
poetry
directions from a seagull to its preferred Scandinavian beach
a poem by Aurora Lee Passin
by Aurora Lee Passin
It’s the right spot
when your body folds out of flight
when your feet scrabble on scree.
It should be midday
in August when sun fills sky like a flash that won’t end
high above old stone wall that circles the entire.
In front of you
spread out in metal and slate
is Balticsea trembling with summerfish.
Aurora Lee Passin is a middle-aged queer poet who explores nature and her long-term chronic illness through poetry.
2 poems
by Diane Webster
by Diane Webster
stairs startled
The flight of stairs flees
upward, downward
curves left, darts right…
a maze runner
direction challenged
in a stairwell deep
within swells of walls;
bursts through the doorway
like a flock of seagulls
startled by seashore surf.
yarn chaos
Chaos, a ball of yarn
attacked by a kitten
stringing threads
behind the couch,
flinging color
over the kitchen chair,
plopping a shrinking
ball to rest in the recliner
before flipping it
across the room
to bang
into someone’s head.
Diane Webster’s work has appeared in Old Red Kimono, North Dakota Quarterly, New English Review, Studio One and other literary magazines. She had micro-chaps published by Origami Poetry Press in 2022, 2023 and 2024. Diane has been nominated for Best of the Net and a Pushcart. She was a featured writer in Macrame Literary Journal and WestWard Quarterly. Her website is: www.dianewebster.com
conversations after hours
a poem by Julia Lombardo
by Julia Lombardo
let me clock out before we get into this
same difference
san francisco, LA
i forgot that was her name
have you ever thought
about becoming a therapist?
my mom still calls it a phase
you know you don’t have to wait
they probably just don’t know
what else to say
isn’t it cool how tiny,
tiny snowflakes can hold
such an intricate shape?
it’s good to let it out
you should tell them goodbye
you probably don’t know what those words mean
but don’t forget to have fun
once it happens,
i’ll buy you a cake
i want to write him a note
it’s just something you shouldn’t say
i wouldn’t say no
if he ever asked me
we knew we were in love
i think it’s just the way i was raised
i want to make it home
to watch the game
this job is my way to save
i want to get better
but i don’t have him to talk to anymore
i just don’t want
my kids to feel afraid
it’s still too early to know
the future’s so far away
i won’t keep you late
i bet you’re getting cold
it’s just been hard these days
can you believe it got that busy?
i swear i’m always going to be
stuck
at this place
i’ll take the towels out on the way.
Julia Lombardo is a full-time magazine editor always finding ways to keep up with her creative writing endeavors. She has numerous poems published across Mosaic Magazine, Short Vine Journal, Hog Creek Hardin Literary Journal, and Backwards Trajectory. She enjoys reading YA fiction, going to concerts, ranking coffee shops, and walking aimlessly through wooded trails.
Ophelia
a poem by Meghan Malachi
by Meghan Malachi
I’ve optioned to die towards the sky.
What I leave: a building, hot mouth.
See it: a rose at the hem of agency.
Tell it: We lived to bedeck the life of a hundred humdrum men.
I’m the heroine. I’m the heroine.
I won’t be left to hold love’s screeching child.
They’ll position me somewhere between holy and unholy.
All I wanted: to flirt with mud and beauty.
Unhitch my lace from the offshoot.
You’ve learned to break language because of me —
you owe me this much.
Meghan Malachi is a poet and educator from the South Bronx, New York. She is the first-place winner of the Spoon River Poetry Review 2022 Editor's Prize Contest and a 2022 Pushcart Prize Nominee. Her first chapbook, The Autodidact, was published by Ethel Zine & Micro Press.
attention deficit
a poem by Eugenia Pozas
by Eugenia Pozas
My memory works a little like
when you throw a pebble and it creates
tiny, perfect ripples across the lake,
diluting in acrylic colors across white landscapes,
spilled mercury, and leaving at least three used coffee mugs
in an empty room.
And maybe that’s why I love fairies,
their tempers and their schemes, so ephemeral,
so manic, so quick to forget, sweet one moment
and malevolent the next.
The palm of the mirror returns my swirling,
awake eyes to me, and I fall, asking myself
if I’ve been here for a few seconds or more.
In the ice cream parlor, you joke,
remember when I broke your heart?
I nod and smile to please you but my glance
is already on the sunlight pooling on the sidewalk,
lighting my hair on fire.
I touch my golden necklace, my favorite.
A stray cat curls up on my lap.
I already forgot about you.
Eugenia Pozas is a bilingual writer based in Monterrey, Mexico. Her first poetry collection in Spanish - Náufragos (Castaways) - was published in 2022 with 42 Líneas. Her poetry has been published or is forthcoming in Dust Poetry Magazine, Stone Circle Review, The Basilisk Tree, Kaleidotrope, Sontag Mag, and Crowstep Journal. You can find her on Instagram and X as @eugepozas.
the winter
a poem by Ela Begum Kumcuoglu
by Ela Begum Kumcuoglu
Comes again, and again, again, I feel
So inexpressible, so tiny.
She whispers, snuggles in.
All the bright and beautiful things are asleep.
The year shrivels up and sheds.
Geese flock in time, drawing new winds
To their pinions. On a fresher morning
There is even snow, thick enough to cover it all.
Ela Begum Kumcuoglu is a Turkish writer and student living in London, published or soon to be published in Wildscape Literary; Obsessed with Pipework; the Genre Society; and Moonday Magazine.
survival is at the end of most things
a poem by Alina Kalontarov
by Alina Kalontarov
The Big Bang is for the believers.
I’ve swirled around in nothingness long enough
to know that change comes for you
in small, imperceptible increments.
Our hearts made a fragile clatter when they met,
like two sets of creped butterfly wings
pinned against the wall,
a willful abandon of flight.
I used to study your hands
and wonder on what mountain
those rivered veins were forged,
into what ocean would they empty.
You used to watch my mouth when I spoke,
lips like feral peonies
curling in convulsions of poetry.
You didn’t know it then,
how stale the language gets
beneath the tongue.
How even happiness can curdle
when left out too long.
We didn’t know that romance was
a coward’s enterprise,
that it takes nothing to blush a loin
into submission.
All that, and along came a wind,
laughing at our convictions.
We set down all our minor risks
like discarded parables on a green street bench.
It’s true. Even soft things can grow scales in the dark.
Even the past moves on without you.
Even so, I wonder where you are.
I’m still here, wintering in the violet sun,
returning my body to its sadness.
Everything feels over,
and there’s so much living left to do.
Alina Kalontarov is a Humanities teacher in New York City. Poetry and photography have always been a way for her to rummage through the unspoken and unseen spaces in the world. Some of her work lives in Sky Island Journal, Thimble Literary Magazine, and in a forthcoming anthology, Words Apart: A Globe of Literature.
poem in which I’m not sorry
by Julia Enns
by Julia Enns
The eggshells that I used to walk on
Have been shredded down to a fine powder
Something of sand that I will sink my toes in
With ease, I will no longer apologize
For things that I intended
Like saying my name
In that volume
In that way
Out loud
To the mirror
To your face
Those things will not cut me anymore
Into an existence of hypervigilance
They are seashells, not shards
And when I bring them to my ears
I no longer hear complaints of shame
I hear waves crashing
Bringing me back to shore
Julia Enns is a 22-year-old poet from Montreal. She studies anthropology, rock climbs and has trouble giving titles to her work.
the siphon era
a poem by KG Newman
by KG Newman
Our house with creaking butterfly doors
and what can’t be fixed with a wrench.
Mummies smiling behind the cloth.
Floats of us punctured on the one
streetlight that doesn’t flicker. Field
of abandoned silos to which only
unlost birds return in winter.
CapriSun straw wrappers scattered
everywhere we step. Remember how
we had something to pray for.
We’d sit around the nicked kitchen table
saying the names of flowers we know.
Daisy. Chrysanthemum. Dahlia to
remind us of when charred forests
braved storms, and we built stadiums
we didn’t need nor could afford,
just to sit in premium seats and
watch fireflies resurrect themselves.
KG Newman is a sportswriter for The Denver Post. His first five poetry collections are available on Amazon and he has been published in scores of literary journals worldwide. The Arizona State University alum is on Twitter @KyleNewmanDP and more info and writing can be found at kgnewman.com. He is the poetry editor of Hidden Peak Press and he lives in Hidden Village, Colorado, with his wife and three kids.
dinner’s tough tonight
a poem by Ashley Kirkland
by Ashley Kirkland
The younger one asks
if war will happen
here & if we’ll get old,
spaghetti sauce smeared
on his cheeks. He means here
as in Ohio & it’s hard to say
what he means by old. My husband
takes the first question, answers
with something about being
in the middle, something
like, who would bother? I take
the second.We all get old, I say
and it makes me sad to lie
more, knowing it’s not true: not
everyone gets to grow old.
We all get old? he says, and I say it
again with resolution: We all
get old. I try to picture him
then as an old man, even though
he’s so small right now,
and me, long gone. I run
my hand over his peach
of a noggin – a baby-soft,
summer buzz. I want him to live
until he’s old, and then
some, but also, to never know
life without me, the sadness
of being motherless, like
losing a limb. I cut
a meatball in half and slide
it to the side, mouth
a piece of gristle to the tip
of my tongue.
Ashley Kirkland writes in Ohio where she lives with her husband and sons. Her work can be found in Cordella Press, boats against the current, The Citron Review, Naugatuck River Review, HAD, Major7thMagazine, among others. Her chapbook, BRUISED MOTHER, is available from Boats Against the Current. She is a poetry editor for 3Elements Literary Review. You can find her at lashleykirkland.bsky.social and lashleykirklandwriter on Instagram.
airless satellite
a poem by Robin Elise Hamilton
by Robin Elise Hamilton
Blackstrap sad tortoiseshell rover
me and me walking alone
No sun at night and moreover
no one for me in me phone
No one gone sing out a glad tune
left their love far behind me
Slog the daft side of the mad moon
me and me melancholy
Memory me cannot forget
burning so deep in this sand
Bailing with bucket of regret
ash of last wave of your hand
Robin Elise Hamilton (she/her) is a recently-septuagenarian, recently-out queer trans woman recently-returned to writing poetry after a half-century offstage in live performance.
harebell
a poem by Simon Ravenscroft
by Simon Ravenscroft
Find me under a pile of old leaves then
pretending not to feel this
or pretending there could be a way
to have you as if in parentheses
within the sentences of life
you would be a flowering or something
and when you look at me with that globe look
and hesitate on the edge
and all is washed bare
we would be free briefly as the breeze
making its way around the crust
of this whole earth
in its chalk whiteness
a sudden blueness
sans thorn
Simon Ravenscroft lives in Cambridge, England. His work has recently been published in Meniscus, Trampoline, Red Ogre Review, The Alchemy Spoon, Swifts & Slows, JAKE, Ink Sweat & Tears, and other places. He is a Fellow of Magdalene College at the University of Cambridge.
first frost
a poem by John T. Howard
by John T. Howard
On the radio Among the stars some
one said to think of this earth we call
home: a planet bound by fire & fury.
My planet is small these days: dank
steps down to a basement apartment
with mornings in & mornings out
before sunrise. The old dog ash-eyed
& blind sleeps alone, moves on hinges
tender, limping. So that I now wonder
which death I will have to summon
strength for soonest: that of the dog
or for the loss of one of my parents.
My father ages & refuses to speak
on the subject of death. My mother
without her teeth in seems skeletal.
The sky cold & clear & full of small
stabbings. Blanket of night punctured
by a full moon as close to the earth
as the earth will allow. The shrubs
glisten with a frosted-over white caul
of frozen dew. It is now mid-October.
In a few weeks November. Someone
will win an election. Others will not.
The dog may be dead. A parent too.
This body falls farther into age along
side a daughter whose smallness now
grows larger. With this worries surge.
Winter will come & go. Then come
& go again & again & again & again.
A first frost is not a first. It never is.
John T. Howard is a Colombian American writer, translator, and educator. He has served as Writer-in-Residence at Wellspring House Retreat and holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Indiana University. His poetry can be found at Salamander, Notre Dame Review, PANK Magazine, The South Carolina Review, Hayden's Ferry Review, and elsewhere; he was recently nominated for a Pushcart Prize for poetry found in Posit. His creative nonfiction is published with The Cincinnati Review. He resides in the greater Boston area with his daughter and teaches writing at Tufts University.
instructions for becoming a captain
a poem by Vevna Forrow
by Vevna Forrow
twizzler tie your black sea hair back
tuck in a weather balloon sweater cap
helicopter pencil on a cookie cutter moustache
swap your foam beer for whoopie cushion water
[concealed in a sunchoked crumpler paper lunch bag]
wear an XL denim jacket & 9 ½ Nordvik boots
net laugh with the guys [net laugh at the guys]
even when the sinking crabby patty jokes make zero stinking sense
paspatou steer the wheel [blindfolded]
pluto pretend you’re the only one in a fish suit onboard
and voyager whisper to yourself aloud:
this is my deep down jellyfish jam dream
i will sail towards every sky constellation
i will sail with my heart on the elysium edge
without boy blue boy fear
Vevna Forrow (Jazz Marie Kaur) is an experimental visual designer and queer poet originally from Minneapolis, Minnesota, but resides in Southern Nevada. Work of hers appears in the Lothlorien Journal, Kindergarten Mag, diacritics – DVAN, Phantom Kangaroo, and Oddball Magazine.
ink
a poem by Jackie Hollowell
by Jackie Hollowell
Childhood / is only a cage / that widens
from “Dear Peter” by Ocean Vuong
Of my childhood,
I want to give you
the parts I like to
remember.
I’ll write down
as much as I can
before god catches up.
He was there for a while—
in my sister’s room,
my mother’s garden.
In my grandmother calling my name
while she still knew it.
The ink only falls
on the previous page
but I keep turning it
anyway. I think,
maybe the leaf can return
to the branch
and it does,
if you write long enough.
If you live long enough.
Back when I was a girl
I wasn't yet a girl,
just an abjuration
of moss
being pulled
from stone.
Please don't take
my hands from the soil;
I want to go home.
The ink is running out but
I still have so much childhood left
before I’m turned to salt.
Jackie Hollowell is an extremely queer poet originally from the Pacific Northwest but now lives in Vietnam. She has a love/hate relationship with capital letters and an all-hate relationship with capitalism. They have been published in or have work forthcoming from The Dawn Review, The Wayfarer, and Rogue Agent. Find them online: @6_Hollowell.
march
a poem by Kevin A. Risner
by Kevin A. Risner
A month that holds so much promise
held unease, fear, newfound isolation
just a few years ago.
I swear it happens so much more
often, the glance at an old photo,
the recollection of a trip. And here
I thought it happened
just a blink ago, and it’s been
a decade. Catch each radio
wave as it flies past.
A bit of sweat falls instantly
when I hear too much, think too much,
when I fear for the newborn ones
who will appear next March.
They’ll have no clue about a time when
we didn’t yearn for fresh air.
Kevin A. Risner is the author of My Ear is a Sieve; Do Us a Favor; and You Thought This Was Just Gonna Be About Cleveland, Didn't You. His debut full-length, There's No Future Where We Don't Have Fire, is forthcoming from ELJ Editions. He also has work published in Gordon Square Review, The Great Lakes Review, Memoir Mixtapes, Moist Poetry Journal, The Ocean State Review, and elsewhere.
last call
a poem by Annabel Mitchell
by Annabel Mitchell
last call I’m sure you heard it
echoed down to the garden
please thank you well I wouldn’t trouble
you
thinking of being a poet a baker
an arboretum photographer
thirty five cents and a tin of tuna
weird word isn’t it really
arbor – e – tum
tastes oversaturated
like stone bridges and stainless steel taps
and the bricks left over from the old mill
I saw a deer on the train well it wasn’t
on the train I was but I saw it out there
poised all ears and haunches and alone
the sea sparkles when you look at it
haven’t
you noticed haven’t you haven’t you
please thank you and good
night
Annabel Mitchell lives, works and writes in Leith, Edinburgh and has a degree in Classical Studies and English from St Andrews.
rhino
a poem by Ellen Lusetti
by Ellen Lusetti
Skin, lattice, like the quilt my mother won’t finish.
Wrinkled, like the back of her hands.
Head devoid of hair.
The last time she took me to the zoo,
there was only one rhino.
The exhibit sign read, “vulnerable.”
As she threads her final needle
with trembling fingers,
lips formed around a curse,
I note the ways our hands
resemble one another,
the deep ridges of our middle
knuckles, stout, pink beds
topped with clouded crescents.
A split runs down her thumbnail
to the nub, threatening breakage
beyond the keratin, beneath
the cells of flesh and tolerance.
“They have tools for that,” I tell her.
She scoffs, for she is the force
that weaves a taut backing
and exacts her isolation,
the lone rhino with armor stitched
to defend but sheer enough to burn.
Ellen Lusetti is a queer writer whose work explores themes of feminism and the nature of morality. She graduated with an MFA from San Diego State University in 2022 and currently teaches writing at New Mexico State University.
murmurations of starlings
a poem by Terri McCord
by Terri McCord
“the most subtle spooking will do it, a dog’s bark, the slam of a car door down the street”
Nautilus Magazine, March 4, 2020
To delight in the scattering
a heavy sea spray
a funneled sky ash
an old-time amusement
park ride
The covetousness in the blue
tearings and mendings
above us
the quick repatternings
Possibly 100,000 in a winter flock
To start, too,
at the slightest wind-shift
Feel the air grapple with birds
A South Carolina Arts Commission literary fellowship recipient, Terri McCord has work forthcoming from Lucky Jefferson, Panoply, Orchard Poetry Review, Slippery Elm Literary Journal, Black Lily, and Coast Lines Anthology.
instructions for staying put
a poem by Shannon Swearingen Gabriel
by Shannon Swearingen Gabriel
after Joy Sullivan
In the evenings, sit on your front porch with a whiskey sour in your hand and witness the sky’s pastels dim from peach to lilac to bruise.
On Sundays, fill the house with the warmth of every baked good you can think of:
double-chocolate-chip muffins, craggy biscuits flaked with cheddar, lemon pound cake so tart your mouth can’t help but squeeze around every forkful.
Each day, fill your belly with what it craves: the punch of laughter, the entire bowl of watermelon. Every night, stroke your daughter’s soft hair.
Let the quicksand of her eyes root you here till you rebloom — barrel cactus or blazing tulip.
In the long winters, let your body take up the entire narrow beam of sunlight. Lie still on the made bed and absorb the dark.
Always insist on a tangle of stars. Bury your doubts here so that you always have their graves
to return to. Remember — you can make wherever is under your feet your home.
Remember — just a mile west are the greenest fields, your emergency exit.
You can make your own peace.
Shannon Swearingen Gabriel is a professional copy editor by day, a mother around the clock, and a scribbler of poems whenever possible. Originally from Nashville, she now lives in the Chicago suburbs, where she enjoys frequenting great restaurants, cute coffee shops, and vinyl record stores.