poetry

McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

òran neo-làthaireachd

a poem by Eartha Davis

by Eartha Davis

Love is  

waking here.  

Love is rowing  

a forever song  

across your  

palm.  

The palm  

rewrites herself.  

A river  

grows.  

—  

There is no one  

to tell me  

when the ocean was born.  

How light  

creases  

water.  

How bodies sleep  

on an altar of  

forgiveness.  

—  

Suppose  

we are loving  

underwater. 

A way  

of translating  

the salt.  

A way  

of polishing  

heart stones.  

—  

We give  

rivered  

testimony.  

Ripen  

in the  

leaving.  

Mar sin leibh, mouth says.  

It opens  

like a cathedral of wanting.  

Mar sin leibh an-dràsta.  

You  

understand.  

Fingers  

crossing.  

There is  

no word for  

absence. 




Eartha wishes to live gently by a river. She placed second in the 2022 Woorilla Poetry Prize Youth Section, was nominated for Best of the Net in 2023, and was shortlisted for the 2024 Creative Writing New Zealand’s Short Story Prize. Her work is published or forthcoming in Wildness, Rabbit, Frozen Sea, Minarets, Modron, Baby Teeth Journal, South Florida Poetry Journal, JMWW, LEON Literary Review, Arboreal Magazine, ELJ Editions, the Basilisk Tree, the Stirling Review, Where the Meadows Reside, the Spellbinder Magazine, the engineidling, Discretionary Love, Sour Cherry Magazine, Revolute, & Eunoia Review, among others. She honours her Ngāpuhi ancestors and the Wiradjuri people, on whose land she lives, breathes, and writes.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

trees and boats

a poem by Tempest Miller

by Tempest Miller

Trees on boats 

nurserymen on waves 

the orchard showered in squall 

the vineyard of a rustling gunwale 

wood bark spray 

spurted from a handsaw of death 

stranded on the sea for five years 

dreaming like a prisoner 

of a degenerate kiss on a dockland 

I smell castle stone 

and bear fur on the quayside  

I smell it still like  

I smell the green mountains 

of youth 

and snow on my bare arm 

I look at the sky wretched-faced 

a face as a bed 

with the duvet flung all about





Tempest Miller (he/him) is an LGBTQ+ writer from the UK. His work has appeared in Boats Against the Current, Swamp Pink and JAKE. His debut chapbook, England 2K State Insekt, was released in February 2024. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

northern lights

a poem by Erin Schallmoser

by Erin Schallmoser

A friend once told me this theory she had:

that once she sees the northern lights,

really gives them a good look, she will never

be sad again. Yes, what a dazzling way to turn

your back on depression. I can see it now: streaks of 

green and purple and yellow, freshly fallen snow that

crunches under her black boots, her spine like a path 

for the rest of her life: strong and systematic and painless. 

Here in western Washington, it’s early April and spring

is showing its face, but would I  even recognize it 

if it weren’t for the winter we just walked through? 

And so it is with my friend, seeking out the deep

timeless beauties of the world, hoping they will

be like a permanent summer for her psyche,

because she knows the winter too well and 

it has stopped serving her.






Erin Schallmoser (she/her) is a poet and writer living in the Pacific Northwest. Her work can be found in Nurture, Paperbark, Catchwater, and elsewhere. She is the founder and editor-in-chief of Gastropoda, and is on Twitter @dialogofadream. You can read more at erinschallmoser.com/.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

in the crosshatch of sand and sky

a poem by Rekha Valliappan

by Rekha Valliappan

a clap, rapid cloudburst

a soundboard runoff

draining discord

litter of summera

buried in topsoil – 

seeds shuffle

unapologetic aperture

of mud marbled dust

beneath the shape of

sun-stoned days 

basking yellow

chance mellows,

change, charcuterie,

collards, capsicums,

cracked, caked,

ochre-ing season’s loom

fermented to fullness

the stitch starts over

bilious boards 

crushed in bloat;

the devastated dead 

which sleep, stagnate, 

do not lie

swept into vacuum

of sand and sky

do not die

this moist earth hums

gashing gagging

its spectral shimmers

loud return on the longer trek

of crumbling axials

while low flecks of sky

tilted scatter  

granules of grain

encircling an aged orb

it’s a scan, it’s spam,

solar flux triangled in

old ephemera of

a beginning with no end

tentative threads

strewn all around

paralleled with a once was

that never paused

– ages – ageless





Rekha Valliappan is an award-winning multi-genre writer of short stories, poetry and creative nonfiction. Her poems and prose-poems feature in various journals and anthologies including Press 53 / Prime Number Magazine, The Pangolin Review, The Wild Word, Small Orange Poetry Journal, The London Reader, and other places. Her poem 'The Ghostly Luna' was Poem of the Week in Red Fez. Her poem 'Sakura' earned her a Pushcart Prize nomination from Liquid Imagination.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

felling

a poem by Jonathan Chan

by Jonathan Chan

today the trees have been felled,

bare light glaring through the cavity, 

the patch. 

street lamps goad the eye as

foliage falls to stump and root. 

the night rushes to fill its gap, 

subterfuge to a scar. 

a lonely god watches

an undoing. 

i remember how this city plays 

with the heart, how a rupture 

shocks, blows a hole in the 

suspension of time. 

land use is a singular term. 

the wind will find new space

to blow. 

the birds must find someplace

new to rest.





Jonathan Chan is a writer and editor. Born in New York to a Malaysian father and South Korean mother, he was raised in Singapore and educated at Cambridge and Yale Universities. He is the author of the poetry collection going home (Landmark, 2022) and Managing Editor of poetry.sg. He has recently been moved by the writing of Yaa Gyasi, Chris Bernstorf, and Hala Alyan. More of his writing can be found at jonbcy.wordpress.com and on Instagram at @fivefoundings. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Katy Luxem

by Katy Luxem

I want to get drunk with you

A shot for every year of our marriage, the ring

and clatter of small glasses on a dark, polished bar.

Licking salt from each rim, or wounds, or bubbles

in the froth of cold beer. Peanuts in a cracked bowl.

Or cracked peanuts in a bowl. What was it

you liked? A hurricane, murky, me rocking

with a baby in my arms, wine after the in-laws left

Thanksgiving. I feel like taking your hand, tipsy

on the highest ledge. What are we celebrating if not

us? Outdoors at the plastic picnic table, the umbrella 

barely covering our flushed cheeks. May we do that?

Tip the bartender who lets us hotly evaporate just a little

bit together into the late afternoon sun. 




first swing

This must be what they make

those little

leg holes in the buckets for, 

tiny &

absorbing your body weight. 

I love these

chains, how they bring your joy

right back to me. 





Katy Luxem is based in Salt Lake City. She is a graduate of the University of Washington and has a master’s from the University of Utah. Her work has appeared in Rattle, McSweeney’s, SWWIM Every Day, Rust & Moth, One Art, Poetry Online, Appalachian Review, and others. She is the author of Until It Is True (Kelsay Books, 2023). Find her at www.katyluxem.com.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

sunday afternoon

a poem by Leigh Winters

by Leigh Winters

It is Sunday afternoon

My mom presses flowers into a

National Geographic magazine

I’ve had coffee and a mountain dew and 

Still a migraine protests on the tops of

My temples

It has the audacity to ask for more caffeine

The orange red or cuphea petals

Against the faded print

My mom closes the magazine





Leigh Winters is a 27-year-old poet. When she's not writing, she's doing Zumba, cuddling her cat, listening to loud music, and watching bad horror movies.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

slough

a poem by Molly Kathryn Fisher

 by Molly Kathryn Fisher

coffee-stained canines tear through sweet, 

slurpy strawberry skin, 

               gorging guts, 

a seed-

swallowing prayer that these vines may 

grow in the hollow of my stomach and 

tangle my

loose threads               together, that my mouth

may froth with sugar instead of blood, 

but 

my throat chokes on the saccharine 

sickly

slide 

down.

                                     my sheets stain red. 

please please pretend

i’m a nice woman.

please wake me when my headache

breaks. 






Molly Kathryn Fisher is a writer based in the Chicagoland area, earning a BA in Literature from North Central College. Winner of the 2022 and 2023 Ruth Cooley Poetry Prize, her poems “my stream of consciousness fails the bechdel test” and “Disco Ball Blues” are featured on poets.org. Her work also appears in Moonflake Press, The Erozine, and the fridge at her parents’ house. Molly is fond of Carole King, the color green, and feeling too much.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Kathleen McCann

by Kathleen McCann

these days without you

I move slowly, cautious as

the old snapper, pulling

for the dark, filmy pond.

Better to keep moving,

far from the country

of you.




the quintessential shoe

Where is the worry

when they smile

up at you,

a face full

of forehead, no

eyes.

Only that rich

mahogany mouth.

And maybe,

a penny.





Kathleen McCann is a poet who lives and writes in Venice, Florida after retiring and moving from Massahusetts. She recently finished a chapbook, Nothing Vanishes, and is beginning to send it out. Her full-length collection, Sail Away The Plenty, was a finalist for the May Swenson Poetry Award, Jane Hirshfield as judge. Writing poetry and swimming help McCann stay centered in these crazy and fractious times.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

delft blue

a poem by Benjamin WC Rosser

 by Benjamin WC Rosser

My Delft blue plate, a replication of an imitation, lies smashed in the trash.  Do not know the who nor how, never heard the crash.  Flat circular center an idyllic scene sealed beneath clear glazed-glass, cracked.  17th century Dutch fishing sloop, cuts towards wild reeds by a bygone windmill, beside a thatched-roof cottage before a deciduous wood, white clouds in a soft cobalt sky, distant seabirds soaring.  The plate’s raised outer rim replete with blossoms and feathered leaves.  My Delft blue plate, thousands of meals, sticky egg yolk, thick turkey gravy, steaming potatoes, sweet corn, buttered vegetables, juicy meats, tangy sauces, pasta, chili, sushi, marmalade.  Each dinner I exhumed bit by bit, bite by bite, the motionless wooden windmill, gulls suspended in air, the slicing sloop.  Tiny figures on deck, lifelong companions.  Everything wanting wind.  I sit by the window in my 10th floor concrete cage, peering through grimy glass.  Rows of residential towers resemble headstones in an amber haze, along the barren banks of an asphalt creek.  We all wait for wind.  I scroll the internet seeking a duplicate Delft blue plate.  




Benjamin WC Rosser is a Professor Emeritus of the University of Saskatchewan.  He has published poetry in Consilience Journal (2022), London Grip (2022, 2023), Boats Against the Current (2023), and Verse Afire Canadian Poetry Magazine (2024).  Ben resides in Ottawa, Canada, with his wife Corinne and children Isabel and Oliver.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

2 poems

by Ivy Aloa Robb

by Ivy Aloa Robb

Isabella

A dog asleep near gate in grass,

She looked like a caterpillar 

In late summer,

A black-ended bear all

Curled up with her back to me,

The sienna fur matted to her thighs 

Like patches of steel wool.

I wondered if she were dead,

Or if shortly she would turn her muzzle 

From flesh to lift her head

Then look at me with smoky-quartz eyes,

But I was already driven off 

And couldn’t know.

if I could go back 

If I could go back to the Ash River, 

I’d bring less with me. 

When my father turns and says “it’s slow fishing today”, 

I’d take more time to know what he meant.

I wouldn’t let the loon look at me

From across the bay.

Her wailing a mockery of my own song.

Her breath a vapor in the wind—

Suspended above the water.

I’d bait my own hook

And filet my own fish,

Even when its flesh becomes warm and difficult. 

I wouldn’t ask for any help.

If I could go back to the land,

I’d spend more time laughing with my mother, 

Watching the black bear 

Nudge its babies into the treeline.

Their legs nearly breaking under their swollen bellies. 

If I could go back to the clearing, 

I would chase the grouse with my sister again

And laugh less at their suffering.

Find another way to feel better, 

So that I didn’t have to strike them myself. 

I still remember their blood against 

The boulder I used to read Millay on. 

I can still smell August burning sulfur 

And the dock’s rotting mold. 

If I could go back,

I’d pray more often.






Ivy Aloa Robb is a poet and artist from central Florida. Her poetry has been featured in various literary journals such as Emerge Literary Journal, Lindenwood Review, Ephimiliar Journal, and more. Alongside her creative endeavors, Ivy is also the founder and EIC behind Magpie Lit, a platform she founded to give voice to emerging voices in the literary world. When she's not lost in writing, you can often find Ivy indulging in birdwatching or exploring the intricacies of theology.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

a brief summing up

a poem by George Freek

by George Freek

The sky is like a table

I live under.

It seems as fragile as glass,

and when night arrives,

another day has gone.

A star flickers.

Then it burns away.

It’s what we’re made of.

It does what it was

meant to do. It will rise,

flicker and then it dies.

It’s only left for me

to wonder why. 




George Freek’s poem "Enigmatic Variations" was recently nominated for Best of the Net. His poem "Night Thoughts" was also nominated for a Pushcart Prize.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

grandma’s garden on sundays

a poem by Sarah Robin

by Sarah Robin

Creased, aged hands grasp the watering can with hers, contrastingly small yet strong 

With youth, lifting the weight of the water before letting it drip down onto the earth;

Feeding the seeds that will grow and produce; a creation of new life.

Patience, love and care provides results before long;

Balls of green brightens the soil, the colour of hope and the birth 

Of flowers for all to enjoy, for us and the wildlife.

Every Sunday the grandchildren visit they see inches of new growth. Excitement, 

Joy and wonder bursts out of the girls, crowding around in awe and pride. 

Their work and dedication materialise steadily, buds start to form

And hints of colour give some indication of the beauty to come, anticipation heightened. 

A week later the children kneel on the ground, lean over to take a closer look, eyes wide. 

The flowers now fully open, smudges of red, yellow and orange, the colours warm. 


Bees bury themselves into the silk cups, buzzing back and forth, weaving between 

Bushes and over fences, returning for more. Butterflies circle in the air, momentarily 

Landing in various places, wings like a painting without a frame; as if the paint could 

Run off their wings into the depths of the green, green

Grass below. Spiders weave webs between the plants, silvery 

Threads intertwined in intricate designs. Worms dig down into the mud. 

Grandma brings out jelly and ice-cream - a classic favourite. Different generations

Bask in the sun, calm and contented; silent in joint appreciation of their surroundings

And good company, just the sound of spoons hitting the bottom of bowls amongst the sway

Of the branches in the gentle breeze - nobody could wish for a better location. 

Spending valuable time with family creating precious memories all year round;

There’s nowhere I’d rather be than in Grandma’s garden on Sundays. 





Sarah Robin is a new writer from Bolton in northwest England, only starting her writing journey during the coronavirus pandemic. She uses past and present experiences as inspiration for her work and likes to focus on conveying emotion and being ‘in the moment’. Robin has had several pieces of work published in anthologies and online literary magazines as well as being a competition winner for both short fiction and poetry. She is also the Secretary of the Lancashire Authors’ Association. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

what you built

a poem by Alayna VanDoeselaar

by Alayna VanDoeselaar

paint on the wall

a color you picked quickly

I pick at it with fingers

that wiped my tears

you tear the picture of us all

frame it and hang it on the wall

do you tell her about – 

the miles crossed and flies on the wall

do you tell her what they saw

the sounds falling through your hands

does she see what you built

what was torn down

this smell of new carpet is not the 

same as new beginnings

you reach out an olive branch but 

I’m on my own now

it’s okay

I know







Alayna VanDoeselaar is an emerging writer who enjoys creating poetry and fiction in many forms. Born and raised in Michigan, she is now attending Michigan State University, studying English in hopes of pursuing her writing passions as a career. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

already far at sea

a poem by Peter J. Dellolio

by Peter J. Dellolio

Already far at sea

there

was

something

askew

a clog in the make-up

        of the valor mandate

        all sands

        cauldron

        flecks of time came

        towards the scepter in

        its cage.




Peter J. Dellolio was born in 1956 in NYC. New York University 1978: BA Cinema Studies/BFA Film Production; poetry, fiction, short plays, art work, and critical essays published in literary magazines and journals.  Poetry collections “A Box Of Crazy Toys” published 2018 by Xenos Books/Chelsea Editions; “Bloodstream Is An Illusion Of Rubies Counting Fireplaces” published February 2023 and “Roller Coasters Made Of Dream Space” published November 2023 by Cyberwit/Rochak Publishing. 

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

the animal eats

a poem by Kristin Lueke

by Kristin Lueke

some evenings on earth an even darker wolf wins.

the body, god help it, can bear more than the mind.

while i plead after goodness, the meat of me tenders. 

i could scream. we both know i won’t stop. 

i have an angel i hate. they won’t shut up about grace.

i have a heart & it howls for blood. 

who am i to say what is mine to feed? 

the moon wanes. the animal eats. 




Kristin Lueke is a Chicana poet living in northern New Mexico. She is the author of the chapbook (in)different math, published by Dancing Girl Press. Her work has appeared in Wildness, HAD, Anti-Heroin Chic, Hooligan, the Santa Fe Reporter, and elsewhere.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

I remember the cold

a poem by Nazaret Ranea

by Nazaret Ranea

I remember the cold

I remember throwing up

Sugar

And something else.

I remember how you looked

At me with eyes

Full of disgust.

And I remember the door

As it slapped behind your

Steps

It was the brightest blue

I've ever seen.







Born in 1999 in Malaga, Spain, now residing in Edinburgh, Scotland, Nazaret Ranea is an emerging poet recognized as one of Scotland's Next Generation Young Makars. Nazaret is the author of the zine My Men, and is currently working on her debut anthology. She frequently participates in many spoken work events in Scotland, and debuted at the 2023 Fringe festival. You can find out more about Nazaret's work on www.nazaretranea.com

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

animal

a poem by Livio Farallo

by Livio Farallo

there is that reason

              that sugar in time

              that sweetens dawn

              to let you drink it down

and now

                there is nothing for fog to do

                but crack the atmosphere

                letting moisture whistle away

and now

               a rock is the dirt the dirt is a tree

               a tree is a rooted mountain

               i’ve never seen.

up the road

out of stifling topography

drenched in thin rain,

we have a conversation

about the regardless air.

it’s what we talk about

no matter what we say:

                                           breathed in

                                           breathed out.

                                           breathed air

furring every word.






Livio Farallo is co-editor of Slipstream and Professor of Biology at Niagara County Community College in Sanborn, New York. His work has appeared in The Cardiff Review, The Cordite Review, Triggerfish, Roi Faineant, Ranger, Straylight, and elsewhere.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

point of view

a poem by Diane Webster

by Diane Webster

Blurred reflection

of colorful houses

shatters as a boy

jumps in the puddle.

Melted crayons

between sheets

of wax paper

on the sidewalk

mimic stained-glass

windows of a church.

Hot pavement

steams fog

after a rogue

August storm

T-bones the highway.





Diane Webster’s work has appeared in El Portal, North Dakota Quarterly, Verdad, and other literary magazines. She had micro-chaps published by Origami Poetry Press in 2022 and 2023 and was nominated for Best of the Net in 2022.

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McKenna Deen McKenna Deen

3 poems

by Mykyta Ryzhykh

by Mykyta Ryzhykh

The bush is devoid of all berries

Autumn is now stripping off the leaves too

The future is uncertain

By dying like the first time you teach me to feel sorry for you

A cry torn off by the wind is carried away leaving a silent emptiness

I don’t know how to feel sorry for you because you are indifferent to my regrets

Death is just a surprise box that you finally gave me

This is your first gift to me

This is the last gift

I grab the tree but its branches don't care

I'm walking through the cemetery looking for life

I cry about the living because the 

dead are indifferent to everything

I don't find anyone alive anywhere in this world

Only photographs on graves speak to me of love





Mykyta Ryzhykh has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and published in Dzvin, Dnipro, Bukovinian magazine, Polutona, Tipton Poetry Journal, Stone Poetry Journal, and others. 

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