is forthcoming from Lithic Press in March 2024. Hopkinson happily answers to labels such as atheist, feminist, and empty nester; and enjoys traveling, live music, and craft beer.

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D Larissa Peters

Specifics | Seeds

Specifics

 I remember everything and nothing,

when my brother died.

 

I couldn’t keep track of the outside world, but I know

just how the chain of the swing felt—cold against my bare leg,

shorts too short for January.

 

I remember the smell of metal, covering over

the smell of hospital clean mixed with gravy and stale urine.

 

Every heart disaster after followed this pattern … a friendship lost

re-enters consciousness with the berry flavor of sangria, a melody

threading through my meal, my break ups

 

marked by the soft peripheral rustle, crisp dried rose petals

hanging upside down on the side of my fridge

 

crunching every time I lean against the counter. Everything but nothing

at all of importance reminds me in the crack of the moments of my years.

 

Seeds

You’re my dandelion wish—on a hot

summer’s day, lawn mower buzzing —

coughing bright yellow spots,

foggy billows on stems

 

I used to wish for a million dollars

because I knew someone like you

would never come along.


D Larissa Peters grew up in Indonesia and has been somewhat of a nomad. After meandering around the East Coast for more than 10 years, she now resides in California. Her recent published poems have appeared in Blue Villa, Honey Guide Magazine, Suspended Magazine alongside a few forthcoming pieces elsewhere.

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Christina Ruotolo

Triggers | Holding on to letting go

Holding on to letting go

The buzz

cold against

your tender skull

salt and pepper

filaments

            fall

the last time roots

will know a home

strands

            dance

                        fly

silently to the floor

you scoop a handful

in your tired palms

seal the bundle

in a plastic sandwich bag

            fast forward

ten years after cancer

            ravaged you

the bags remains

            unopened

            sealed

            hidden

in a safe deposit box

held hostage by me

            I pray

the smell of you

remains inside

eventually

I’ll set your strands

            free

and one day

your scent

the heart of you

will bring me back to life.

  

Triggers

The mind never forgets…

infant blood poisoned

with a mother’s addiction

smell of 80s hairspray

half-empty Dr. Pepper bottles

fifth of vodka nestled

under her pillow

a forensic, glazed stare

anything but motherly

strawberry blond hairs

on the back of a couch

she’s passed out on

as your feel the lighter

between three year-old fingers

the spark, Matchbox car

flaming down the plastic track

carpet burning, then smoke

you creep out the back door

afraid to wake her

addiction shouldering

the night you slept in

the backseat of a car

in an alley after a drug deal

windows steamed up

tracing circles on the glass

the loaded shotgun

pointed at your chest

as you try to save her

from another man’s wrath

the trip to the mall at fifteen

an argument over a gold chain

you learned to drive on I-95

addiction passed out behind you

the mind never forgets

images, baggage, smells

building, growing wild

until one day you

take your first sip too

triggers washed away

seeds planted

watered as you welcome

addiction home.


Christina Ruotolo is a poet, creative writing instructor and editor of Her Magazine. She was shortlisted for the 2019 James Applewhite Poetry award, runner-up for the Heart of the Pamlico Poet Laureate in 2021 and a long list finalist for the 2023 Fish International Poetry Award. She is author of the poetry collection, The Butterfly Net and the nonfiction book, The Day the Earth Moved Haiti. Her poetry and nonfiction have appeared in Wednesday Night Poetry, Petigru Review, NC Bards Poetry Journal, Gyroscope Review, Heron Clan, and various other magazines and journals.

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Joan Mazza

Vessels | Your Notebook Will Never Leave You

Vessels

 Crystal and ceramic bowls filled

with lemons and oranges, one avocado

shouting, Now! Hand-painted, Polish

 

pottery bowls with Romaine leaves

in a bouquet of green inside a pattern

of blue swirls. An inlaid vase

 

with Capodimonte porcelain blooms.

Yard sale vases sold for fifty cents,

Mason jars overflowing wildflowers.

 

Teacups, jelly glasses, watering cans,

pots for boiling pasta, Dutch ovens

loaded with cucumbers, zucchini, ripe

 

tomatoes, red, green, and orange peppers.

Buckets of rainbow chard and samposai.

Let every container be filled with color

 

and perfect plants at their peak. Let

no stomach go empty. Let every heart

swell with joy like mosses after rain.


Your Notebook Will Never Leave You

I study the notebooks of the famous,

how they thought on paper with drawings,

diagrams, sketches from different views,

how they captured three dimensions

with shadows, labeled the parts. I wish

 

I could read Leonardo’s mirror script

in Fifteenth Century Italian. I wish

I could learn his quirks of penmanship

and idiom, the slang of the day, wish

to cultivate some of his flamboyant style,

 

his dogged curiosity to ask questions

and come back to them again and again

in writing to find what was right. I’d like

his patience with observation, the ability

to watch how the wings of dragonflies

 

on my pond move, the wings of a phoebe

when it catches an insect for its nestlings.

Let me make notes and to-do lists with

my final breath. His last notebook ends

with geometric shapes as he puzzled

 

over rectangles. These musings fizzle out.

He writes he must stop now

because the soup is getting cold.


Joan Mazza has worked as a medical microbiologist, psychotherapist, and taught workshops on understanding dreams and nightmares. She is the author of six psychology books, including Dreaming Your Real Self, and her poetry has appeared in Atlanta Review, Prairie Schooner, The Comstock Review, Poet Lore, Slant, Italian Americana, and The Nation. She lives in rural central Virginia.

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elizabeth iannaci

Talking with the Whale | Love--A Tattoo on the Lining of the Heart

Talking with the Whale

Would you look into her eye, ask

if  Melville got it right: that a fist

full of spermaceti cleanses you

of rage, the need for revenge?  Is that

why whales are so forgiving:

 

corset & collar stays 

hooped skirts 

fishing rods

carriage springs

soap

varnish

afternoon-tea spoons

buggy whips

piano keys

baby teethers

typewriter springs

chess pieces

handles of walking sticks

rejuvenating cosmetics

oil for a bright, clear flame

 

all forgiven? Would you stand hoping

she sees that you want, more than breath,

to lean your whole self against her,

the timpani in your chest hammering

her wetsuit-slick skin.  Might she

generously humor you, let you gentle

what you think is the spooked mare

of her, or would she turn as slowly

as she could (to not damage you)

dive away, slapping the water white

with the handlebars of her tail?

Love—A Tattoo on the Lining of the Heart

Step One

Someone said      you, mine      someone left a mark,

At first, a soot-covered thread pulled through the skin,

by a sliver of polished bone,

a pin, a ballpoint pen,             and a guy’s initials,

a wing emerging from a red center,      a love,  a dove,

then a claw holding a scrolled Lola,

a big cat crafted, sand-colored, nestled

in the small of a back, a serpent over a shoulder,

vining up the curve of neck, lost in a shag

of hair. After some years you come

to understand it was the wrong tiger,

not your Celtic knot, a stranger’s

cursive initial in the center of a Valentine.

 

Step Two

To fade the tattoo, try rubbing a salt solution

into it. Scrape away or sand down the skin.

Freeze- burn the area with liquid nitrogen.

Laser-removal may feel as though you’re being pelted,

with hot grease, sound like bacon frying.

Throw kerosene on it and light a match.

 

When it heals, the tattoo should be gone,                

but       there may be scars. Fluorescent colors—

purples, greens are nearly impossible to be rid of—

the bigger,      brighter,          the harder to erase.

 

Step Three

When the scars settle, the skin

faded enough, think hard,

take measurements, dig deep,

make drawings. Start with black & white;

add colors: burnt sienna, naranja, scarlet.

when you get the image exactly right,

set the paper on fire

over the bathroom sink. Use the ashes

to smear a charcoal shadow

from the canthus edge upward

above the lid, deepening

your eyes’ natural hollow.


Widely published and anthologized, elizabeth iannaci shares a birthday with Red China, Julie Andrews, Jimmy Carter and the anniversary of Roger Maris’s 61st home run. Raised in Southern California, she’s never been on a surfboard. She once hitchhiked from California to Florida with her then husband, along the way getting a ride from a geezer who hocked his teeth for bottle of whiskey. Elizabeth has worn various diverse hats from chicken wrangler to Music Industry publicist, to Marilyn Monroe look-alike. She holds an MFA in Poetry from VCFA and still writes letters on paper that are delivered by humans.

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Andrea Penner

May It Please Superior Court | The Writer's Asana

May It Please Superior Court

Their favorite color is blue.

Eyes, soft as a lazuli bunting.

Blue, like the mountains of Santa Cruz

on late evening drives, blue

highway wending down through

redwood forests to the green-

blue sea. Watery sky, sublime

Paris blue. Fluid boundary

birthing ocean, cloud.

California blue, they tell you. Indigo,

sung by midnight saxes, transposed

sapphires. You know—piano vibes.

Not your seventies’ Joni album Blue.

A stripe of harmony in rainbow

flags—fly yours! Androgynous, like

spiky hair, bubblegum, and recycled 501s.

Non-binary blue, eighteen candles tall,

legal birthday, turquoise pride takes the cake.

Petition granted. Their name is Blue.

The Writer’s Asana

I write

short

            loose lines

 

because my hand goes numb

if I grip

            too tightly

or type for too long.

 

I write in snapshots

because my mind

photographs

its memories

for Anne Lamott’s

one-inch picture

frame that holds only

so much color, line

and shadow.

 

I write myself

into a corner

with nowhere

else to go but

there

where

I must stay

until I write

myself out

again

 

again because

out of things to say

or else to go nowhere

but there

here.

 

I write beneath the flannel night

and into the denim pocket of the afternoon.

 

I write

sideways in my journal

pen poised with an unquiet mind in child’s pose.


Andrea Penner lives in New Mexico where she serves up poetry and creative non-fiction on In Our Own Ink. Her poetry appears most recently in Neologism, Sky Island Journal, and Flora/Fauna (Open Shutter). Her second book, Rabbit Sun, Lotus Moon (Mercury HeartLink, 2017), was a poetry finalist for an Arizona/New Mexico book award. Once upon a time, she was a college professor. Before that, well, that’s another story, the stuff of her memoir-in-progress, which she aspires to write with clarity and grace.

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Mark J. Mitchell

Notes on Tea from the Drowned City | Parable of the Apples

Notes on Tea From the Drowned City

Beyond the walls, low rolling hills

grow yellow blooms. Come Fall, they went

vermillion, ready. Plucked by hand

on half-moon nights, young girls would sort

the perfect flowers, making tea.

The only tea the great ones drink

 

On the back of the hill

there are brown and green leaves.

The small girls stoop to pick

only choicest, the soft

supple ones, to take home

to their mothers for their tea.

A Parable of Apples

She drops

green-gold fruit

to slow down

running children.

“Soft for cider,”

she calls,

“firm ones

for school pies.”

Then she takes

her first step

up her leaning

ladder and plucks red.

Before dropping

a full sack

to the boy below,

she looks up.

Shining red and

and perfect, she stretches.

Is this sin?

Her bite’s quick and sharp.


Mark J. Mitchell has been a working poet for 50 years. He’s the author of five full-length collections, and six chapbooks. His latest collection is Something To Be from Pski’s Porch Publishing. A novel, A Book of Lost Songs, is due out in 2025.He’s fond of baseball, Louis Aragon, Dante, and his wife, activist Joan Juster. He lives in San Francisco. Find him on TwitterFacebook, or his website.

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David Sheskin

Oh Yes, There Were Casualties | Psychiatric Parable

Oh Yes, There Were Casualties

Perusing the morning paper I come upon the fact that as

Miss Patty Perkins read a story to her Second Grade Class

From the quaint little book Master Peter Potter had brought to school

A Ferocious Fire Breathing Dragon suddenly leaped out of Page 4

Admittedly Chaos ensued for some time

Before the Blazing Beast was Humanely Subdued

By two fine Officers of the Law

Oh Yes, there were Casualties

Miss Perkins sustained Second Degree Burns

Principal Danny Dotts lost the tip of his Once Fine Nose

And a Nurse Becky Bortwine is still mourning the loss of her Pinky Finger

As for the Children

They all have Nightmares

The Dastardly Dragon has been transported to a place called Animal Land

 A Sanctuary of Sorts

Where it shares Food and Air with a menagerie of assorted Irascible Four-Legged Misfits

A Nasty Hippopotamus, a Sadistic Rhinoceros, a Vulgar Skunk, a Choleric Porcupine

To name a few

Rumor has it that in the not too distant future

Miss Perkins will take her little charges to visit

The poor Beast and his New Coterie of Friends

Because she is of the opinion that a Person

Even one who is Little and Brittle

 Should make Peace with

Those Afflictions and Challenges

Life sees fit to Impose upon us

Psychiatric Parable

It was once believed

The Only Way

To cure Madness

Was to Harness a Poor Soul

With arms outstretched

In a Standing Position

Firmly Bound

To a Wooden Cross

For a full a day and a half

During which time

At alternate hours

One would be assaulted

With

Boiling Water

And

Assorted Vermin

History has recorded that if by chance

A Body had the Good Fortune

To Survive such an

Exercise

No longer would the Patient

Exhibit

Delirious Outbursts

And once lowered to the ground

Upon awakening from a

Long and Peaceful Sleep

One would be a

Model of Restraint

And from that Point on be

An Ardent Disciple of

Cure by Crucifixion


David Sheskin is a writer and artist whose work has appeared in numerous magazines over the years. Most recently he has appeared in Superstition Review, The Dalhousie Review, Quarterly West and Chicago Quarterly Review.  His most recent books are David Sheskin’s Cabinet of Curiosities and Outrageous Wedding Announcements.

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Tom Barwell

imagination announces itself | slate rooves in scottish rain

imagination announces itself

to end,

there is sufficient question

to spiral a snail;

leave the blind men to stare at

the strewn stones,

mooncast in cold blue,

until they topple and multiply.

trees reign over these craggy silhouettes,

ancient brothers named for monks,

towering vespers in

cathedrals, fingertips into

the vault itself.

a stillness watches,

a depthless bath,

where no apple could

dare to fall

and risk disgrace.

our silent psalm ushers the

bowed heads of snowdrops,

a chorus fruited by

a far-off owl, so attuned to her note,

even breath enters the crypt.

a fox’s bark

prickles back the cool air,

places her own blade

through the sternum of this

wordless imagination,

and the grey trumpets of daffodils

dip their bonnets

in the echo.

the lowly herbivore in my

palm wears a cracked

galaxy upon

her back like a telescope

from childhood. i place her

on the damp grass

for the next eternity,

the stark waves ebbing through

distant fields.

the slip of my shadow rings

on a stone floor like a terrible bell,

and from gemini rafters

the barn owl returns, summoned

on silent wings by the spell

that feeds her young.

slate rooves in scottish rain

an orchestra of fingernails

tap out a stone piece

on 400 million year old knuckles –

 

this rain has lasted

longer than that.

 

conjoined storms, head

to head to head, rushing

sea-monster of a thousand eyes,

holds out ten thousand frozen,

atlantic talons to

slash these unflinching few houses,

november to october.

 

but we, pale-aged cavers,

are warmed to our hearts by

such welcome, savage percussion, as

if it were our hearth:

otherwise lit by a pecuniary

photon once a month,

the beat of beaten claws is

familiar evidence of

this firmly anchored world.

 

bearded green, lichen tree-topped,

and trousered with a thousand mosses,

our blue veins wriggle with the

confidence of teeming streams,

plume skin-born clouds to

meet the great recycler,

tame as a toothed fossil,

shut out by a finger’s snap.

 

i picture ferns sheltering insects,

i picture a billion beetle wings, iridescence

shading layers of thick deer hides, bracken

scented, every bark and oil you might

infuse, distilled like malt whisky,

millennium blend, thicker than tar.

 

i raise a toast of tongues, these

fine rocks spun by a spinning sun –

shield, skin, father, drum,

tuned in perfect time.


Tom Barwell is an English poet, who is also recently published in Poetica Review. He’s a perennial student of nature and human nature, and works as a psychotherapist and coach. He lives by a creek, which feeds him his best lines.

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Jim Stewart

Air Quality Index | I Have Seen a Billion Universes

Air Quality Index

The sky's been blit with the color

of an LCD screen streaming cheap CGI,

the scary half of a Marvel movie poster,

or the kind of show we would put between us

to pretend we could share the couch

One would like certain words adjacent

if the space has enough dimensions, as in

I like to play with my pet blank.

I do. But the beagle terrier cross and the tabby

don't bother to fight anymore. I picture the car closer

to the black & white piebald sleeping in the walk in closet.

A dot product gives a sense

of nearness when plotted, and though

we've been distant before, I fear

we'll be shown orthogonal. And in different quadrants

distance stops having meaning. Sequoia smoke

from Nova Scotia settles over the estuary. The skyline

is a cloud mirage castle.

I know this smell; was it five, ten years ago

when northern California burned, or was it the time

we had to evacuate the house in Oregon?

Now, is there anything left but shared accounts?

A bunch of semi-random strings I invented

when passwords could be easy to remember

enshrined in our story like secret sacred mantras?

Even that costs money now. The channel's

new terms of service call us out

on our pretense we are a unit.

I'd imagined an experimental way to tell this,

a 2d plot or nodes with edges.

But I was scared to write it at all.

The last time I put you in a poem

there was a ring in the box. Now I must tell you

it's in there again. Hasn't every generation

said the end was just a little further down the gradient?

And weren't they always right?

I have seen a billion universes

They're all the same. Every time

the ice dam broke in Utah, floods

swept out the Columbia River Valley, left

acres of vineyards, that eternal

Taco Bell on the corner of Rand.

Every time the elms in Yale Park

dropped papery seedling discs, sap-stuck

to windshields, piled on curbs until

they tore the park out for the bookstore. You think

my choice of major, your first kiss, rose

to the collapse of the spin of some pixel flash

entangled to a CRT showing

some late episode of Gilligan's Island?

 

A billion times I was born into this

simulation, same seed every load. Every time

that elevator to the 7 at Grand Central breaks.

Every time the white horse serves cheap

tonic, haddock shiny with grease. If you look

close enough, they say, you should see

the shortcuts, misplaced voxels, lazy-

loading truth waiting till you bother to ask. They can't

find it. No one has the cheat codes. You think

if you load a new map it'll play any better?

 

I've watched this season a billion times, dishes

piled in the sink, back door open for the cats. Every time

they closed the ferry dock by the KAWS Mickeys. Every time

the waterfront towers devour the sky bite by bite. It always

ends this way. You think the next binge you'll want

to sit here all the way through? Every time

it ends this way. Every time we fall in love. Every time

we hurt each other till the show's canceled. I don't

need to watch it again. I know I will.


Jim Stewart has been published or has poems forthcoming in In Company, New Mexico Poets after 1970, Liminality, Rattapallax, Passengers Journal, The City Key, and the Moonstone Arts Center's Ekphrastic Poetry anthology. He co-edited and designed Saint Elizabeth Street magazine and hinenimagazine.com. He teaches programming and logic in New York.

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