poetry

McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

little magic

a poem by Ifunanya Georgia Ezeano

by Ifunanya Georgia Ezeano

Sometimes you want magic

but not like Morgana had 

for your hands to be filled 

with little magic

to do the simple things 

with your powers

like pausing a bad day

avoiding an accident

turning off the light bulb 

from your bed or 

telling your grandma 

you love her

few seconds before she dies.




Ifunanya Georgia Ezeano is an Igbo, Nigerian writer, poet, and editor. She holds a BSc in Psychology. She has her works published in journals and lit mags in many places. She is the head editor for Writers Space Africa Virtual/Video Poetry. She was the pioneer leader of Poets in Nigeria, at the University of Nigeria Nsukka.  She is the author of the poetry collection; Naked and Thorns & Petals (on Amazon and other places) and she has other unpublished works. She has a Gazelle (Droplets) coming out on the Konya Shamsrumi Review Gazelle series. She was nominated this year for the British Loft Prize for flash fiction. She recently received the Sparks Poetry Award honorary mention from Memorial University, Newfoundland, Canada. She is interested in human experiences, the psychology of life, femininity, and Africanism.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

two objects

a poem by Celinda Olive

by Celinda Olive

Summer again, my beloved peonies 

the palest of pinks in their petal fleece.

I wash a wine glass under the spotlight 

just above the sink. Junior Kimbrough

lulls in the background in steady 

pulsed blues. It’s a mantra, 

this ominous lyric, “You better run…don’t let him get you…” 

The crystal of the glass, awfully 

clear, kissing the serrated blade like a mandate 

from heaven — and it overwhelms me, 

this terrible, sharp beauty, of living. 





Celinda Olive is a poet residing in the Minneapolis area and holds an MFA in Creative Writing (Poetry) from Seattle Pacific University. She’s a clumsy steward of beauty taking one day at a time. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Anne Mikusinski

by Anne Mikusinski

definition

Art is debatable

At best

If civility is your 

Aim 

For the discussion

At worst

It’s

Raised voices 

And various opinions

Expressed

In sitting rooms

Or noisy bars

Or sometimes

Outside venues

Where people wait

Together

To see the same event

But come away with something

Different.




as yet

Tonight I read 

As if you were listening 

Attentively

While hidden

In a quiet corner

Dimly lit

And undisclosed

But there.

As underneath

An imaginary spotlight

I revealed

My true intentions.



Anne Mikusinski has always been in love with words. She’s been writing poems and short stories since she was seven. Her influences range from Robert Frost and Dylan Thomas to David Byrne and Nick Cave. She hopes that one day, some of her writing will impress others the way these writers have had an impact on her.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

summer calm

a poem by Jeffrey Yamaguchi

by Jeffrey Yamaguchi

There were always fresh peaches

in the fancy bowl on the counter

as soon as the summer scents

lofted the days to never ending

Diving into the liquid blue

further and deeper, over and over

seeing just how long

you can hold your breath

Playing ditch beyond last call

no one even looking for us

at stake the light of the moon

should we ever let ourselves be found

Taking late showers

the sweet sweat of an endless climb

up a cherry tree ready for harvest

forever holding its luster

A bowl of ice cream before bed

in our boxer shorts on the back porch

the boundless chirp of crickets

shaping the contours of our slumber





Jeffrey Yamaguchi (jeffreyyamaguchi.com) creates projects with words, photos, and video as art explorations, as well as through his professional endeavors in the publishing industry. His work has been featured in publications such as Okay Donkey, Atticus Review, Kissing Dynamite, X-R-A-Y Literary Magazine, Vamp Cat Magazine, Nightingale & Sparrow, Failed Haiku, Daily Haiga, Black Bough Poetry, Feral, Anti-Heroin Chic, and The Storms.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

scene at sea

by Nida Mubaraki

by Nida Mubaraki

a lightbulb forty feet up waves hello from the southern tide, 

little hiccups in the waves 

dancing at our knobby knees. 

we woke up 200 miles north from last year’s dream 

in a farewell letter to the silver dollar espresso – 

traded in your boiler pot for a slow & grating stove, simmering 

soft your protruding ribs inside-out. 

newport’s sun-cloud glaze and my sworded fingers, 

wrapped up in sheets and echoes of yesterday. what happened to the

smell of the morning blackberries? too early picked 

and i don’t know what home is anymore. is it true 

you left her here to die? 

coffin in the kitchenette, sitting like a 

four o’clock scone. back there you’re all buttery and bone-thin 

in some alienatic way; 

dirtied hands and two-knot hair that you left in the city, 

all out of your reddish plates you fed to a lazy-eyed tomb. 

you were wound-up in the days of yesterday 

before the interstate drive down up (please don’t go back down).

education born in new england, the only place 

we can read with the fisherman’s daughters. learn where comfort resides:

they’re not short-knived in the boroughs. 

stay here with me is what i’d say if this was about us: 

linger where the ocean is the broth at supper, 

savory & seasonal is our mainland diet. 

no energy drinks except for the accidental saltwater sips, 

breaking bread with crab legs and lemon instead. 

august can be eternal now, if you keep holding my hand – 

do we abandon our souls if we leave here? 

down south we don’t work. just let us nod off 

in crisp winter with nothing 

but the woods, the fire, and us. 

waves shouting at you: the tide will welcome you now. no more nostalgia, no more

dreams, no more wonder; 

certainty is in the cusp of your palm & is thumbing your lip, healing the years

of bites. north is no north but it’s evergreened home, 

the city gives you nothing but day-old bread and a lack of remorse.





Nida Mubaraki is a New Jersey and Philadelphia based writer. She has work in/forthcoming in Maudlin House, Bullshit Lit, and Eunoia Review, amongst others. She works as the senior editor, Twitter head, and a contributor for The Empty Inkwell Review. Email her at nidamubaraki@gmail.com or find her on Twitter: @pennedbynida. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

gossip from the forest

a poem by Kay Burrows

by Kay Burrows

Last year I learned the difference between a forest and a woodland.

Forests are hunting grounds; ancient rites and rhythms.

Did you hear that she is home?

The moon is high and our eyes 

deal only in black and white.

You skip after silhouettes while I scatter a breadcrumb trail.

Magpies roost with shiny things

and fairy rings spring around my heavy feet.

Word travels fast in here. 

The news is pressing

on my chest and echoes are compressed.

Was she forced to confess?

I gulp and try to think of home

of silver jewelry and fairy lights and not only of the way you skewered 

marshmallows and licked

them clean off the stick, splinters in your tongue. I begged

you not to eat in the forest.

Didn’t you hear that she is home?




Kay Burrows is a scientist, musician, writer, and runner. She lives in the North of England and loves being outside, whatever the weather!

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

green water

a poem by Sydney Thomson

by Sydney Thomson

An Ode to Herbert James Draper’s The Lament for Icarus

For a brief moment, after death, in the green,

it’s as if he were alive and had merely been

taking a rest, on a bed of soft feathers

in the pleasantest weather, before decay begins.

How long the fall, and how cruel the end,

but his face holds no fright, 

not at all, the sight almost serene.

The day is so bright all but where he now lies.

How strange to see Death in the light,

because the sun knows

Death is softer at night. It might be romantic 

if it wasn’t so tragic. 

Oh, how devastating! If only the sun

had been kinder or the sea not awaiting,

with open arms, the fallen angel

the plummet fatal, a strike that leaves the ears ringing

the rigor takes his wings and

his life already gone, their hearts surely stinging.

Their mouths are open, they may be crying –

they may be singing.





Sydney Thomson honed her writing skills in the University of Washington’s Creative Writing program. She writes poetry, short stories, and novel-length works.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Kirsten Ireland

by Kirsten Ireland

twenty twenty

I look like he, 

but sound like she. 

It confuses people 

when my wife says

the baby 

she gave birth to 

has my eyes. 



why

I’m struggling,

at this point anyway, 

to understand 

exactly what happened. 

Rereading words 

nearly twenty years 

old and dead, 

I found honesty 

and happiness. 

I feel it still now, 

that truth 

and that warmth, 

but from a distance. 

I can’t say 

that it is diminished, 

just a different shape 

and I, as you, 

still don’t know why. 







Kirsten Ireland is a visual artist, musician, and longtime writer who currently resides in Illinois with her wife and children. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in anthologies such as, Shared Words, and Warps in the Tapestry. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

small talk

a poem by Devon Neal

by Devon Neal

I never learned to float.

While friends could recline on the billowing surface

of backyard pools, the brown palm 

of the lake in June, the water swallowed me,

my ankles jagged concrete blocks,

my shoulders smooth river stones,

the goldfish of my organs swirling

in the tree limbs of my rib cage.

I could never tread water.

The stuff I’m made of is just too heavy,

my marrow like petrified wood,

my spine a clattering chain,

my lungs worn tires, waterlogged and black,

the reluctant prize of the novice fisherman.




Devon Neal (he/him) is a Bardstown, KY resident who received a B.A. in Creative Writing from Eastern Kentucky University and an MBA from The University of the Cumberlands. He currently works as a Human Resources Manager in Louisville, KY. His work has been featured in Moss Puppy Magazine, Dead Peasant, Paddler Press, MIDLVLMAG, and others.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Bryan Vale

by Bryan Vale

oakland arena  

the canal floats

oil paints and

oxidized screws away

from their origins

in industrial backlots.

true story: i once dumped,

at my boss's direction,

ten gallons of acrylic 

down the drain.

so it's my canal

too, and i float

up to the

urban-scarred 

horizon. 




to the girls who enjoyed the hand motions

who brought waves of mercy and grace to life,

who improvised choreography to those songs that lacked it,

who closed eyes and tilted heads

as choruses hit the high note,

to the girls who enjoyed the hand motions:

i wish i knew who dispensed your wisdom,

who gave out your generosity.

i was a fly on the wall of your winter camp,

a seeker in the doorway of your youth group,

a humble pursuer of knowledge and joy

lost on unmarked dirt roads far from my destination.






Bryan Vale is a writer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. His fiction and poetry have appeared in several journals, including Scribes*MICRO*Fiction, Paddler Press, Friday Flash Fiction, Bright Flash Literary Review, and Quibble. Learn more at bryanvalewriter.com, or follow Bryan on Twitter and Instagram: @bryanvalewriter.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Isaac Fox

by Isaac Fox

as she’s dragged to the gallows

In Paradise

Lost, Earth

hangs from Heaven

by a golden

chain.




how Frank imagines the afterlife

When you

butcher

fresh-caught

bluegills,

brown eyes 

blink and

gills flap,

even

when their 

heads are

bloodied 

in a 

bucket





Isaac Fox writes crazy things, plays the clarinet and guitar, and spends as much time as possible outside. His work has previously appeared in Bending Genres, Tiny Molecules, and 50-Word Stories, among other publications. You can find him on Twitter at @isaac_k_fox.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

\ out past the dawns (a pantoum)

by Frank G. Karioris

by Frank G. Karioris

the warp

ripped your hands

as fallow bus 

routes departed

ripped your hands

on the empty shell remnants 

routes departed

& all we can do is stay

on the empty shell remnants

you braved new storms

& all we can do is stay

holding out hope, tomorrows

you braved new storms

where winter was oncoming

holding out hope, tomorrows

can’t break bone so easily

where winter was oncoming

phones no longer ringing  

can’t break bone so easily

so they breathe 

phones no longer ringing

love wasn’t meant to live

so they breathe

will you stay here now still

love wasn’t meant to live

were you hoping for more

will you stay here now still

or did the ocean draw you out again

were you hoping for more

what do palms contain 

or did the ocean draw you out again

waves don’t drown, just hold you close

what do palms contain

if the sand drifts

waves don’t drown, just hold you close

at night we make our own cover

if the sand drifts

make a beachhead & hold against the tide forthcoming 

at night we make our own cover

separated from a bed & a lover & all that is left is the roar of tempests 

make a beachhead & hold against the tide forthcoming

winds blow

separated from a bed & a lover & all that is left is the roar of tempests 

night still

winds blow

holy

night still 

cold

holy

aurora

cold 

eventide. 





Frank G. Karioris (he/they/him/them) is a writer and educator based in San Francisco whose writing addresses issues of friendship, gender, and class. Their work has appeared or is forthcoming in Pittsburgh Poetry Journal, Collective Unrest, Riverstone, Sooth Swarm Journal, and in the collection Eco-Justice For All amongst others. They were a W.S. Merwin Fellow at the 2023 Community of Writers Poetry Program.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Eric Pinder

by Eric Pinder

after an unexpected snowfall in May

Apollo always dillydallies

at daybreak, blanketed

in snug penumbra,

too drowsy to heed

the urgent birdsong beseeching

a tardy sun, its warm timbre

almost forgotten, to unburden

boughs and branches hunched

beneath the white weight

of Demeter’s grief.



ajar

Alone

the body

is a jar inside

of which

nothing

exists

except

the hollow

gap

so sparsely filled

by the sole

thing trapped

by Pandora. 

Only that,

that diffuse hope

spread within

the jar as thin

as the suffocating

vapor on Mars —

only that frail gasp

of hope

prevents

collapse.



Eric Pinder is the author of If All the Animals Came Inside and other books about wilderness, wildlife, and weather. He teaches at a small college in the woods, a few miles down the road less traveled. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Em Setzer

by Em Setzer

Biddeford Pool, ME

My friend humming

to the periwinkle snails

and her voice is lost to the wind

and the snail remains inside

its shell.

my mother on luna moths

It rests on the side

of the lakehouse,

wings the green type

of youngskinny scions.

Spots like eyes, like

the sleepy eyes of

Byzantine saints

puncture sweet green.

I am saddened, I say.

They have no mouths.

They live a waiting

life, they die hungry.

Don’t be, she says.

They live beautiful.

They are beautiful

and they are happy

for it.





Em Setzer is a poet and translator from Maryland. Their work has been published by Asymptote, LUPERCALIA Press, and The Foundationalist. They will begin an MFA at Cornell University in the fall.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

sea

a poem by Fiona Vigo Marshall

by Fiona Vigo Marshall

This sea is made of light, 

rolling heavy in and crashing

on the pebbles in the old way. 

And it’s as if it prays me:

Please send him back, 

and, I want to go home.

This chastens me; 

it’s not me praying.

It’s an involuntary surge, 

basic and automatic as this sea,

or my heart beating, 

that longs for itself. 

It’s not personal.

I’m past caring 

that my love were in my arms again,

that the small rain down can rain. 

It’s this liquid light

gathering itself and heaving 

with the sway of many moons,

many centuries, that wants things 

to go back

to being how they were before.

I have no say, in my longing.




Fiona Vigo Marshall’s work has been published in Aesthetica, Ambit, Fiction, Ink Sweat & Tears, OpenPen, Orbis, Phantom Drift, Prospect, Theology Journal, and Vita Poetica. She is the author of two novels, Find Me Falling, 2019, and The House of Marvellous Books, 2022, paperback 2023, Fairlight Books, Oxford. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

echo location

a poem by Kate Polak

by Kate Polak

The strains in an abandoned classroom were a new page —

tones mastering the same creamy range, blanching dull, 

then harried, then straining against whatever wall

they’re thrown across. But me, I’ll always take the twang

of fiddle over violin — reminds me of clear liquor, 

and the busy hurdling of concatenation, the frenzied

fingering, blown steel strings flailing from the neck: knotted

knuckles, that his play in this empty space made boiling lore,

attained, as his hands ranged, the grace of supplicant—

flagellating an Appalachian myth to form. The forearm posed

and crooked to push sinew to denim, clothed 

in all devoted practice of those renewed in covenant. 

After a late one, our hands were laughing at one another’s waists

when we were rudely interrupted, and so, rephrased.    




Kate Polak is an artist, writer, and teacher. Her work has recently appeared in Plainsongs, McSweeney’s, So to Speak, Coffin Bell, The Closed Eye Open, Inverted Syntax, and elsewhere. She lives in South Florida and aspires to a swamp hermitage. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

the girls we were

a poem by Irene Cantizano Bescós

by Irene Cantizano Bescós

We were immortal children 

in the forest’s golden glade.

Our skirts swirling in the schoolyard,

poplar seeds like falling snow.

Three half-remembered dreams

I caress every morning.

Here’s the last one:

Remember when I showed you Orion’s Belt?

The summer stars got tangled in your hair

I brushed them out - your thick black curls the night sky

I was afraid to breathe; how could time not stop right then, how did it dare?

You were so beautiful back then.

But when we went into the woods and tried to play,

our bodies weren’t ours anymore 

our hands suddenly too big,

we couldn’t recognise each other.


Then all these perfect boys I loved and hurt

because 

they weren't you.

Now, when the house is quiet

on the eve of the long summer,

I unspool my days onto my breast.

Of all the lives I didn't live,

ours is the one I most regret.




Irene Cantizano Bescós is a writer and immigrant from Spain lost between two languages. Her work has been featured in Amethyst Review, Moria, Black Hare Press, Five Minutes, (mac)ro(mic), and Tales to Terrify, among others. She is also a freelance journalist, and her reporting has appeared in leading Spanish and UK titles such as Huffington Post, El País, Telva, and Positive News. Irene lives in England with her husband, two boisterous toddlers, and two warring cats. You can find her on Twitter as @IreneCantizano.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

youngsters

a poem by Hiram Larew

by Hiram Larew

Remember that

I peeked through the group kitchen’s door

That was ajar like memory

And saw you carrying 

Trays of tortillas 

To the oven  

You looked up for a split second

But were busy

Years from now

When you’re my age

And the tortillas are youngsters

Remember that I looked in 

For just a blink

Before the door closed

And then went into another room

As you will someday





Founder of Poetry X Hunger: Bringing a World of Poets to the Anti-Hunger Cause, Hiram Larew has had poems appear in recent issues of ZiN Daily, Contemporary American Voices, The Iowa Review and Poetry Scotland's Gallus.  His most recent collection, Patchy Ways, was published by CyberWit Press in 2023.   

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

roller skates

a poem by Lisa Caroline Friedman

by Lisa Caroline Friedman

Stiff-legged, arms jerking 

like bent wings struggling 

to catch air, we inched up the driveway

giving first flight to our identical 

twin gifts from Grandma Rose.

We were four feet bound

in hard white leather with pink 

wheels and toe stops. We found 

a jagged rhythm 

as our wheels rolled over 

pocked and pebbled pavement 

then hiccupped at the lips 

between slabs. We hugged 

parking meters to rest or stop

a fall then hit the playground 

where we skated between metal 

swings and mostly dirt 

fields. We skated until dusk

then back to the dreaded 

driveway, now downhill. I reached 

the bottom upright and waited 

but your wheels ran wild  

and you skated into me – 

my body, your stop. We fell 

and first I cradled you. Then I yelled

at you, embarrassed. You skated

while I fake-limped 

the rest of the way 

home. What I wouldn’t give

give to cradle you now.




Lisa Caroline Friedman (she/her) was born in Fort Belvoir, Virginia, grew up in New York City, and currently resides in Palo Alto, California with her husband, daughters, and thirteen year-old labradoodle. Her first published poem appeared in the March 2023 issue of Pink Panther Magazine. She will have two more poems published in the Fall 2023 issues of San Pedro River Review and Rat’s Ass Review. She received a BA in English from Stanford University and this winter, will begin Antioch University’s low-residency MFA in Creative Writing program.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

she, her, and me

a poem by Annie Tallis

by Annie Tallis

She comes in the dark 

when I am defenseless, 

washes over my body, 

presses her fists down 

my throat and 

deprives 

me of my senses. I cannot 

sleep until I give in to the 

tidal wave of grief. Salt 

stings my eyes as 

tears race down my face, 

speeding, trying to prove

who loved her 

more. 

I wake, screaming,

drenched in sweat 

jolting at

the realization: I can 

never be hurt by her again. 

In my personal drought, 

I sit on the floor

of the shower, let the cold 

water run

over and under my pain.






Annie Tallis is a young queer poet living in Cardiff, Wales. She originally began writing poetry as a cathartic experience to process grief, trauma and pretty much any emotion! She has previously been published in Sideways Poetry Journal and Green Ink Poetry. She will have upcoming pieces of the new editions, both online and in print, of Inspired Poetry. 

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