
poetry
2 poems
by Wendy Freborg
by Wendy Freborg
bermuda buttercups
Bermuda buttercups have taken root
among my gardenias.
They are weeds but they are so yellow,
I find them bright and welcome in February.
Valuing their yellowness,
ignoring the garden book’s instructions,
I let them grow.
I am generous, benignly tolerant,
arrogantly neglecting
to ask the gardenias their opinion.
measuring my life in pills
I sometimes measure my life in pills,
watching my days elapse
a dose at a time, three times a day.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Pill case half empty
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
another week gone.
Another week closer to …
don’t say it
If my stock of days is dwindling,
let me mark their passage
in things accomplished
time with the ones I love,
hours with children
poetry written
humor appreciated
letters to friends
books I’ve read
If my time is running out,
on Saturday, when the pill case is empty,
let me refill it and say,
“Here’s to another week.”
Wendy Freborg is a retired social worker whose work has appeared in Rat’s Ass Review, Right Hand Pointing, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Misfit, and WestWard Quarterly. Her life includes one husband, one son, two grandchildren, enough friends, too many doctors and not enough dogs. Her pleasures are her family, crossword puzzles, learning new things, and remembering old times.
puddle
a poem by Christopher Phelps
by Christopher Phelps
Originally diminutive
of ditch, it clung
to lagoons and pools
as well, which,
to me, is a happy,
humble hold:
this little lake
a pond,
a luke-cold puddle
to ponder on—or in,
water, a nervous waiter.
Water, I know you
stagnate without moving
through peoples and pebbles,
through the glimmer of springs
and the glamour of worms,
through drafts and drifts through
the valves and vaults of Earth,
the salt and sedge of Earth,
the wide-eyed sky of Earth.
Airth, I start to hear it as;
start to want to call it.
After days of rain,
who knows
why words cease
and wrens sing
and prayer bows
from the preposter
all the way to us,
just now, rinsing off
time’s line—turns to fill
a hole into a shape
of water—whole
as any other.
Christopher Phelps is a queer, neurodivergent poet living in Santa Fe where he teaches math, creative problem-solving, and letteral arts. He is searching for others who think poetry can be equal parts vulnerable and subversive communication. His poems have appeared in Poetry Magazine, Palette Poetry, Beloit Poetry Journal, The Kenyon Review, Zoeglossia, and The Nation. A chapbook, Tremblem, was privately printed in 2018. Details can be found at www.christopher-phelps.com/poetry.
on the lake
a poem by Paul Ilechko
by Paul Ilechko
They asked us to choose
between cherries and grapes
but I went with acorns
and the way in which the fog rested
so delicately on the surface
of the lake in the early morning
I paddled a kayak wearing only
a pair of borrowed shorts
when we took off from the narrow
beach and headed to the far bank
people who grew up locally
think the lake is small
but that’s because they are comparing
it to the immensity it had
when they were children
there are more mosquitoes now
and the undergrowth is denser
and I worry what will happen to this place
as the century proceeds
later I will call you on the phone
we will talk of my day and your day
all of the things we might have done
if we had been together
and I’ll tell you about the texture
of the fog and the colors exposed
by the rippling waters
as the sun rose over the eastern hills.
Paul Ilechko is a British American poet and occasional songwriter who lives with his partner in Lambertville, NJ. His work has appeared in many journals, including The Bennington Review, The Night Heron Barks, deLuge, Stirring, and The Inflectionist Review. He has also published several chapbooks.
all he knows
a poem by Holly Day
by Holly Day
as they pause from playing games
feet
soil slicks past me as
will drag them under
cilia around their warm ankles
the bright shards of crystal spires
the world of bright sunlight, blue water
I will come down from the trees to rest bare
on the solid ground. wet
the sunlight, new flesh. I
wrap long tendrils of hunger
pull them down to where I live
far below
family picnics, thick tree roots.
Holly Day’s poetry has recently appeared in Slipstream, Penumbric, and Maintenant. She is the co-author of the books, Music Theory for Dummies and Music Composition for Dummies and currently works as an instructor at The Richard Hugo Center in Seattle and at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis.
moonlight
a poem by Breia Gore
by Breia Gore
Ocean Isle, South Carolina
In June, we stayed at a beach
scattered with nests for local science
with a marine life museum down the street,
where I cried at the informational video
showing baby turtles dying and racing.
Only one in a thousand hatchlings
make it to adulthood. They emerge
from the dark place and the predators start.
Breia Gore is an Asian-American artist from the south. A Pushcart Prize Nominee, her work has appeared in G-Mob Mag, Pink Apple Press, and Corporeal Literary, amongst others. Follow her @breiagore.
2 poems
by Claire Gunner
by Claire Gunner
an altar
This afternoon my mother bisque fired then glazed and fired again
an altar, ready for someone’s incense, prayer candle, fetish.
I always take the object of worship for the thing that conveys it–
the queen for the sedan, the golden calf for the desert.
For the longest time I thought the tabernacle was a microwave,
that other purifying fire:
nuke my body for two and a half minutes at fifty percent power.
Now my body has hot spots. Ready for redemption.
Eat it.
On my mother’s glazed altar I place a wedge of clay,
a tobacco tin filled with sewing needles, four wooden spoons.
I turn my back.
accidental renaissance
On Thursday, I sat in the middle-left
as the 102 bus slowed at 96th Street.
I watched a hatted figure, jacket-clad
(not on the 102 bus)
cross the February street in front of traffic
extend his hand, palm up, fingers forward
and graze its emblazoned side panel
as if he were God, or Adam
as if he were not of this world
but becoming it.
Claire Gunner lives in Brooklyn with her husband and two cats. She works as a staff attorney for a legal services nonprofit in New York City. Her work appears in The Cardiff Review and Paddler Press.
courses
a poem by Susan Shea
by Susan Shea
Face in the sun eating heat
like a pansy in a greenhouse
I only want to be here
warm in provision until
it is too loafing hot
then I miss being cool
so I’ll hide here in grey
working on a plan of
my own making
being industrious
until I’ve had enough
of this alone time
I want to drive to a talking place
take in all their make believes
their feats their foes
their families
feed their shadows
with tastes
from my sunshine
wait in vain for one
to want to know
how my life is going
‘til I want to go again
to my next stop
I could use
a bounce in my step
right now to
a place that calls me out
to play among
my portions
Susan Shea is a retired school psychologist who was raised in New York City, and is now living in a forest in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. Since she has returned to writing poetry this year, her poems have been accepted in a few dozen publications, including Feminine Collective, Ekstasis, Persimmon Tree Literary Magazine, Military Experience and the Arts, and the Avalon Literary Review.
dad
a poem by Britta Adams
by Britta Adams
My father spoke softly,
like wind before the storm:
Don’t stop imagining
the life of the aphid, how it sucks
the watery marrow from each
leaf it encounters. Don’t neglect
the way raindrops dance
on car windows or how wiggly worms
cry when exposed on wet cement. Don’t
ignore a small girl caught in the eye
of a hurricane or the single shy tear
unnoticed by those who rush by —
the day you do is the day
you die.
My father whispered “goodnight”
like wind before the storm.
I can still hear him
typing away in his dark corner closet,
while we girls were supposedly sleeping.
But I would stay up and listen
to words coming to life:
The drip drip drip of keyboard clicks,
echoing down the hallway.
It sounded like rain.
Britta Adams is a poet living in Orem, Utah, with a passion for binging documentaries, playing video games, and baking delicious treats.
some poems are anecdotal like this
a poem by Stephanie Trenchard
by Stephanie Trenchard
Anecdotal in painting is to depict small narratives, like a woman sleeping on a picnic table as the blue-sky spins and a winged lemur, a nocturnal animal, fluent in the language of dreams, waits nearby looking away from the vortex. Reading in bed, my membrane bound matter, my cells, search for what is missing, what is available. Music, meaning images from a dream state, a daydream break, invites the unexpected, the surrealism of my layered memories, and even if, even when, a judgment pricks and forces an exhale, a resignation to time, to ego again, I fold back into the sleepy realm and gravitate to the rhythm of patterns, novel thoughts that pair images, for instance, of Jupiter and someone from years ago, Eileen or Scott, unfinished, unopened presents from the psyche, left deep within. A hello again, together, surprise, surprise! A divertimento that feels like a key. Some dreams are like this.
Stephanie Trenchard is a nationally recognized artist whose narrative cast glass work in many fine collections and museums. She runs a hot glass studio in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin as well as teaching her technique internationally. Her writing has been published in Dillydoun Review, The Closed Eye Open, upcoming in Black Fox Literary Journal, and The Write Launch. Her artwork is in many fine collections and museums and can be seen at popelkaglass.com
gretna days
a poem by Nate Castellitto
by Nate Castellitto
I could sit here all day, watch you read
that novel. You purchased it
yesterday at the market; I left with a
collection of reprints
of the coffee table variety. I think
I should read it again.
Spend more time with acrylic river
and mountain and lilac. The
kettle has boiled a minute too late because
neither of us wants tea anymore. We
forgot to pick up honey
yesterday. I could
go out again but today is a
nothing day.
The comforter on the
living room sofa remains inviting. I remember
you mentioned your novel examines an unsolved
sequence of crime. This time I
light a candle by the stove and bring
you a glass of rosé.
Nate Castellitto (he/him/his) is a poet and flash writer in Pennsylvania. His poems have appeared in wildness, Sojourners, and elsewhere. Read more at natecastellitto.net.
nature
a poem by Bianca Sanchez
by Bianca Sanchez
Earth is a puzzle
green and blue pieces scattered
the details get lost
Aloe Vera, healer
extends her green leaves like hands
soothes burns and cuts
Fresh Ginger, yellow
sunshine for gloomy stomachs
tastes spicy, acts sweet
Hard workers, you Bees
our gardener without gloves
so much life you bring
Trees, lungs of the earth
leaves inhale and exhale
so we can breathe too
Even gray clouds bring
a belly of gifts, brown grass
sticks out its dry tongue.
Bianca Sanchez is a writer living in San Diego. She has a BA in English from San Diego State University and currently works in publishing. Her work has appeared in 50-word Stories, Every Day Fiction, and San Diego Poetry Annual. Her Instagram handle is @sanchezbianca1.
poor room for a sonnet
a poem by Matthew Nisinson
by Matthew Nisinson
by Ivan Albright, in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago
No, I am going to make my endless world
in a confined space. No time, no end, no today
no yesterday, no tomorrow. Now my world
will be flatness on flatness, layered forever
and forever and forever without end. No room
for depth, for nuance, for insight. Flat. No, you
will just have to gaze. Flat hands, flat feet, no
room for pain, no room for the absence
of pain. No room for absence, only flat now.
Everything here, everywhen, always and contin-
uous. No order to it. No disorder to it. At once
and always. Poor room, we press on. Flat forever
and forever and forever flat. We are. We both just are.
Matthew Nisinson (he/him) is a proud New Yorker living in Queens with his wife and daughter and their two cats. He has a JD, and a BA in Latin. Each summer he grows chili peppers. By day he is a bureaucrat. His poetry has appeared in en*gendered, Hyacinth Review, and Milk Press, among others. You can find him on Instagram or Threads @lepidum_novum_libellum and on Twitter and Bluesky @mnisinson.
sloth at the Cincinnati zoo
a poem by Ashley Kirkland
by Ashley Kirkland
Maybe
it’s the temperature,
but I can’t
be rushed; I like
to take my time, take it
slow. Clawed fist over
clawed fist, branch
to branch. It can be
so lonely in winter
– so few visitors
that time of year. Not like
the summer when the kids flock
for summer camp
to spend their days among
the trees and those of us
hiding in them.
I play this game
– it takes all night–
where I find a new hide-out
in the greenhouse and the children
try to find me in the morning.
There’s nothing quite like
the sound of a child
squealing with joy, calling
his friends to
come here.
Ashley Kirkland writes in Ohio where she lives with her husband and sons. Her work can most recently be found in The Naugatuck River Review, The Light Ekphrastic, and boats against the current.
I wasn’t going to tell you, but
a poem by Lisa MacKenzie
by Lisa MacKenzie
I put the avocados,
which were in the fridge,
back out on the counter to ripen.
You wanted to make guacamole
for dinner tomorrow
with these stones.
I don’t mind if you’re mad,
but they won’t taste good.
Like you,
no softness,
no yielding.
Lisa MacKenzie is enjoying the free time of retirement in which to write poetry. Her work has appeared in boats against the current, Visual Verse and Literary North. She lives in Maryland with her husband and two entertaining cats.
Note: The title of this poem is inspired by This Is Just To Say by William Carlos Williams
daybreak and the little moon in the sky
a poem by Charlene Langfur
by Charlene Langfur
The sky is a sweet, deep, dark blue before the light breaks.
The little moon, an arc over the tall fan palms.
A single star glowing over a hot planet.
This is a birthday poem in the Sonoran Desert.
The poem tracking where we are, marking it safely.
I think this is what the poem does now. Saves us.
Reminds of the best we can do, remembering the miracle
of stopping to see what was around us all along.
Fan palm leaves alive, green, deep green, swaying,
in a place of sand and scraggly wild grass.
Mesquite covered with small pods all over it,
cactus on fire with yellow flowers and red fruit.
What goes on living no matter what. I follow along
after what lives, what goes for more where there is less.
I think, why not grow older along with the universe,
eat cupcakes with lemon icing, blow out the candles on top,
on a planet of bombs and threats, a pandemic
that does not quit. And I keep going back to the poem and the sky,
my rescued dog’s wild kisses, the idea nothing’s amiss even if it is,
and I open up the day this way, all in, agog with the new, exactly who
and where I am in the desert in the pandemic in the recession
at the beginning of earth changes.
Charlene Langfur is an LGBTQ and green writer, an organic gardener with many publications in Room, Weber, The Stone Canoe, most recently in The Hiram Poetry Review, Poetry East, Acumen, an essay in Still Point Arts Quarterly, and a short story “The Force of Atoms in an Imperfect World” highlighted on the Hudson Valley Writer’s Guild website.
today is Rilke’s birthday
a poem by Justin Karcher
by Justin Karcher
and the café’s busier than usual. The guy
sitting at the table next to me loudly recalling
drunken heroics. Like the time he swam across
the Niagara River. His friend’s absolutely
in awe. There’s a very fine line
between being a hero and having your little life
come crashing down. A torso cut off from the whole
worried you’ve wasted it all. Everything blooming
most recklessly. How it starts in your bedroom.
The loneliness is fever-pitched before it unravels
into syringed hands and barefoot candles.
Thousand echoes you want to gently push
in front of a moving car. But that’s where it needs to end.
Justin Karcher (Twitter: @justin_karcher, Bluesky: justinkarcher.bsky.social) is a Best of the Net- and Pushcart-nominated poet and playwright born and raised in Buffalo, NY. He is the author of several books, including Tailgating at the Gates of Hell (Ghost City Press, 2015). Recent playwriting credits include The Birth of Santa (American Repertory Theater of WNY) and “The Trick Is to Spill Your Guts Faster Than the Snow Falls” (Alleyway Theatre).
convergence
a poem by Kristen Mitchell
by Kristen Mitchell
for Sage
in the small of the light
a private conference of toads
do not touch this pool
we are growing here
the trees hang onto sound
acoustic players of the night
I can’t sleep
shut the window
my brain washes itself on
8hrs of sleep
kissing
jumping spider
looking for the smaller flies
the killer mosquito
but the old toad who didn’t care
for that dream you were having
caught it
with a sticky tongue
Kristen Mitchell is a queer/ disabled writer living in Michigan. They are the author of The Wound (Alien Buddha Press) and their work has been published in Witchcraft Mag, Wanting to Die Poetry Club, Door Is a Jar Magazine, and others.
outside of the seven
a poem by Daniel Lockeridge
by Daniel Lockeridge
A lake lends its balanced levitation
to another duck that sang like Saturn,
and the driving morning — more midnight —
is suddenly having to make room for planetary poesy.
I let it grow like a ring in the sun,
till it almost sounds, like the trillion wings
that split water only because you remember the air
and tell me to stop imagining your planet-sunned hum.
The lake rises as the earth cares for its revolution,
and in the extra rush I indulge your singing stares;
I hold the ducks like deservedness, while they soar.
I may not find another muse among the seven
remaining decades of fluttering, precise destruction
left by the ballpoint-sound whose slowness soaks the mind.
Daniel Lockeridge is a twenty-nine-year-old Australian who has self-published two collections of poetry as well as a collection of meditative reminders. His Instagram page – @danlovepoetry – has allowed him to expand on his love for writing free verse, especially romantic poetry interlaced with nature themes. His poetry has been published in Reverie Magazine, The Winged Moon Magazine and Free Verse Revolution. Currently, he is focusing on completing novels as well as additional poetry and spiritual books.
2 poems
by Bo Rahm
by Bo Rahm
the sinking ship
They are gentlemen
Top hats skin tight
Reservoir tipped.
The ocean plots to
Be filled and won’t
Stop until fully satisfied.
All the men in slobbering saucer eyed amazement
Take off their hats
Before jumping in.
looking at my niece’s painting
It is
The way a leaf is...
The way Jupiter is...
Everything has been said before,
Frightfully before. She says,
“All the colors of a clown
Are all the colors of the universe.”
And that is
It.
Bo Rahm’s favorite Poets include Theodore Roethke, Frank O’Hara, and Japanese Haiku poets. Bo has earned a bachelor’s degree in creative writing. He is the latest bloomer in any group of people he finds himself in.
proposal
a poem by Bart Edelman
by Bart Edelman
There’s a voice in the ocean,
Calling out to you,
And you can faintly hear it.
It’s intended just for you—
Of this you’re quite certain.
You visit the shore each day,
Waiting on the water’s edge,
Watching the waves roll back and forth,
Straining for the proposal—
Buoyed by its presence.
Friends begin to worry,
Wonder where you reside
In this silent life you lead.
But you have a secret,
And intend to keep it,
Until the current sets you free,
Answers any remaining question,
Before you marry the sea.
Bart Edelman’s poetry collections include Crossing the Hackensack, Under Damaris’ Dress, The Alphabet of Love, The Gentle Man, The Last Mojito, The Geographer’s Wife, Whistling to Trick the Wind, and This Body Is Never at Rest: New and Selected Poems 1993 – 2023, forthcoming from Meadowlark Press. He has taught at Glendale College, where he edited Eclipse, a literary journal, and, most recently, in the MFA program at Antioch University, Los Angeles. His work has been widely anthologized in textbooks published by City Lights Books, Etruscan Press, Fountainhead Press, Harcourt Brace, Longman, McGraw-Hill, Prentice Hall, Simon & Schuster, Thomson/Heinle, the University of Iowa Press, Wadsworth, and others. He lives in Pasadena, California.