ONE ART’s 2026 Pushcart Prize Nominations
Moudi Sbeity – Whale Shark
Morrow Dowdle – And Then, We Hear It
Veronica Tucker – Once, on the Oncology Floor
Hilary Sideris – Net Worth
Francesca Leader – Weights & Measures
Anne Starling – Conversations with My Son
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Whale Shark
A whale shark, according to the five year old at
the climbing gym, is what happens when a whale
eats a shark. Just like that. It’s simple. Everything
is separate and when two things join they just
add to another. The shark doesn’t die in this story.
Nothing changes. The world is still safe, predictable.
The whale shark was his favorite tattoo, but now it’s
erased. My full sleeve tattoos don’t erase though,
and they’re the biggest ones he’s seen. Like really big.
Like really really big. I thought of how when sorrow
consumes joy they don’t simply add to each other,
but become poignant. And when gratitude spills
into grief together they create the conditions for
surrender. Or even how water and flour make bread,
not Water Flour. Some things get lost along the way.
But I didn’t tell him this; that a whale shark is actually
a shark, just a really big one. I wanted more to believe
in the simplicity of his world, in the authenticity of
how things join, then come apart, and in the process
nothing is changed, no one dies. We just continue to
appear and disappear into each other’s lives unaffected,
our innocence not yet capable of breaking.
*
Moudi Sbeity is a first-generation Lebanese-American currently enrolled in the Mindfulness-Based Transpersonal Counseling masters program at Naropa University. Prior to attending Naropa, they co-owned and operated a Lebanese restaurant in Salt Lake City, which served as a queer safe space. Moudi was also a named plaintiff in Kitchen v. Herbert, the landmark case that brought marriage equality to Utah in 2014. As a person who stutters, they are passionate about writing and poetry as transpersonal practices in self-expression.
Moudi’s poems have appeared in the following anthologies; Irreplaceable by Nan Seymour and Terry Tempest Williams (Moon In The Rye Press, 2025), Love Is For All Of Us by James Crews (Storey Publishing, May 2025), The Nature Of Our Times by Luisa A. Igloria (Paloma Press, Fall 2025). Moudi’s first book, Habibi Means Beloved, a memoir on growing up queer and stuttering in Lebanon, is expected to be published in late 2026 by University of Utah Press.
§
And Then, We Hear It
That is, I hear it, and then
she enters my bedroom.
Face stricken.
I heard it, she says. Something
booming. I don’t correct her,
don’t say shooting.
The book of essays stays
open on my lap. I’m reading
the scholar’s message
to the would-be confessional poet.
Their recommendation? Your verse
should be more gospel
than gossip. The only hymn
at present a ringing in my ears.
Aren’t you scared?
she asks. I tell again the saddest
lie—No, I reply. I cut her
loose in her fear, make
my face maddeningly flat.
And what could I say about
the stray bullet that found me
in Chicago. Or the ones
that fly by no accident
into a brother’s or sister’s
chest or head. Men do kill,
whether it’s bird or deer
or a queer who’s been known
to hold a red card, sitting
out here in the country
with my daughter,
where the KKK still lurks
in corners. Then there’s
the adrenaline of executive
orders, the line not far
from Klan to militia.
It’s probably someone
hammering, she says.
Yes, I say. I like that
explanation. I like us
to think that someone’s
out there in the dark
on a silver ladder, nails
sprouting from their mouth.
So eager to build a house
they could not wait for morning.
*
Morrow Dowdle is a two-time Pushcart Prize nominee and the author of the micro-chapbook Hardly (Bottlecap Press, 2024). Their work can be found in New York Quarterly, The Baltimore Review, Pedestal Magazine, and other publications. They run a performance series which features BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ voices. They are an MFA candidate at Pacific University and live in Durham, NC.
§
Once, on the Oncology Floor
A teenager asked
if he’d ever drive again.
No one knew what to say.
So I showed him
how to press the nurse call button
like it was an ignition switch.
He laughed,
and for a minute,
the hallway turned
into an open road.
That night
I dreamed of him
parallel parking
between stars.
I woke with the memory
of his hand
gripping the rail
as if it were
a steering wheel.
*
Veronica Tucker is an emergency medicine and addiction medicine physician, as well as a mother of three. Her work appears in redrosethorns, Red Eft Review, and Medmic, with additional pieces forthcoming. Find her at www.veronicatuckerwrites.com or on Instagram @veronicatuckerwrites.
§
Net Worth
I watch the news & file
my statement of net worth,
sign a retainer stating I won’t date
until divorced. Mom loves Sam,
a man my age who lives with her
(locked out of his wife’s house,
his name not on the deed).
No one has ever treated her so well.
Ecstatic to have someone to cook for,
she wonders what sex will be like.
My father wasn’t nice. I have his eyes,
& the bags under them. At church
folks talk. Sam promises he’ll build
a mansion soon, maybe they’ll move
to Spain. Incredulous, she tells me
He even finds my phone.
*
Hilary Sideris is the author of Un Amore Veloce (Kelsay Books 2019), The Silent B (Dos Madres Press 2019), Animals in English (Dos Madres Press 2020), and Liberty Laundry (Dos Madres Press 2022.) Her new collection, Calliope, is now available from Broadstone. Sideris works as a professional developer for CUNY Start, a program for underserved, limited-income students at The City University of New York. She can be found online at hilarysiderispoetry.com
§
Weights & Measures
I still don’t know how
You can compliment a girl
Without infecting her,
Say she’s perfect
Without seeding worry
Of when she won’t be
Anymore, span her
Waist with hands
Amarvel at its minuteness
Without encoding
Lovability as the ability
To fit inside something
Else, submit to
Subsumption. I still don’t
Know how you can
Expect a girl’s soul
Not to snag on BMI charts,
Measurements, bodyfat
Ratios, celebrity weight
Loss and “Half My Size” stories,
Because they’re
Everywhere—number-shaped
Briars ensnarling all
Paths to self-acceptance—
Or tell her to inure,
Ignore, be tough but soft,
A paradox, like vanity sizing
That makes her crave
The labels that anoint her
A 2 and damn the brands
That brand her a 12,
As if she could be “S”
And “L” at once,
Survive the truth
Of weighing & measuring how
Much she matters in inverse
Proportion to how much
(Always too much) matter
She comprises, for bodies
Most loved are the
Bodies that least exist.
I still don’t know how
You can call a girl
Beautiful because she’s thin
Or ugly because she isn’t
Without engendering
Pathology, a fixation sickness
On what is visible
Instead of what is whole.
*
Francesca Leader has poetry published or forthcoming in Abyss & Apex, HAD, Broadkill Review, Stone Circle, The Storms Journal, and elsewhere. Her poems have been nominated for Best of the Net (2025) and Best Spiritual Literature (2025). Her debut poetry chapbook, “Like Wine or Like Pain,” is available from Bottlecap Press. Learn more about her work at inabucketthemoon.wordpress.com.
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Conversations with My Son
The longest one lasted twelve minutes.
I held my breath.
He was happy. He had something to tell me.
He was leaving.
He was almost gone.
I can still see us together at that moment,
Nick at thirteen, sitting on the sun porch floor,
playing with the dog’s ears, his whole face
open to me as he talked about his two new
friends, his new school. Open as the weed-
flowers he used to rush inside to bestow
when he was little. So then,
I wasn’t thinking about starting dinner,
or of the magazine article I’d set aside.
Or of the word he’d used— “mavericks”—
to describe the trio of classmates he
so proudly
claimed to lead. I was trying to be happy;
I was happy for him. The world would soon turn
unrecognizable, would become something
I couldn’t imagine. Not the world: of course
I mean life. I mean my life. From then on,
the world was smoldering, until everything
went up in flames. I could show you.
I have the ashes.
*
Anne Starling is a poet from Florida. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rattle, The Southern Review, New Ohio Review, and Tampa Review, among other journals. Her poem “Shoe Store” appeared in Missouri Review Online as Poem of the Week.
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