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poetry
white sky
a poem by Dorothy Lune
by Dorothy Lune
No Christmas presents / natural disaster payment pending— / I tweeze glaciers & land from 3D to strong hold gel. / No Christmas tree / is like no dresses / aren't you bothered. / I'm playing hopscotch / skipping, hand holding— / capitalism lands in slaughter / it never existed / what are you on about. / All I need is open sky / all I have is open sky.
In a past life we were
penguins / you protected our
eggs / we didn't celebrate
Christmas / or we
did / our eggs look like moons /
there are plenty
of moons / & these are
our moons / I chewed
my way out of misogyny /
you love me
after that / racks of
snow / hold
collections / of love /
poems. / I will mimic
embarrassment /
& you will see through it.
Dorothy Lune is a Yorta Yorta poet, born in Australia. Her work has appeared in Pinhole Poetry & more. She is compiling a manuscript, can be found online @dorothylune, & has a substack: https://dorothylune.substack.com/
2 poems
a poem by Joy Andersen
by Joy Andersen
between the trees
Between the steady trunks of oaks
Dappled beams
Through flickering leaves
With twitters
And gentle rustles
Grass softened by breeze
Will lay a pebble
A smooth one
Natural colours
Topped with petals
A small engraving
A sun
Seven lines
Around a circle
Just the quiet
In his beauty
Is all I’ll need
When you remember me
worship
As mouths of seeds
Whistle to the sky
Mist-whirled wind
Dance each away
Blooms of change
Sing colours themselves
Until far reached
Like mountains
They stand
And glorify
Joy Andersen is a messy, praying, daydreaming chef from Cambridge, UK. More of her poetry can be found with Literary Tribune and Words & Whispers Magazine. She’s infrequently on twitter @jyndrsn.
art
a poem by Philip Berry
by Philip Berry
I do not regret –
The slashes into soft clay
Arcs of pigment, one fading
Into the next, a glorious pool
Of nations thickening
In dusty corners.
The time it took to alter marble
Forms, precision violence
Over and over again.
The triangles of canvas
Flapping into the vacuum
Of my heat.
A codex of passionate
Correctives to your blind
ambition, blind to a muse’s
deeper purpose.
To travel with you
Until dark.
Philip Berry’s poetry and short fiction have appeared in Black Bough, Poetry Birmingham, The Healing Muse, Deracine and Dream Noir. He also writes fiction and CNF. His work can be explored at www.philberrycreative.wordpress.com and @philaberry.
ghost of you
a poem by Jenny Turnbull
by Jenny Turnbull
The ghost of you
is everywhere.
Floating through the fog
like photographs
razor sharp edges
that cut.
Sitting on empty corners in the coarse sea air
thrashing salt on open wounds
forever ahead of me
out of reach
looking back.
How did the days turn into years and back to days
that ended.
Our sand ran out.
Your ghost leads me to the ocean
our memories drift there with the current
determined light fights through the fog
and finds me.
A subtle wave of peace
your ghost sent me in the breeze
maybe
you’ve found that better place
a slate pure and clear
of memory
endless sand
not haunted
by the ghost
of me.
Jenny Turnbull is a KidLit author who also writes poetry. Her debut picture book is forthcoming from Crown Children's/Penguin Random House in 2024. Jenny left a career in film and television to pursue her passion for creative writing and has never looked back. Jenny was born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA and now lives seaside in Los Angeles with her husband and Westie. Follow her on Twitter @JennyTwrites
prejudice and life
a poem by Ali Ashhar
by Ali Ashhar
A side of coin flips
bills are passed
some weapons are sold
other side of coin flips
a life is bought
with the currencies of prejudice and pride
news breaks out in the town
but, somewhere down the hill
an estranged mother awaits
her grandchildren ask,
“When will Dad return home?”
she gives her best
to deviate their mind, but only
for a while
they ask again
this time she replies
he has gone
to a distant market
to get some food
not knowing that
he will be back
without bidding them farewell
in the midst of war —
motherhood was left devastated
and nascent dreams of childhood crippled.
Ali Ashhar is a poet, short story writer and columnist. He is the author of poetry collection, Mirror of Emotions. His works appear in Indian Review, The Raven Review, Bosphorus Review of Books, among others.
anything, everything
a poem by Maisie Russel
by Maisie Russel
the thing about metaphors is
they circle around undistilled truths—
like hiding behind breath-taken;
captivated moon-eyes calling it tender
like secret longing that aches, sunlight
touching dust, settling for hunger
like witnessing the tress grow and graze
the garden beyond the clouds; praying surrender
let me say this once: ask me for the world
and I will give it to you.
Maisie Russel is a poet living in the desert. She also works on hcl design, information architecture, and ethical technological practices. Her works are published in various homes for poetry, both online and in print.
when storms reach the edge of the world
a poem by Adelaide Juelfs
by Adelaide Juelfs
The rain blurred the edges of the
world, a gutted fish lay
split on the sand,
salt-soaked and bleeding. A dead
man’s life spit up on the
tongue of the ocean, a storm of fury.
My dragonfly, my pride. Here — a new
day is brought to the edge,
we’ve been here for too long. The clouds that once
muddied the horizon turned it whole,
my hair grew untamed in the early
morning — a thousand little hands
reaching toward the sky. While waiting for
something, I suddenly remember yesterday
when I pinned myself to the sidelines
and a sure-fire cry brought me back.
I notice an abalone shell sitting on the
counter, a turquoise green light drifts in
through the open window
and eats the walls whole.
My honeyed eye, my want.
A dream catcher flies sideways in the wind,
and I feel a part of me pulled with it, out past the waves.
I feel a part of me surrender. Maybe I’m just tired.
Maybe it’s the circadian rhythm. A part of me hopes.
Here is the dark drifting away.
Here, I sew myself back up with the storm and
try to be alive again.
Adelaide is a high school student from Southern California. She writes in an attempt to better understand both herself and the world, and through language, she is both tethered to her life and transported somewhere mystical. She enjoys physics, daydreaming, and water polo.
temper
a poem by Nailea Salazar
by Nailea Salazar
Somewhere — a redwood, charred bark concealed
in thick haze, wild engulfed. Life awaits
your touch, lush with fervor. Temper frosts over
We make nice & skate in infinite ribbons.
Nailea Salazar is a writer from California whose work has appeared in Rejection Letters and Mister Magazine. She believes that God is stored inside Meg Ryan movies.
humming
a poem by Blair Center
by Blair Center
The rapid rattle—the magpie’s cackle
tap-tap tap-taps against the traffic panes
on Loch Street. The beak chaps nails to shatter
the low chorus humming of fumy wheels
which roll in waves below its sparse tree mast.
Brutalism looms. While they call above
the living flow in which I daily swim,
we both enjoy the sweeping coastal air
and the bonnie city’s shining movements
and rainy promises of future spring.
I look upon the sea like endless fields
and I shall hum and sing as is needed
to nest, to build, to keep the crops growing.
Blair Center is a writer and student from the north-east of Scotland. Center has had poetry published by Dreich, Leopard Arts, and The Hyacinth Review. Whether in English, Scots, or his local tongue, Doric, Center finds that themes of nature, memory, identity, and place particularly and consistently motivate his work.
2 poems
by Mykyta Ryzhykh
by Mykyta Ryzhykh
A sweet cloud dissolves in wet eyes.
Mirages of sand in wet eyes.
God’s assistant pressed the wrong button again.
The sea of heaven
Port of clouds
The future flows into its own absence
Mykyta Ryzhykh (he\him) lives in Ukraine (Nova Kakhovka Citу). He is the winner of the international competition Art Against Drugs, bronze medalist of the festival Chestnut House, and laureate of the literary competition named after Tyutyunnik. He is published in several journals and received a scholarship from the President of Ukraine for young authors.
those who knew
a poem by Deron Eckert
by Deron Eckert
The closer the coasts moved in,
the more common the shipwrecks
became. Oceans swelled slowly,
but their slight changes disguised
them enough from those who knew
them so well they could tell the
hour of day by the sound
the waves made as they crashed in
that by the time they reached the
thickets of grass defining
land from sea, those who knew that
song by heart could now only
hear it singing in their heads.
The farther the tides crept up
beaches that grew greedier
in their embrace, the harder
those who knew them best chased their
familiar call, even if
it meant their end, because those
who knew they had already
lost so much refused to let
their beloved song leave, too.
Deron Eckert is a writer and attorney who lives in Lexington, Kentucky. His writing has appeared in Rattle Magazine, Fahmidan Journal, Sky Island Journal, Swim Press, Treehouse Literary, and Rue Scribe and is forthcoming in Ghost City Review and Querencia Press' Winter 2023 Anthology. He was a flash fiction finalist in New Millenium Writing’s 54th Writing Awards. He is currently seeking publication for his Southern Gothic, coming-of-age novel, which explores how personal experiences change our preconceived notions of right and wrong, while working on a collection of poetry and prose.
membership
a poem by Adam Deutsch
by Adam Deutsch
In the barn, two green-bodied black-winged
bugs are joined at their backs, crawl rims
of surfaces nobody can honestly claim as their own.
The farm’s main house’s wallpaper
is stubborn, pushing back at the steam iron,
glues and old centuries’ ink enduring
like a domestic tattoo, a fabric that moths
and moisture ignore. It can get into your limbs
before you scrape it away from the original wall.
When I rub palms together, small strands
of tarnished ribbon unravel to cellar dust,
a box of papers, my aunt tells me, that say
she’s recognized as a daughter of a revolution,
could be of confederacy, and I could be a son.
It’s something like thirty dollars to register,
another five to insert yourself in the record
of who was where in histories that topple
toward myth. A ship’s belly who could not find
the sun in the flag-soaked ocean, carrying
our organization of murder to shore.
Adam Deutsch is the author of a full-length collection, Every Transmission, forthcoming from Fernwood Press in 2023. He has work recently in Poetry International, Thrush, Juked, AMP Magazine, Ping Pong, and Typo, and has a chapbook called Carry On (Elegies). He teaches in the English Department at Grossmont College and is the publisher of Cooper Dillon Books. He lives with his spouse and child in San Diego, CA. AdamDeutsch.com
stenotype
a poem by Ayelet Amittay
by Ayelet Amittay
If speech survives
a courtroom, unstruck
from the record, it is
broken, coded
as abbreviation: 22
keys, a ticker tape of white
margin space, no man’s
land where letters stand for
pause, punctuation
S T PH = question
mark in a topography
of neighbor keys. Your Honor,
may I approach
the bench to stand before the court
reporter, beg an alternate
ending? <Question> Surely
some repair can come to
this interstitial
brokenness:
missing consonants missing
I and why.
Ayelet Amittay is a poet and nurse practitioner in Oregon. Her poems have recently appeared in Tupelo Quarterly, Michigan Quarterly Review, Whale Road Review, and others. She has received fellowships from the Yiddish Book Center and the Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing.
there’s just no blueprint
a poem by Abbie Doll
by Abbie Doll
for constructing
all these damn
mazes
built from words
i pluck them out
one-by-one
like stray strands
trying to tame
this unruly brain
Abbie Doll is an eclectic mess of a person who loves exploring the beautiful intricacies of the written word. She resides in Columbus, OH and received her MFA from Lindenwood University; her work has been featured or is forthcoming in Door Is a Jar Magazine, Ellipsis Zine, OPEN: Journal of Arts & Letters (O:JA&L), among others. Follow her @AbbieDollWrites.
calibrating the dream machine
a poem by Tyler Raso
by Tyler Raso
In my hometown, there was
this bridge. Sounded like an
apocalypse whenever you drove
over it, the river beneath always
a little sickly with stones.
I was raised by liars. Black mold
in my childhood bedroom. No one
ever hurt me. The concrete of
my small throat. Socks coming
pink from the washing machine.
I don’t have much to say.
My father is a kind man, held
God like a baseball bat. Left
my jawline in his will. Our faces
falling from one another.
My mom had this tomato plant,
upside-down, in the kitchen window.
Nothing grew from it. She’d smoke
with a rubber glove on. We could
hardly see her face through
the sour mist.
When I fell in love, I was walking
up a hill. My bones were somewhere
else. None of this is important,
even if it is true.
I think about dreaming a lot.
There’s this one where music
spills out of my ears.
Nobody knows the song.
Yet everyone’s toes tap
the wet grass. Someone stands up
to leave. A tangle
of sound holding the hole
their body made.
Tyler Raso (they/them) is a poet, essayist, and teacher. Their work is featured or forthcoming in POETRY, Black Warrior Review, DIAGRAM, Salt Hill Journal, The Journal, and elsewhere. They are the author of the chapbook In my dreams/I love like an idea, winner of the 2022 Frontier Digital Chapbook Contest. They currently write, teach, and study in Bloomington, IN, tweeting @spaghettiutopia and websiting at tylerraso.com
cupped hand
a poem by Ervin Brown
by Ervin Brown
life is a mewling flame
in the shadow of a cupped hand
twisted appendages linger
molded from fly-paper and resin
webbing and wedding the remains
purring to the ashes
hymns of tinfoil
and enchanted double-helix
the faux lavender glow
reverbing across space
Ervin Brown is a twenty-year-old storyteller and poet from Coney Island. His works have appeared in The Dillydoun Review, Willows Wept Review, The Closed Eye Open, Beyond Words Literary Magazine, and Wild Roof Journal, among other places. He is currently a master’s student at the University of New Hampshire.
the road ahead
a poem by Julie Stevens
by Julie Stevens
They say the dead walk this road
every time the moon showers light
on steps caught in its glare.
A line of broken souls
breezing earth’s warm crust,
before mounting the wind to the sky.
The chilled air catches memories:
sugar-coated, hardened, raw.
An eternal collection for the library of life.
We walk the same path
surging forward with ambition,
never knowing when our steps will take flight.
Julie Stevens writes poems that cover many themes, but often engages with the problems of disability. She has two published pamphlets: Quicksand (Dreich 2020) and Balancing Act (Hedgehog Poetry Press, 2021). Her next pamphlet Step into the Dark will be published by The Hedgehog Poetry Press. www.jumpingjulespoetry.com
I used to know your place in the dirt
a poem by Gal Snir
by Gal Snir
when our eyelids were flowers and our minds were thick bark
with ridges that curved — ribbons on the most exquisite of gifts.
During then, the ground was a place to grow words from
and deadweights more like roots and root systems
extending down Earth’s crinkly covering
where tomato & basil seeds sweetly bud.
They call it companion planting.
Meaning anecdotal wisdom.
Indicating tried & true.
I employed this truth like a cancer.
Planted basil seeds until basil seeds
were nowhere to be found
and blamed the swelling of green tomatoes
on their absence.
It is easier to indulge in an abundance of emptiness
over an abundance itself.
Now, I stand over dead ground surrounded by winds
and white walls
and white-knuckles
made for punching.
Now, hands are meant to punch.
Hands are not meant to dig.
Now no more composted words.
Now no more people seeds.
No earthlier things to replant.
Gal Snir lives in Seattle, WA. She works as a medical assistant for a small primary care practice in the city. She enjoys writing poetry that peers into the bower of the self and explores cycles of grief, loss, and change. When she’s not suffering for her art or studying for the MCAT, she likes to annoy her sweet dog, Angel.
2 poems
by Sadie Kromm
by Sadie Kromm
till’ solace due us part
my inner child now
exists in a balmy
cottage filled with
harvested books,
lemon loaf, and
a fireplace that keeps
the baby hounds warm.
it is all handmade and
habitually preserved
by me.
I often weep knowing
that she feels safe
and will forever live
rent free.
the two ferns are now dancing
to those who mocked
me for resisting the
emotional poverty
of materialism,
you taught me that
big homes often feel
too cold, but smaller
homes preserve warmth.
and your hatred was
because you could never
fathom why I could ever
be so happy with so little.
Sadie Kromm is a wordsmith and visual artist who is homestead in Ontario. She has pen’d a collection of irresistible columns and hosted an audience, leading local pioneers in the arts and culture sector – particularly independent music. Sadie is now inscribing her own life’s tale about mental health, childhood trauma, kindliness, and her unique relationship with animals through the medium of poetry.
the perfect weather
a poem by Wheeler Light
by Wheeler Light
The weather outside is your heart.
The weather inside is your heart also
but the weather outside is more of your heart.
Inside is more like an echo like your pulse
is a call and response. It’s like the weather.
The tide goes out. It comes back every time.
The good times go away. You could lose your job.
You could lose your heart, your little sweet
marching drum. Honey, there is enough time.
I love you I love you. Cold and muted. Simple
mirror. The weather outside is just atmosphere
You know what the good times are like.
They’re like summer but without the
sweating. These days, you’re just waiting for the first snow,
for that opportunity to dip your toes into the sky.
I promise the good times come back
but not before the bad times go away.
Well sometimes at the same time,
like snow melting while it falls and pooling
at the edge of the sidewalk and when you
walk over it, there it is, your reflection.
Always there like the weather. It’s just the weather.
Just something to talk about it. Isn’t it amazing?
Wheeler Light is an MFA candidate at the University of Virginia. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in Rattle, Spit Poet Zine, and Pretty Owl Poetry, among other publications. You can find his work at www.wheelerlight.net.