The End of Technology by Haley DiRenzo

The End of Technology
after Ada Limón

No more the green blinking button. No more
the sweatsheen of screens. No more petals
of cheeks painted in pale blue light. No more tiny
keyboards. Love letters written by thumbs.
No more the glitches and are you still theres
and faces half frozen in pixel. No more crackly
voice notes. No more sinking in to the scroll
to numb the blueblack pain. No more the ever
buzz of the planet. The sun never setting on progress.
No more birthday cards emailed, not drawn
crooked lined in crayon. No more looping video
like a broken magic trick. No more distance.
Never again. I am asking you to come close, see me
in the flesh, before the light goes out.

*

Haley DiRenzo is a Colorado writer and attorney specializing in eviction defense. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Barely South Review, Thimble, and Bending Genres, among others, and has been nominated for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize. Instagram: @haleydirenzo

At Home in the Body by Robbi Nester

At Home in the Body

My cousin is a dancer, while I have always
lived too much in my mind. When I visited,
she dragged me to a belly-dancing lesson.
In the dim light, women in clouds of scented oil
swayed like palm trees, cymbals crashing
on each finger, arms coiling overhead.
They could say so much with just the slightest
bird-tilt of the head, move as though each muscle
had a mind—rictus abdominus, obliques, erector
spinae, pelvic floor, and more. At the sight, my body
stalled, so my cousin tied a folded scarf over my eyes,
blinding me to faltering. I became a leopard, muscles
a rippling stream beneath the skin.

*

Robbi Nester is the author of 5 books of poetry and editor of 3 anthologies. She currently curates and hosts two monthly poetry reading series on Zoom and acts as contributing editor on a new journal, The Odd Pocket Review. Learn more about her work at robbinester.net

Two Poems by Laura Foley

Coming Out to My Sister

My sister—
the aloof one—
wasn’t, that day.
She took my arm,
led me through Georgetown,
sunlight on brick sidewalks,
into a small boutique
where we found clothes
soft as permission.

I chose a black silk cape,
delicate women stitched
across the back—
a garment that felt
like stepping into myself.

For a little while
she smiled at me,
held clothes to my shoulders,
wanting to see
who I might become.

Many years now
she hasn’t called,
doesn’t answer emails—
has slipped again
into distance, into silence.

But the cape still hangs
in my closet,
light as breath,
reminding me
of the one day
we were gentle
with each other.

*

Tea and Sympathy

She drives all the way to my house,
up a steep hill in the woods of Vermont.

“I understand—this is someone’s life,”
she offers, as she stamps and signs,
as I sign and sign, blue pen looping my name.

We sit at the kitchen table.
She pats our dog,
explaining how, in her free time,
she takes in elderly Labradors
at the end of their lives.

“Give them a year or two of happiness.
One just passed, last week.
I still wake at night to take him out.”

We share spiced cookies,
Earl Grey tea,
as she tells me about her health,
a difficult teenage son,
how she loves to work on her own.

Meanwhile, I’m signing page after page—
tax documents, a deed—
as I sell my sister’s townhouse in Texas,
the one she flooded
as she was dying in her tub.

Sheila places her cup in the sink,
scans the documents into her phone,
beams them off across the country.

As she leaves, I feel lighter,
freer of a sister
I hadn’t known well—hadn’t seen in forty years;

thankful for the sympathy—
a notary
whose stamp feels like kindness.

*

Laura Foley is the author of, most recently, Sledding the Valley of the Shadow, and Ice Cream for Lunch. Sister in a Different Movie (Sheila-Na-Gig Editions) is due out later this spring. She has won a Narrative Magazine Poetry Prize, Common Good Books Poetry Prize, Poetry Box Editor’s Choice Chapbook Award, Bisexual Book Award, and others. Her work has been widely published in such journals as Alaska Quarterly, Valparaiso Poetry Review, ONE ART, American Life in Poetry, and anthologies such as How to Love the World and Poetry of Presence. She holds graduate degrees in Literature from Columbia University, and lives with her wife on the steep banks of the Connecticut River in New Hampshire.

Touching by Deborah Bacharach

Touching

I have a thing for marble
that has been beneath
Rodin’s hands.
I want to pull my thumb down a spine,
like a scull down the Schuylkill—
push harder,
gasp a little more.

Once I wanted a man so hard
I bit paint off the walls, can still taste
the grit.
I can see my narrow dorm,
how we knocked
Foucault off the shelf.

Or that late afternoon leaving
the strawberry wine cooler
half drunk,
when my knees hit jet-take-off angle,
him right there in the roar.

Maybe instead of my thumb
skimming the lips
of Rodin’s The Kiss, I should crouch. Be
the old woman, all
sagging breasts.
That would be the safe choice.
No one would be startled.

*

Deborah Bacharach is the author of Shake & Tremor (Grayson Books, 2021) and After I Stop Lying (Cherry Grove Collections, 2015). Her work has recently appeared in Poetry East, Last Syllable, Only Poems, and Grist among many other journals, and she has received a Pushcart prize honorable mention. She is a poetry reader for SWWIM and Whale Road Review. Find out more about her at DeborahBacharach.com.

Drip Study by Heather Kays

Drip Study
After Jackson Pollock

I tried to make something clean once.
It didn’t survive my hands.

The body always tells the truth first—
a tremor in the wrist,
the way anger prefers motion
to confession.

Paint flung itself where it wanted.
Gravity had opinions.
So did my pulse.

This wasn’t chaos.
It was accumulation.
Years of swallowed sentences
learning velocity.

Every line a refusal to stand still.
Every splatter a record
of where I couldn’t stop myself.

They call it violent.
They call it accident.
But nothing lands like this
without intention somewhere upstream.

I moved around the canvas
the way you circle a wound—
careful not to touch it,
desperate to see where it ends.

Color collided.
Layer over layer.
Proof that restraint is a luxury
of people who were never on fire.

There’s no center here.
No horizon.
Just the evidence
of staying alive long enough
to empty yourself
without asking permission.

If you stand close,
you can smell the sweat in it—
metallic, human, unfinished.

This is what it looks like
when control finally admits defeat
and something more honest
takes over.

*

Heather Kays is a St. Louis-based poet and author who has been writing since she was seven. Her memoir, Pieces of Us, dissects her mother’s struggles with alcoholism and addiction. Her YA novel, Lila’s Letters, traces a young woman’s growth and healing through unsent letters.

Her first poetry collection, Myths in the Feed, sold out six times in three months, and she is Crying Heart Press’s best-selling author. She was nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize in 2025.

She runs The Alchemists, an online writing group and creative community, and is drawn to stories that explore survival, identity, and the complexity of being human.

Her work has appeared in ONE ART, Cosmic Daffodil Journal, Chiron Review, The Literary Underground, The Rye Whiskey Review, SHINE Poetry Series, and McSweeney’s Internet Tendency.

Three Poems by Elaine Mintzer

Path
        after Jack Hirschman

Go to your road,
the one you thought
would take you all the way.

The one that started with Eve
and traversed the continents.

The one you share with your mother
who is signaling
she’s taking the next offramp.

The road you were sure
would carry offspring
because it is the nature of roads
to look into the future.

Make peace with discontinuity
and rest assured
this road will last as long as you.

In the meantime, count
the palm trees, the phone poles,
the dented guard rails, then
lose count.

Pass the slow trucks,
torn tire treads, and flattened crows
flapping on the graveled verge.

Turn on the radio.
Sing your heart out.

* 

My Father Finds No Reason to Quit Smoking

1.
My father leaves my sister’s funeral
before the guests thank God for their living children,
ward off the evil eye,
climb into their cars
and hurry home into the setting sun.

2.
My father slides into the leather seat of his T-Bird.
Lights a cigarette.
Puts the car in drive.
Peels onto the open highway,

3.
His own father died before he had language.
Daddy, Papa, Tata, Aba
No name.
No face.

4.
His mother sent him to the promise
of America when he was ten,
then died before the end of the war,
her hiding place sold for a pack of cigarettes.

5.
There is no language of grief
for children.

6.
Hawks and vultures circle the foothills.
The earth is wind-scrubbed and raw.
Black ash from last season’s burn
rims the reborn manzanita and sage.

7.
This time of year, poppies
blaze golden above the Grapevine
where sky presses
against the crags of the Tehachapis.

8.
In Hebrew, the word for wind, ruach,
is the same as the word for spirit.
And the word for breath, nishama,
means soul.

9.
The miles pass, ticked by lane lines.
The tip of Dad’s cigarette glows
as he pulls in the smoke.
It fills him like the spirit
of God.

*

On Deciding Whether to Drive Again to Antelope Valley to See the Poppies

It isn’t that I hate spring: its slithering
        creeks, frozen lizards thawing,
        dew-bejeweled blossoms.

It’s just that it was in spring we buried
        my sister under her edgeless green comforter,
        then drove to walk among the million rain-born poppies.

It isn’t that we were planning to create
        a ritual, an empty
        gesture, a heart-aching memorial,

but how could it be otherwise
        with the earth so determined in its rotation,
        and us just along for the ride.

*

Elaine Mintzer’s poem, E=mc2, was published in the February 2026 edition of Scientific American. Her second full-length collection, Drink from the River, will be released this summer by Moon Tide Press.

Two Poems by Anara Guard

Lug Nuts

Today I learned, with tears of rage,
how easy it is to remove a hubcap,
that lug nuts are not difficult to loosen
if one has the right tools. Lean into the handle
of that socket wrench, then let it drop
and clang against the garage floor
like a clarion call, Joshua’s horn
to destroy a wall long built up
by jokes and cartoons, movie images,
always a helpless woman in high heels,
her hands of no use, her mind less so.
She waited for aid from murderer or beau
hunky hero or menacing stranger.
She did not even know which was which
Or whom to fear. She was naught but a lug nut
who could be turned one way or the other
by any man with strength in his grip.
I shoulder the new tire into place,
wielded my wrench, curse those tropes,
the makers of memes, who shamed us
into thinking that we could not do this.

*

Downsized

(with a nod to Mary Oliver’s poem, “Storage”)

When we moved you
from your beloved home
to a new place (two rooms
in a beige hallway,
congregant dining
around the corner,
aides to bring your pills each night)
there were too many things
and not enough space.
Off you went, ungrudgingly,
leaving behind decades
of papers, books, holiday decor,
photographs, wine glasses,
corkscrews, hats, pairs of shoes
with heels too high for walking now.
What does one do?
We held a sale
and filled the yard with tables.
Friends, neighbors, bargain hunters
came to pick through
your coats and candlesticks.
They took nearly everything.
We donated the remains.
Now you ask: where is my clock?
My walking stick? That canvas bag?
I want my bird feeder.
Oh, things! If only
we could have you back.

*

Anara Guard is a poet living in Sacramento. Her poems have appeared in “On the Seawall,” “Gold Man Review,” “Tule Review,” “Last Stanza,” and elsewhere. She is the author of Hand on My Heart (New Wind Publishing) and Kansas, Reimagined (The Poetry Box). Her poems have won a John Crowe Ransom Award, Jack Kerouac Prize, and a Pushcart Prize nomination.

Two Poems by Anna Lowe Weber

Elegy Before Death

It’s hard to remember and strange comfort:
when you’re gone, truly gone,
you won’t miss us at all. You won’t miss
anything. The dog’s soft jowl. Tomato pie.
A summer night’s slide into clean sheets,
that cold bliss to the feet. None of it.

My aunt, in touch with a medium
after the death of my other aunt—
she claims that her sound system
lit up with static chaos on election night.
That was Lisa—pissed about Trump.

And we shrug and nod; everyone grieves
in their own way. Believe what you need
to believe. See your loved ones in
cardinals, and hummingbirds, and hawks,
that flash of wing or song somehow
proof that they haven’t gone
after all.

But really— can you think
of anything worse for the dead?
Still concerned with that turkey
from beyond the grave? Still going off
about the everyday shit of living?

I hope you miss nothing.
Go, and do not come back.
Go, and be whatever you will be,
utterly apart from us.

A spray of galaxy debris, unfurling.
Matter disintegrated like glitter
on the floor of a distant planet’s
raging sea.

*

How terrible to bear it

The possibility that it could all be okay.
Sure, an illusion. Smoke puff, fog

blanketing the glass top of a lake
while creatures still shudder terribly

under the surface. Everything is subjective,
including hope. Especially hope.

But— it felt real, too.
Something you might tease out of the skin

and examine under dawn’s natural light.
Drag it outside to see all its flaws,

the wrinkles and puckers; the sun-freckled
arm of a hard-earned life. The stub of a leg.

A cane, tap tap tapping. A breath. A goodbye.

*

Anna Lowe Weber, originally from Louisiana, lives in Huntsville, Alabama, where she teaches at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Her poetry and fiction has been published in the Iowa Review, South Carolina Review, Gargoyle, Tar River Poetry, and the Idaho Review, among other journals.

Two Poems by Hayley Mitchell Haugen

Knowing

I’m looking for something non-binary
for my eldest for Valentine’s Day,
I tell the Ulta sales associate.
She/they seems like a safe bet
with her/their pierced eyebrows
and 3D sparkly things adorning
bright green eyeshadow.

We settle on M.A.C.’s Turquatic,
with notes of anemone, cottonwood,
and Coriscan blue cedar, and I don’t know
what any of that means, but it smells
crisp and fresh as advertised.

One Christmas, my husband and I
sniffed sample fragrance cards
until we both had headaches,
looking for something woodsy
and masculine. A rite of passage,
we thought, our son’s first cologne.
We didn’t know that it would sit
unopened in the drawer,
eventually disappear altogether.

The shop-person says, You’re a good mom,
and I tear up, accepting that gift
during this first year of missteps,
an entire adolescence of missed cues
and misunderstandings. I secure
the pretty bottle in bubble wrap
and send it to my son daughter in the mail,
no pressure on her/them to be appreciative.
But they call me later, not a text,
and say the scent is perfect, they love it.

Soon, we are both crying
with the understanding that something
has shifted, not kidding ourselves
that we don’t both have a long way to go,
but embracing the moment, the possibilities
now open to us through knowing.

* 

Deadname

I need to tell you, I wasn’t listening
the night you told me your new name;
with your slipping grades, my own shortcomings,
I was too wrapped up in our family’s rage.

The night you first told me your new name,
I didn’t understand what you were saying.
I was too depressed by our family’s rage,
don’t remember the angry words I said.

I didn’t embrace what you were saying,
pushed you further into that space so alone,
didn’t know those angry words would pave
such a crooked road between you and home.

After pushing you into a space all your own,
when I was ready to hear you, endure your cry,
the road was so crooked between you and home,
I had already lost you; you wanted to die.

When I was ready to hear you, we both cried,
as you expressed your truth—authentic self,
an entire adolescence spent wanting to die,
when I had no idea you needed help.

Although I now accept your truer self,
as a mother so sure of her choice of naming,
I admit, I too, have needed help—
it’s true, at first there’s loss, a kind of grieving.

As a mother so sure of her choice of naming,
I thought I knew who you would always be;
it takes a year to work through all that grieving.
Habit sometimes calls you that deadname, but see,

I always thought I knew who you would be.
I am slipping past my own shortcomings,
lifting you up—setting that deadname free.
I have to tell you. Now, I am listening.

*

Hayley Mitchell Haugen is a Professor of English at Ohio University Southern. Light & Shadow, Shadow & Light from Main Street Rag is her first full-length poetry collection, and her firsr chapbook, What the Grimm Girl Looks Forward To is from Finishing Line Press. Her latest chapbook, The Blue Wife Poems, is from Kelsay Books. She edits Sheila-Na-Gig online and Sheila-Na-Gig Editions.

ONE ART’s Spring 2026 Fundraiser

Last Updated _ 4.13.26 

Donations!

Day 1 – 26% of goal

End of Week 1 – 32% of goal

End of Week 2 – 41.5% of goal

End of Week 3 – 50.5% of goal

End of Week 4 (final) – TBD

Total: $2,074

***

This is ONE ART’s 3rd official fundraiser.

The first two fundraisers were held via GoFundMe. The first was successful, the second not so much. Much gratitude, of course, to all who donated for their support, and for those who regularly support ONE ART over the course of the year.

This time around, I’m not going to use GoFundMe. Instead, ONE ART’s standard donation methods.

Similar to the previous fundraisers, the primary goal will be $3,000 in donations.

Different from the previous fundraisers— if we reach $4,000 in donations, then ONE ART will be able to publish a print version of IN A NUTSHELL: an anthology of micropoems.

Other reasons to donate?

ONE ART does not have any organizational, state, or federal funding.

All of ONE ART’s support comes from generous donations by individuals like you.

In general, my aim is to continue to find new ways to best serve the poetry community.

I remain committed to keeping submissions to ONE ART free.

I want to continue ONE ART’s programming which includes the ONE ART Reading Series and hosting low-cost workshops.

I hope you will consider a small donation to ONE ART to help support my ability to focus my attention on ONE ART’s daily operations and contributions to the poetry community.

With Gratitude,

Mark Danowsky
Founder / Editor-in-Chief
ONE ART: a journal of poetry

~ Ways to Donate ~

Donate via Stripe
Donate via PayPal
Donate via Venmo
Donate via CashApp

Reach out to discuss other methods.

On Cryptozoology by Kaily Dorfman

On Cryptozoology

Even in the silvery light, it doesn’t come back to me
and I can’t quite make it out. Like the overcast day
when I swam out alone, then started laughing: the cold
won’t stop. By the end, it was almost a relief.
With my hair wet, he said, I might be some watery cryptid
dragging him down, drowning him deep. He didn’t ask
much else of me. Now when I sleep I don’t see
the tangles of rotting kelp, those green ripples
at our feet. Should I say that he loved me
for my selfishness, or the freckle on my cheek?
I only dream the whining gulls, the cormorants
and me. Not the stranger with his mouth who walked the beach
laughing. Or years before, the salt scratching my heart
when I stretched out alone in the echoing green.

*

Kaily Dorfman was born and raised in Santa Cruz, California, and completed her MFA in poetry at UC Irvine and her PhD in English and literary arts at the University of Denver. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and the Best New Poets anthology, and is published or forthcoming at journals including New England Review, The Wallace Stevens Journal, Painted Bride Quarterly, The New Criterion, and Summerset Review.

ONE ART x The Poetry Shop

ONE ART has partnered with The Poetry Shop to help sell more poetry books!

The Poetry Shop is an independent online book store just for poetry!!

+

Here’s a link to ONE ART’s shop pages (they feature some different selections):

>> The ONE ART Shop

>> Curated by ONE ART: A Journal of Poetry

+

We’re currently featuring Poems of Awe and Wonder — which includes James Crews beautiful just published poetry collection ‘Breathing Room’, Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer’s ‘The Unfolding’, and Hayden Saunier’s ‘How to Wear This Body’.

Another featured bundle includes three excellent anthologies — Poetry Anthologies Are Not a Luxury

+

Note: ONE ART’s Shop page (which can be found on the ONE ART website home page) is a work-in-progress. Very much open to feedback.

To the Lost Flowers of Minab by Valentina Gnup

To the Lost Flowers of Minab

— for the 160 young girls killed at the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Iran

          Here is the beeswax candle
you took turns blowing out at bedtime.

          Here is the faded blue quilt,
stitched in your family a century ago,
the quilt your sister and you curled beneath each night,
your bodies, a warm treble clef of skinny limbs.

          Here are blessed milk thistle and the cherished lily.

          Here are roasted aubergine, pomegranates,
and the crispy rice that stuck to the bottom of the pot.

          Here are marbles, a jump rope, your favorite doll.
And here, your strictest teacher and the poetry
you learned to recite.

          Swinging in the park with your best friend,
sorrow of returning home at sunset.

          Scarlet orchids and white hyacinth.

          A setar perched on your thigh,
the way one finger coaxed music from the instrument
as your mother listened from across the hall.

          Here are pink damask roses, your shattered childhood,
your whole future returned to you—

          quiet mornings of old age,
and the long, long river of memory.

*

Valentina Gnup’s poetry collection, Ruined Music, was published by Grayson Books in 2024. In 2023 she won the Tucson Festival of Books Literary Award for Poetry and second place in the Yeats Prize for poetry. In 2019, she won the Lascaux Prize in Poetry; in 2017, she won the Ekphrastic Challenge from Rattle; and in 2015, she won the Rattle Reader’s Choice Award. She lives in Mill Valley, California. Visit at valentinagnup.com

Stripping Tobacco by Jason Roberts

Stripping Tobacco

The barn light
catches the dance
of amber dust
in the cold air
and casts long shadows
of Geneva and Clifton.

There are others,
but I only remember them.
Our silence is shared,
the way work is shared
when hands know what to do.

Leaves move through their fingers,
practiced and sure.
Through mine—
slower,
uncertain,
learning.

We strip them
clean,
sorting
pile from pile.
The air is dry and sweet,
thick enough
to tighten my throat
and settle in my clothes.

A radio in the corner.
Two Sparrows in a Hurricane
drifts through dust.
Then a Vince Gill song—
heard,
and left alone.

Her hands are fast,
controlled and rough.
He stands close.

Their eyes move
only between the leaves.
This will be Christmas money.

Nothing is said.
Nothing needs to be.
The night deepens and thins,
hours lengthen
and songs end.

When I think of stripping tobacco,
I do not think of words.
I think of standing,
hands moving,
dust floating,
my grandparents—
their quiet,
the hours,
the work,
and the way we stood together.

*

Jason Roberts is a social worker and therapist from Kentucky. He grew up on his grandfather’s farm, where the land became the center of his imagination. His work explores memory and the rural spaces that shaped his attention.

44.5kg by Amanda Ruiqing Flynn

44.5kg

i used to starve myself to fit in the hands of a man
i used to starve myself to fit in
i used to starve myself to fit
i used to starve
i used
i
i used
i used to hunger
i used to hunger for love
i used to hunger for love in the wrong places
i used to hunger for love in the wrong places of a man

*

Amanda Ruiqing Flynn is a writer, poet, multi-disciplinary artist and literary translator. She was a winner of the Golden Point Award 2025, and has served as a judge of the Bai Meigui Translation Competition. Her writing has been featured in Oyster River Pages, Best New Singaporean Short Stories, Quarterly Literary Review Singapore, Eunoia Review and This is Southeast Asia. She was co-editor of Singapore in the Eyes of Mother Artists. Raised in East Sussex, United Kingdom, Amanda lived in Taiwan for seven years before returning to her birthplace, Singapore, where she currently resides. When she’s not busy conjuring up new ideas, you can find her moonlighting as a librarian at Casual Poet Library.

NOVEMBER by Elizabeth Conway

NOVEMBER

I wish I was a Great Blue Heron
standing on one leg in the Clark Fork River
clutching ancient bedrock
in my talons for balance
instead of your waist
to hold you upright
so the cancer that stole
your steadiness
won’t pull you to
the floor while you
brush your hair.

*

Raised in St. Cloud, Minnesota, Elizabeth Conway has her MFA from the University of Montana, Missoula. Her fiction has been a finalist in Glimmer Train’s Open Fiction contest, Reed Magazine’s John Steinbeck Award and The Southeast Review’s World’s Best Short-Short Story Contest. You can also find her work in the ‘Weird Sisters’ Lilac City Fairy Tales anthology by Scabland Books, New Flash Fiction Review, Blue Earth Review, Fractured Lit, and elsewhere. Her chapter “A Fire at Valleyview Nursing Home” recently won Uncharted Magazine’s Novel Excerpt Contest, judged by Cynthia Pelayo. In addition, Conway is a recipient of the Michael Kenneth Smith Fellowship.

Two Poems by Lisa Beech Hartz

Francesca Is Complicit
After Amy Sherlock, “Multiple Expeausures:
Identity and Alterity in the ‘Self-Portraits
of Francesca Woodman,” 2013, an erasure

The nude hovers

between flesh and ideal.

Always an external gaze

complicit. The tactile

apprehension –

sensation of intimacy

thwarted. A mourning.

The withdrawal caught:

every gesture suspended.

The nude crumbling blurs

the doorframe. The threshold

never there.

*

Francesca Is, Francesca Does
After John Berger, Ways of Seeing, 1972, an erasure

A woman is
different. Her attitude
defines what can
be done to her.
Her gestures, voice,
a kind of
aura. To be born
a woman
into the keeping
of men. A self
split must watch
herself:
her image of herself
walking,
weeping. Walking
or weeping.
Everything she is,
she does. Men
survey women.
Women must
contain, interiorize.
Demonstrate
what is and is not
permissible. Women
watch themselves
being looked at:
She turns herself
into an object.
The nude aware
of nakedness
is not as naked.
The mirror
in her hand –

*

Lisa Beech Hartz directs Seven Cities Writers Project which brings writing workshops to underserved communities. She guides poetry workshops for men and women in two city jails. Erasure and ekphrastic poems are among her writers’ favorite ways to create new work. She is the author of The Goldfish Window (Grayson Books, 2018) and These Kismets (CutBank Books, 2025).

It’s All About Me: Finding Your Place in the World and the Poem — A Workshop with Alexis Sears

It’s All About Me: Finding Your Place in the World and the Poem
A Workshop with Alexis Sears

Workshop Leader: Alexis Sears
Date: Sunday, April 19
Time: 2pm Eastern
Duration: 2-hours
Cost: $25 (sliding scale)

>> Register Here <<

Readings are recorded and shared with all who register.

Workshop Description

In this single-session workshop, we’ll explore the art of writing the self without falling into cliché, diary-entry confessionalism. Students will craft intentional self-portraits in poetry, distinguish between various personas, and discuss the ethics surrounding writing about people we know. We’ll engage in generative exercises, close readings, and workshop discussions to transform personal experience into powerful, surprising poetry.

About The Workshop Leader

Alexis Sears is the author of Out of Order, winner of the 2021 Donald Justice Poetry Prize and the Poetry by the Sea Book Award: Best Book of 2022. Her work appears in Best American Poetry, Poet Lore, Cortland Review, Cimarron Review, Subtropics, and elsewhere. She earned her MFA in poetry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and her BA in Writing Seminars from Johns Hopkins University. She lives in Los Angeles.

Five Poems by Andrea Potos

THE FRIENDSHIP

The week
when she wrote:

You and I will
explore Truth together,

my heart
signed on instantly:

Yes,
though nothing followed–

they were words
only, after all;

I who am one who believes
in words, words

have rescued my life, after all.
Some say words are cheap;

I say, they
are costlier than you know.

*

SADNESS IS ON ITS WAY

I can hear the foghorns,
skies a drizzled mist,
clouds sodden
with grey weight
as if with so much
to let go of,
so much to say.

*

THE MOMENT I SENSED MY MOTHER WAS LEAVING

Standing in the mist-
drizzled green of Connemara,
the Wild Atlantic Way thousands of miles
from my mother in the rehab home,
I called to make sure she knew
I’d be back in four days.
I needed to ask her
how she was that morning– her voice
weakened and crackling across the vastness–
Just fair, she said,
Unable, for the first time in my life,
to offer the reassurance
for the daughter she loved so well-
it was then I knew.

*

WHEN MY WIDOWER NEIGHBOR INVITES ME
TO COME AND TAKE WHATEVER I WANT
FROM HIS WIFE’S WARDROBE

Three dressing rooms of voluminous wonder,
ballroom gowns, brocaded jackets
and scarves, leather purses and shoes,
and dressers filled with nightwear and tops.
I browsed and lingered, stayed for nearly an hour.
When I opened the deepest mahogany drawer, I found
a pale pink sweater, cloud-soft,
patterned all over with lipstick prints.
I thought of my mother, all the years
of her beloved Revlon shades.
I might have felt her then
tap my shoulder: Here is some love
from me honey–take it–
and I did.

*

WHEN OUR FAVORITE RESTAURANT CLOSES
         for Mom

Though you’ve been gone
nearly ten years now,
I’d drive the eighty miles
to go there–the glass doors still
opening for both of us.
I’d order our coffee
in their thick ceramic mugs,
then slices of their legendary
blueberry pie for take-home–
heaping with plump berries,
no crust on top, cold, with clouds
of whipped cream for later.
Each bite would remind me.
Now I must find
another place for us–
I want a location to point to,
to say, here, Mom, let’s go together,
I’ll pick you up at noon.

*

Andrea Potos is the author of several collections of poetry, most recently Two Emilys (Kelsay Books) and Her Joy Becomes (Fernwood Press). A new collection entitled The Presence of One Word is forthcoming later in 2025. Recent poems can be found in CALYX Journal, Presence, New York Times Book Review, Earth’s Daughters, and Poem. You can find her at andreapotos.com

Stations of the Cross by Susan Cossette

Stations of the Cross

Do not anger the domestic goddess.
Ora et labora.

Her nave is a mirror
that refuses to hold the shadow
or a footprint,
the bedroom carpet
a field of unblemished snow
vanquished weekly
by the Hoover god of destruction.

She is only safe when
the salt and pepper shakers
are aligned on the cherry wood altar–
Scarlet swiss guards,
perfect porcelain sentries.

She wields the Windex bottle
like the priest’s aspergillum,
and anoints the windowsills
with lemon chrism–
every smudge a black transgression.

The tea towels wait
to be ironed into a hiss of silence,
compressed into a memory of starch
and placed into the cedar Reliquarium.

That last speck of dust
is a persistent ghost.

From dust we came,
to dust we return.

She kneels weekly at the basin,
to scrub the white toilet
and flush her sin into the earth.

*

Susan Cossette lives and writes in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The author of Peggy Sue Messed Up, she was awarded the University of Connecticut’s Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize and is a two-time Pushcart Prize Nominee. Look for her published and forthcoming poems and essays in ONE ART, SWWIM, The Eunoia Review, The New York Quarterly, Rust and Moth, As It Ought to Be, and Anti-Heroin Chic, as well as the anthologies Fast Famous Women, Fast Fallen Women, and Fast Forbidden Women (Woodhall Press). If you meet her, be sure to ask about her cats, Sylvia and Charles.

The Translucent Mother by Lara Payne

The Translucent Mother

That night I thought you were dead I didn’t think once about your ghost, or worry you would haunt me. Of all I did not do for you. Of all you did not do for me. The police used the photo I gave them, found you bloody toed and confused. The next day you told me you don’t know how you wandered for 12 hours, never once asking for help. Am I kind to strangers because of you and your illness? Your ease of disappearance. I suckled 6 weeks, you told me once, so you knew you’d never get cancer. I’m used to your magical thinking, and barely argued. To what point? Perhaps I don’t need to imagine your ghost, as your presence has always been a bit translucent. Easily blown by any wind. Your voice changing cadence with each new friend or love. Chameleon. My first love, my first loss. The person I try every day to both love and be nothing like. Mother, half gone. Mother disappeared.

*

Lara Payne lives in Maryland. Once an archeologist, she now teaches writing at the college level, to veterans, and to small children. Her poems, many of which explore the Chesapeake environment and people, have appeared in a museum, on buses, and in print and online journals. Recent poems have appeared in Gargoyle and online with SWWIM Daily.

How We Rebuild by Christopher Barry

How We Rebuild

After his hip surgery
I asked my friend about meditation
because we have the same history
when it comes to pharmaceuticals
and I wondered how honest
he was with the doctor about his past
and how was he managing
with his wife keeping track of the pills
because as we inhabit these bodies
not designed to last as long as they do
how does sitting and noticing our breathing
help when bone rubs on bone where cartilage
used to be and tendon and ligament
fail to stretch around all that atrophy.

And my friend, who rebuilt one day at a time his life
only to wake one day with a titanium hip
that will outlast his body
and a prescription that reads like a note
from an old love that his wife
holds in her purse, understands
I am not asking a theoretical question
of suffering. Some days I sit
and follow my breath while my thoughts
snake through the wreckage of my past.
Some days no amount of detachment
and gently coming back to my breathing
is enough. I can manage the slow move
towards the surgeon’s knife
but what is strong enough to handle
the recovery that follows?

*

Christopher Barry is a teacher living in New Hampshire. His most recent work has appeared or will appear in “Feral,” “Scavengers,” “Poet’s Row,” and “Sport Literate,” and “Sardine Can Collective,” among other publications. Follow him on Instagram @mrbarrywrites

Three Poems by Joanne Leva

Lobster

You could crack my lobster or pitch a tent,
festoon it with pirates’ flags and shiny
things flapping in the wind. Stinging wind off
the Atlantic bluster but only half
a block from the hotel where we would stay
year after year. You’d walk for our pizza.
You, with outstretched, undeniable arms.
And, dutiful you, you’d deliver the hot
pepperoni and cheese to our sea mist
balcony overlooking the Sea Foam
Arcade, which overlooks the famous Love
Locks Park where large glycerin bubbles float
buoyant in transitioning summer sky.

*

Daily Routine in Lansdale, PA

Remember you are all people and all people are you.
—Joy Harjo

Remember the bed beneath your body,
the arrival of dawn. How peach color
reveals and illuminates the good sky.
How the reliable sun is mercy.
Remember how you walk on maple wood
floors. How the spirit goes along with you.
Remember your mornings, alone. The way
you remember the cat. How he adores
your lap. Remember your daily work. How
you step up. Remember your voice. Use it.
How green shoots start to show in early spring
and the hardened earth under the feeder
crumbles when you cross the yard. Remember

*

Final Arrangement

Let me tell you it wasn’t all bad, yes
it was Alcoholics Anonymous
on so many nights, car wrecks, chain smoking,
and tripping on acid in our house. Or
the night you left our bed and never came
back, set up a make-shift boudoir complete
with a large screen TV, CDs galore,
tobacco for rolling cigarettes. But,
it wasn’t all bad, there were good times too.
There was kindness in the middle of it.
Odd little kindnesses on my birthday,
our anniversary, Mother’s Day, and
that surf-tumbled, deep-purple sea glass ring.

*

An advocate for creative writing and community service, Joanne Leva is the founder and executive director of the Montgomery County Poet Laureate Program (MCPL), founder and coordinator of the Forgotten Voices Poetry Group out of the Indian Valley Public Library in Telford, PA, and author of the poetry collections Eve Would Know (2017) and Eve Heads Back (2020) published by Kelsay Books.

Leva’s poems have appeared in The American Poetry Review, Peace Is a Haiku Song, 50 Over Fifty, Apiary, E-Verse Radio, Schuylkill Valley Journal, Rag Queen Periodical, Bucks County Writer, Transcendent Visions, WILDsound Festival of Poetry and elsewhere. Her poem, “God Walks into a Bar,” was featured in a Philadelphia Calligraphers’ Society Poetry Reading & Exhibit and companion publication.

Insomnia Chronicles LV by Erin Murphy

Insomnia Chronicles LV

The night is full of insomniacs googling insomnia. The woman who wrote a popular children’s book about grief to help her own kids process the loss of their father was just convicted of murdering him. Even my phone objects to murder. It keeps autocorrecting to my last name. I never realized how much Murphy and murder have in common. I prefer the Irish pronunciation: Moor-fee and moor-der. Today is St. Patrick’s Day. Many Murphys were murdered in the Potato Famine. That seems almost quaint, doesn’t it? Death by vegetable. Now we use drones and Tomahawk missiles. We block oil supplies and collapse power grids. From the sky, Cuba is as dark as a coal miner’s lung. Meanwhile, I order Guinness mac & cheese from Instacart and watch the Oscars on DVR. Kate Hudson’s necklace cost $35M. Demi Moore looks like a bird after the Exxon Valdez spill. Only one presenter mentions Palestine. Only one letter stands between fiction and friction. “Grief Author Guilty of Poisoning Husband,” the headlines say. She’ll serve life without parole while other murderers clean up in stocks, crypto, and votes. Once upon a time we let this happen. Where are our convictions?

*

Erin Murphy is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, most recently Human Resources, Mother as Conjunction: Lyric Essays, and Fluent in Blue, winner of the 2025 American Book Fest Best Book Award in Poetry. Swoon: New and Selected Poems is forthcoming in 2026. Website: www.erin-murphy.com

Driving at Night by Ally Baig

Driving at Night

Two vanilla cones from McDonald’s and a rap song
on the stereo. Tonight, I am skeptical of those mysterious
towering numbered buildings standing between plazas,
whose purpose no one will admit to knowing. Tonight,
I am sympathetic to the animals that stumble around
in the dark of the unlit American night, searching
for food for their children. Friend who wants to drive
faster but doesn’t—who is stopping you? I will turn
the music up. Those blinking green lights on the stop sign
are cheering for us. The speed limit is just a suggestion.

*

Ally Baig is pursuing a BA in English with a concentration in Creative Writing, and his poetry has been previously published, and forthcoming, in Eunoia Review.

Ghazal workshop with Ellen Rowland

Ghazal workshop with Ellen Rowland
Date: Tuesday, April 7
Time: 1-3pm Eastern
Duration: 2-hours
Cost: $25

Limited to 15 participants.

>> Register Here <<

Readings are recorded and shared with all who sign up.

~ About The Workshop ~

In this instructive and generative workshop, we’ll delve into the Arabic Ghazal, exploring its historical origins and cultural significance, as well the specific stanza structure and musical devices, including refrain, rhyme, and use of repetition. Through illustrative examples, we’ll learn the particular patterns and music of this ancient form to express cultural differences, celebrate love and beauty, or insist on an idea or theme.

The first hour of workshop will cover the history of the Ghazal and its influence on modern poetry with examples and detailed writing guidelines, followed by discussion.

The second hour will be dedicated to writing time to practice the form and optional sharing of our work.

In order to create an intimate environment that encourages discussion, sharing of ideas and writing, this workshop is limited to 15 participants.

All poetry levels welcome.

~ About The Workshop Leader ~

Ellen Rowland is a writer and editor who leads small, generative poetry workshops on craft and form. She is the author of two collections of haiku: Light, Come Gather Me and Blue Seasons, and most recently The Echo of Silence/L’écho du Silence, a bi-lingual book of haiku and tanka. Her full-length poetry collection, No Small Thing, was published by Fernwood Press in 2023. You can find her writing in One Art Poetry, Sheila-Na-Gig, Braided Way, Humana Obscura, and several anthologies, including “The Path to Kindness” and “The Wonder of Small Things” edited by James Crews. Her chapbook of after poems, In Search of Lost Birds is forthcoming from Kelsay Books. She lives off the grid with her family on a small farm in Greece. Connect with her on Instagram , Facebook and Substack.

Lines from the State-Required Divorced Parents Seminar by Scott Withiam

Lines from the State-Required Divorced Parents Seminar

Divorce. No one wants to be there, so not here, either, at
The State-Required Divorced Parents Seminar. Before it begins,
Half those attending slump low as possible in cushy tablet-arm folding chairs.
The other half hyper-survey the room like prairie dogs. Not for danger,
For new mates, fresh burrows, I suppose, the ideal being
To expand community. Before we even get started,
Someone in our group mutters, “Given no choice but to attend,”—
No legal divorce papers if we don’t— “this seminar reeks of implication,
More, condemnation. It benefits the state most, not us.” If not the state,
At least benefits the contracted couple’s counselor that runs this seminar.
He stops passing out business cards (for his practice), states he applauds honesty,
But he wants to make it clear? “This seminar isn’t to say that
You’re wrong!” he says. “It’s critical you know that, but to be fair,
Great ideas, like many marriages, can be poorly tended to,
And then, relationships unchecked, sour. That isn’t and won’t be the case here.
This seminar is established and thoroughly proven to help stabilize families.”
If that’s the case, Why is this seminar taking place
In a technical college classroom doubling as a lab, and doubling again
As a fallout shelter, with a huge Periodic Table hanging on the wall
Behind the lectern, in which, at this distance, the elements’ defined boxes are apparent,
But the electron model potentials are too small to see? “If we’re being honest here,”
The counselor says, “this isn’t about you. It has to do, though,
With all of us.” Well, maybe that’s where we should begin, I think,
But the counselor has leaped to, “That one little detail
Our children most need to know; what is it?” Eyes in the room lock straight ahead;
Lips compress. Time has frozen. Electrons don’t jump rings and move closer
Or farther away. The science of attractions and splitting seizes. Love,
Contained in a box, is stable and safe, an answer no one here can offer.

*

Scott Withiam’s third book of poems, Waste Management Facility, was released by MadHat Press in late July 2025. He has also published two additional books of poems: Doors Out of the Underworld (MadHat Press) and Arson & Prophets (Ashland Poetry Press). His chapbook, Desperate Acts & Deliveries, won the Two Rivers Review Prize. His most recent poems and prose pieces can be found in Another Chicago Magazine, Barrow St., Diagram, On the Seawall, Rattle, and Tampa Review. Poems are forthcoming in Plume.

Savoring Grace by Betsy Mars

Savoring Grace
— for JKH

“We have not yet encountered any god who is as merciful as a man who flicks a beetle over on its feet.”
— Annie Dillard

John carries wasps in cups
one by one, releases them
to the outside
where they will do no harm
or be harmed by curious cats.
He comes by it naturally.

His father before him
was a legendary skunk re-locater;

spotting a skunk one day
in the Little League outfield,
he took the creature by the tail,
deposited it on the fence
away from fly balls
and curious boys.

If John could save the ants,
he would. He tries to corral
or redirect them. Like herding
cats, they follow their own path.
Meanwhile, fruit flies drown
in the temptation of the kitchen jar

Sometimes you have to sacrifice
for the greater good.

Holes in the siding are left unplugged
until the fledglings have flown.
Some spring, walls patched,
he will begin to build his nest.

*

Betsy Mars is a prize-winning poet, photographer, and an editor at Gyroscope Review. Her writing has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and the Best of the Net. Betsy’s poems are widely available online and in print, most recently in ONE ART, Calul, Book of Matches, and the anthology Signed, Sealed, Delivered The Motown Poetry Review (Madville Press). Her photos have appeared in various journals, including Spank the Carp and Rattle. Betsy has had two chapbooks published, Alinea, and In the Muddle of the Night, co-authored with Alan Walowitz. Additionally, through her publishing venture (Kingly Street Press) she released two anthologies, Unsheathed: 24 Contemporary Poets Take Up the Knife and Floored. A full-length book, Rue Obscure, is forthcoming from Sheila-Na-Gig Editions.

Two Poems by Martin Willitts Jr

Blacksmithing When I Was Seventeen

I respond to an urgent request;
a horse has thrush on its hooves.
Only three ways this could happen.
Either, an unclean barn with muck;
or, lack of daily cleaning of the hoof; or, both.
This incident practically spells animal abuse,
lack of care, waiting too long to admit their guilt.
I don’t have to scold them.
They already look ashamed.
Any longer, I would have to but the horse down,
place a bullet between its black eyes.
I must remove this black tar-like ooze
between the small triangle spot on the hoof’s bottom.
A horse must be held gently, sung to
in a la-la-la cooing,
like putting a baby to nap. I must be tender,
making slow, cantering love. I know how.
I’ve seen stallions mount and mate.
I hum. A horse’s heart must be at rest,
while scrapping, avoiding their heart galloping,
like after being penned in all winter,
released in spring, sprinting as if
trying to escape their skin,
their own pain. It gets agonizingly late.
Stars appear as horseshoes.
I must file down this wound with a rasp.
I don’t need to ask the owner
how he would like it
if I scraped the skin off his feet.
This rasp might feel more abrasive.
Hard. Metallic. Rubbing and rubbing.
I urge this horse to relax using lullabies.
I have to calm my own self. Slower.
Focus on curing.
I can always blame the owner later.
The horse senses attention and caring,
thanking me with a nuzzle.
The owner still can’t look me in my eyes.
You can’t cinch a saddle tighter than guilt.

*

When the Sun Scrunches Over the Starting-to-Awakening Landscape

A yellow butternut flower opens
and no bees appear to pollinate it.

I know in the grand scale of importance
this is not important,
considering wars, school shootings,
police-state crackdowns,
impending natural disasters spiraling out of control,
but my butternuts won’t grow without bees.

The news warns about bee collapse,
as if a building hit by a drone launching missiles.
I know these two are not similar,
but my blueberries never blossomed. No bees.

I frantically use a paintbrush inside butternut flowers,
transferring pollen from one yellow flower to another.
I can’t paint salvation, or resurrection,
or the end of trouble, but I can try.
Once again, the sun rises, unfolding like a butternut flower.

Once again, the sun rises, a day without dreams,
but plenty of untended consequences, a day of anguish.
Once again, once again, o lordy, once again,
when another butternut flower collapses due to the lack of bees.

O, silence of bees, the sun tells lies
that this will be a better day. Once again,
promises not kept. Once again, I dab a brush
into butternut flowers to save whatever I can preserve.

There’s no rain forecasted in the clear, blueberry sky.

*

Martin Willitts Jr is a retired Librarian that trained Librarians for New York State Public Libraries. He lives in Syracuse, New York. He is an editor for Comstock Review, and he is the judge for the New York State Fair Poetry Competition. He won 2014 Dylan Thomas International Poetry Contest; Stephen A. DiBiase Poetry Prize, 2018; Editor’s Choice, Rattle Ekphrastic Challenge, December 2020; 17th Annual Sejong Writing Competition, 2022; and the 2025 Silent River Poetry Prize. His 27 full-length collections include the National Ecological Award winner for “Searching for What You Cannot See” (Hiraeth Press, 2013) and the Blue Light Award 2019, “The Temporary World”. His recent books are “Ethereal Flowers” (Shanti Arts Press, 2023); “Rain Followed Me Home” (Glass Lyre Press, 2023); “Leaving Nothing Behind” (Fernwood Press, 2023); “The Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji” (Shanti Arts Press, 2024); “All Beautiful Things Need Not Fly” (Silver Bowl Press, 2024); “Martin Willitts Jr: Selected Poems” (FutureCycle Press, 2024); “Love Never Cools When It Is Hot” (Red Wolf Editions, 2025). Forthcoming books include 2025 Silent River Poetry Prize, “One Thousand Origami Paper Cranes Fly Away in Search of Peace;” “Bone Chills and Arpeggios” (Main Street Press, 2026), “Sounds I Cannot Hear Clearly Anymore Add Up to the Sum of Silence” (Bainbridge Island Press, 2026).

Two Poems by George Franklin

On a Wet Night in Mar-a-Lago

On a wet night in Mar-a-Lago, the lights of cars
In the parking lot are washed clean by the rain.
The valets dodge dark puddles, as they run,
Keys in hand, toward two Bentleys—the white one
Or the black? It doesn’t take long. The clouds
Line up above the beach, reflect suburban light.
The tables in the dining room will empty out
Before long: half-eaten chocolate cake carried
By servers back to the kitchen, coffee cups with
Lipstick smudges, oversized brandy snifters,
Tablecloths and napkins stained with brown au jus.
The President had stopped by for a while, as predicted.
Someone says his wife is at the apartment in New York,
And his sons are hunting large animals again in Africa.
The daughters are simply elsewhere. After the guests,
Deflated by the evening’s end, have drifted to their
Rooms or driven away to whatever follows, he
Returns, a slouching figure in slippers, without a tie.
There are no photographers, and he avoids mirrors—
The secret service follows discreetly. It’s easy to forget
They exist, but he wants to be alone in that bathroom
Where they’d kept the bankers’ boxes of papers before
The raid that hadn’t hurt him. Nothing can hurt him.
He arranges himself on the toilet, a place to sit where
No one will ask him if he needs anything. His ankles
Are swollen, red. He doesn’t look at them. The floor
Seems slightly uneven where the boxes were piled.
He takes some papers out of his jacket and reads a little.
His head nods forward, and he bites his tongue. After
An hour, secret service knocks quietly, asks if he needs
Anything. He doesn’t. He won’t. There’s a cold Coca-Cola
In his bedroom. The agents hear him open the can.
Outside, the sky has cleared, and the winter constellations
Turn to the west. The moon has already set. Between
The stars, the blackness goes on forever.

*

Graffiti

The Romans left it in Egypt, the Americans in Italy,
Tagging stone walls or the side of a tomb. There
Must be a need to leave your name displayed
Prominently, so that it’s still there when you’re not—
A few letters, symbols, a design, something
To stand for a body that ate dinner, caught a cold,
Made love, broke the rules, was punished and
Broke the rules again. The legions stayed for a while,
Then moved to Spain or Britain, or the forests
In Gaul. Caesar wrote histories and made
History. Kilroy was anonymous, peering over
A line meant to be a wall, his balloon-like nose
And bald head visible as literature but just as
Likely to be washed away by rain, wind, or a bucket
Of water and soap. All the legionnaires died, one way
Or another. So did Caesar, butchered like
A spring lamb in the Senate. He divided Gaul into three
Parts on a scroll of papyrus and knew most of what
There was to know about fighting battles. It didn’t
Matter. The spray-painted tag on the expressway
Overpass will be gone by summer.

*

George Franklin is the author of eight poetry collections, including the recent A Man Made of Stories, and a book of essays, Poetry & Pigeons: Short Essays on Writing (both Sheila-Na-Gig Editions, 2025). Individual poems have been published in The High Window, ONE ART, Solstice, Nimrod, Rattle, New Ohio Review, and storySouth, among others. He practices law in Miami, is a translation editor for Cagibi, teaches poetry classes in Florida prisons, and co-translated, along with the author, Ximena Gómez’s Último día/Last Day.

Two Poems by Miriam Calleja

Women who switch roles

Let’s say that for a change
you are the island
and I’m the deep sea
snatching your reefs

And let’s say I am the bear
You, the helpless tourist
mauled with camera still rolling

And let’s say, for once,
I’m the spectator
and that you’re spinning your wheels
going nowhere

Why, you should’ve just asked!
If it’s all the same to you,
let’s do it that way this time.

* 

Ars Poetica for when you don’t recognize yourself
After The Castle by Jorge Méndez Blake

The computer is making sure it’s you.
Your phone won’t unlock;
fingerprints scrubbed out from
hugging yourself all night. You ask me
whether everybody else is having this life,
whether it needs to be so brambly.
I self-sabotage, amateur another
bowl of my anxiety.
The texts we choose
to consume, to translate,
dark our telltales.
There is a squeak in the wheel,
a pea under a pile of mattresses,
a book that rewrites the wall.
Some of us live in two
languages, dreams, tongues,
thoughts split. Another year,
I will speak to you in Italian,
you say yes, yes, let’s speak.
Let’s loosen our tongues and
our waistbands. Let’s stop
giving a shit. In one moment
I brick the balance.
In the next, I disrupt the book
and slip the rules.

*

Miriam Calleja is a Pushcart-nominated poet, writer, workshop leader, artist, and translator. Her work has appeared in platform review, Odyssey, Taos Journal, plume, Modern Poetry in Translation, humana obscura, and elsewhere. She has published 2 full collections and several chapbooks and collaborations. Her latest chapbook is titled Come Closer, I Don’t Mind the Silence (BottleCap Press, 2023). Her first translated work was published in 2025 and is titled Variations on Silence (Nadia Mifsud, PoetryWala). Miriam is from Malta and lives in Birmingham, Alabama. She is co-editor at Brick Road Poetry Press and table // FEAST. Read more on miriamcalleja.com.

Winter’s Edge by Julia Caroline Knowlton

Winter’s Edge

Everyone wants warm
sticky pink blossoms.
That sick semen smell
of ornamental pear.

I would love to know
what is so bad about bare
black branches cutting indigo
frigid shadow into diamond snow.

*

Julia Caroline Knowlton is a Professor of French and Creative Writing at Agnes Scott College in Atlanta. Julia has a PhD in French Literature (UNC-Chapel Hill) and an MFA in Poetry (Antioch University, Los Angeles). The author of one full-length poetry collection, three poetry chapbooks, a memoir and a children’s book, she has twice been named Georgia Author of the Year. Her work has also been recognized by the Academy of American Poets. She lives in Atlanta and Paris.

Knowlton is Guest Editor of ONE ART’s In a Nutshell: an anthology of micropoems.

Reflection by Rebecca Rush

Reflection

Got excited at a light
because I thought the car next to me
was purple
but it was just mine
reflecting back.

Like falling for the first person
who smiles at you in rehab.

My ex husband used to say
that everyone gets gay on cocaine
but that was just an us thing.

All those decades
I’ve lost hiding.

Even here
in West Hollywood
where meet me at the gay bar
at the intersection of Santa Monica
and San Vicente
is not specific enough.

Came out with a whisper
just in time to be a crime.

Now that I might not
be able to marry?

I might want to.

Becoming doesn’t feel good–
why is it supposed to?

It’s like my AA friend Victor once said
when I was smoking weed
& going to meetings
resentful at Zoom squares
I’d never meet
including him.

“The problem is, you’re fabulous
and not everyone is.”

How can I be gay when men
are the only
people
who’ve ever been nice to me?

This didn’t matter
in my pothead space suit–
keeping those layers
between me
and everyone
–gave me permission
to secretly watch lesbian porn
and slam the laptop shut
shaking from shame
& relief.

One of the many times I quit cigarettes
I turned to my dog and said
“this is our new unsatisfied life.”

Only the most narrow perimeters
of change are possible and allowable

I stole that from a famous lesbian.

The first 90 days weed free:
Month one: zero sleep
Month two: only sleep
Month three: the most annoying person
you’ve ever met.

I made a list of ten things
I like about me
there are only two things on it.

An AA tattoo was the only thing
permanent

about my sobriety.

But at least I know
who I see in the mirror.

*

Rebecca Rush (she/they) is a queer, autigender writer and neurodivergent peer support coach from New England, currently residing in LA. Her work has been published in numerous journals and anthologies, including Surreal Confessional Anthology, Rock Salt Journal, and Arc Poetry Magazine. The Los Angeles Poetry Society recently featured them. They hold a B.A. in English Literature with a Concentration in Creative Writing from the University of Connecticut. She currently blogs at TheLoudestGirlintheCorner.Substack.com

Running Away with It by Michelle Bitting

Running Away with It

My eyes say to my arms, my legs, my knees: we will move like music through the world. We will bend and sway with the trees—an atmospheric river rising, stalling time with our juiciest leaps. They may target our bodies & air, coax monumental melts of glaciers, threaten lunches of government cheese. Still, we swarm, spinning a storm, a choreography of hip things shaking, our riots composed of feet. Rave pirouettes rung with fire. The Waters of March in our toes. A quaking bee-line formation, a renegade dance flooding streets. Lit with love, kindred color, known desire. So it blows. No one needs a weatherman when we are the wind.

*

Michelle Bitting was recently named a City of L.A. Department of Cultural Affairs Individual Master Artist Project Grantee and is the author of seven poetry collections, including Nightmares & Miracles (Two Sylvias Press, 2022), winner of the Wilder Prize and named one of Kirkus Reviews 2022 Best of Indie. She won the 2025 Banyan Review Poetry Prize, and her chapbook Dummy Ventriloquist was published in 2024 by C & R Press. Recent poetry, prose, and essays appear on The Slowdown, Thrush, Cleaver, The Poetry Society of New York’s Milk Press, The Glacier, Heavy Feather Review, Split Lip, National Poetry ReviewSWWIM, ONE ART, Gargoyle, and is featured as Poem of the Week in The Missouri Review. Her forthcoming collection Ruined Beauty will be published by Walton Well Press in Spring, 2026. Bitting is writing a hybrid novel that centers around Los Angeles and her great grandmother, stage and screen actor Beryl Mercer, and is Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing and Literature at Loyola Marymount University.

Evaporation At the Scenic Overlook by Emma Goldman-Sherman

Evaporation At the Scenic Overlook

Footsteps as the truck moved on. I turned to see him
walking toward me with a big red Slurpee.
You left me at the hotel, he said. You don’t wanna
wake up beside me? I said, I never woke up beside you.
I had to leave to wake up, a joke he didn’t get. I kicked
at the sand on the blacktop with my boot.

Well, you’re stuck with me, he said.
I don’t believe that anymore, I told him.
You can’t leave me out here, he threatened,
I’ll dehydrate. Fat chance with that Slurpee
sweating and dripping sizzles onto the asphalt.

In the steam of that liquid rising I saw my marriage evaporate.
All the dishes, the vacuuming, dusting, the washing and folding
taking care and making sure, the having everything
in case he might desire and the sex without pleasure.
The silence. The kind that made me wish for noise.

Gone. I wouldn’t get in the car with him again.
I’d find another way into the desert onto the rocks, down
the steep drop. It’s good – you want some, he offered
but I wasn’t thirsty. I felt different, on my way somehow.

Take the car. The keys are inside. And leave you here? Are you crazy?
I thought things were good. We slept under the stars. We were together.

I stood firm, no hip shift, no head tilt, no smile
after so many years lying. I bit my cheeks
refused to please. What is it? he asked
as if he could fix it. Don’t come any closer, I told him.
I release you. I’m gonna live in the desert-garden
green and lush. He started to pace with impatience.
There’s nothing green here. Let’s get in the car.
You don’t know anything about the desert.

How we lash out when we cannot get our way
to minimize, infantilize, we turn our language into knives.

*

Emma Goldman-Sherman’s poems are forthcoming in Bellingham Review (finalist for the 49th Parallel Award) and the chapbook, “Dear Palestine,” (Moonstone Press). Their work has been published in Quartet, Strange Horizons, Toyon, Eckleburg, Gigantic Sequins (1st Prize), Ghost City Press, Best Microfictions (2025 & ’26) and others. They support writers and artists at BraveSpace.online.

Two Poems by Hayden Saunier

Something Is Not Right

My neighbors never turn off the light
in an upstairs room, so one eye
seems always open in the face of that house
which is how ducks sleep, and dolphins,
and wary parents of teenagers, like my sister,
who woke one night as certain of catastrophe
as the French nurse in a children’s book,
so she drove in her robe and nightgown to the house
where her daughter was sleeping over
in time to watch four girls crawl out a bedroom window,
drop to the ground and head toward town.
She stepped from her car, called their names
in the ragged-whispered voice of conscience,
watched them scramble back inside the house.
That’s the god we were taught we had.
God of highway guardrails
and get-your-butt-back-in-that-house.
God of adults not too drunk or damaged
to keep us safe. A clear-eyed god, unmoved
by megachurch money and gold filigree.
God as shepherd, like my sister, standing
under bright stars in a dark world,
nightgown hitched up in a robe sash, boots on,
ready to chase the young ones back to the fold,
away from the wolves, at least for that night.

*

Perfume Notes

An overwhelming waft of fake peachiness
stings my eyes from a bar of discounted soap

and it’s almost as awful as the sugary pink
aroma of Summer’s Eve strawberry douche

that stunk up the family bathroom
at an inlaw’s house— good god, decades ago—

and because memory mainlines scent,
every dissonance I ever ignored for love

comes back to me. I was young.
It takes time to trust your nose.

I dump the soap in a corner of the dirt cellar
to ward off mice, and I’m further back,

age six, in Erica’s damp brick basement,
concocting a magic fragrance from her perfume kit

that turned the gray world Technicolor
but I spilled the entire vial and never could

remake that mix. I pause halfway up
the outside steps and linger in the rich bouquet

of earth, cool bottom note to all our lives.
To this, I’d add dark roasted coffee, drying hay,

the spicy sweetness of mock orange in the air,
atomized atop the mammal musk of skin.

It’s taken years to know what scents to trust.
I douse my life with them.

*

Hayden Saunier is the author of six poetry collections, including her most recent book Wheel. Her work has been awarded a Pushcart Prize, Nimrod International’s Pablo Neruda Prize, the Rattle Poetry Prize, and Gell Poetry prize, and has been published in ONE ART, The Sun, 32 Poems, Shenandoah, Virginia Quarterly Review, and featured on Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, and The Writer’s Almanac. Hayden founded and directs the interactive poetry performance group No River Twice. More at haydensaunier.com.

ONE ART’s April 2026 Reading for National Poetry Month!

ONE ART’s April 2026 Reading for National Poetry Month!

Date: Sunday, April 12
Time: 2pm Eastern
Featured Poets: Barbara Crooker, Molly Fisk, Donna Hilbert, Erin Murphy

Tickets are FREE!
(donations appreciated)

>> Register Here <<

About Our Featured Poets

Barbara Crooker is author of twelve chapbooks and ten full-length books of poetry, including  Some Glad Morning, Pitt Poetry Series, University of Pittsburgh Poetry Press, longlisted for the Julie Suk award from Jacar Press, The Book of Kells, which won the Best Poetry Book of 2019 Award from Poetry by the Sea, and Slow Wreckage (Grayson Books, 2024). Her other awards include: Grammy Spoken Word Finalist, the WB Yeats Society of New York Award, the Thomas Merton Poetry of the Sacred Award, and three Pennsylvania Council fellowships in literature.  Her work appears in literary journals and anthologies, including The Bedford Introduction to Literature. barbaracrooker.com

Molly Fisk is the author of The More Difficult Beauty, Listening to Winter, and five volumes of radio commentary, and edited California Fire & Water, A Climate Crisis Anthology as an Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow. Her historical novel-in-verse, Walking Wheel, will be out in April from Red Hen Press.

Donna Hilbert’s latest book is Enormous Blue Umbrella, Moon Tide Press, 2025. Work has appeared in journals and broadcasts including Eclectica, Gyroscope, Rattle, Sheila Na Gig, ONE ART, Cholla Needles, TSPoetry, VerseDaily, Vox Populi, The Writer’s Almanac, anthologies including Boomer Girls, The Widows’ Handbook, The Poetry of Presence I & II, The Path to Kindness, The Wonder of Small Things, Love Is For All Of Us, What the House Knows, Poetry Goes The Movies. She writes and leads workshops from her home base in Long Beach, California.

Erin Murphy is the author or editor of more than a dozen books, including Human Resources and Fluent in Blue, winner of the 2025 American Book Fest Best Book Award in Poetry. Mother as Conjunction, a collection of lyric essays, is forthcoming in January 2026 from Harbor Editions. Her work has appeared in Ecotone, Women’s Studies Quarterly, The Best of Brevity, Best Microfiction 2024, and in anthologies from Random House, Bloomsbury, Bedford/St. Martin’s, and other presses. She serves as poetry editor of The Summerset Review and professor of English at Penn State Altoona. Visit her website.

Filling out Routine Paperwork at My Own Doctor’s Appointment after the Baby’s Bypass by Kathryn Petruccelli

Filling out Routine Paperwork at My Own Doctor’s Appointment after the Baby’s Bypass

Pen tip paused, poised above page.
The form asks about surgeries, hospitalizations.
He is four months old. Our separation
incomplete. It was me, him; it was him, us;
it’s unclear who was opened up.
I choke a little, as if someone stoked an already
fanned flame, then remember—my life
had not burnt to char, spark instead
smothered, orange cooled to black,
crackle and ash. Dry brush of recent events
smolder, the baby, at home in his basinet,
small fish in a fresh spring, probably
eating his fist and gurgling. The nurse presses
buttons on a scale, smoke rises, thin trail over
my head, ballpoint in my hand a poker.

*

Kathryn Petruccelli is a Pushcart, Best of the Net, and Best Small Fictions-nominated writer who holds an obsession with the ocean and an MA in teaching English language learners. You can find her work in places like West Trestle Review, Tinderbox, SWIMM, RHINO, Fictive Dream, and SweetLit. She teaches pay-what-you-can workshops, writes the Substack newsletter, Ask the Poet., and hosts the Melody or Witchcraft podcast that discusses the sources of literary inspiration. More at poetroar.com.

The World Self-Admits to Hospice by Laura Ann Reed

The World Self-Admits to Hospice

I’ll get right to the point, World.
Not like when I visited my dad
in the ICU, pretending it wasn’t the end.
I’ve learned your condition is terminal.
And as my father’s doctor said of him,
a walking time bomb,
the pathogenic processes are multiplying.

Of all your offspring, I know I’ve most
contributed to your undoing.
Most failed to appreciate the sacrifices
you made. The fish worship your rivers
more than I ever did. Daily, the birds
offer up their feathered prayers to your skies.
Even the earthworm invites you
into its sanctum sanctorum, making of itself
a place of praise.

None of your other progeny turns
a deaf ear to your green call, heeding
instead the silvered summons of the mirror.

And if some wonder drug were to restore
you to your former glory, I can’t
honestly claim I’d do things differently
than I did. Yet, I have loved you,
and desperately, in my way.

*

Laura Ann Reed is the author of the chapbook Homage to Kafka (Poetry Box, 2025). Her work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and has appeared or is forthcoming in numerous journals, as well as in nine anthologies including Poetry of Presence II (Grayson Books, 2023) and The Wonder of Small Things (Storey Publishing 2023). Reed holds master’s degrees in clinical psychology and performing arts. lauraannreed.net

In One of Night’s Anonymous Hours by Mary Makofske

In One of Night’s Anonymous Hours

I lie awake hearing the wind,
a freight loaded up with the past.
No brakeman, no brakes, and the tracks
leading straight to my bed.

*

Mary Makofske is the author of six books of poetry. Her latest are No Angels (Kelsay, 2023, nominated for the Eric Hoffer Award); The Gambler’s Daughter (Orchard Street Press, 2022); World Enough, and Time (Kelsay, 2017); and Traction (Ashland Poetry, 2011), winner of the Richard Snyder Prize. She received the 2024 William Matthews Prize from Asheville Poetry Review and has received first place prizes in Quiet Diamonds, Atlanta Review, New Millennium Writings, Lullwater Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, The Ledge, and Cumberland Poetry Review, and the Hudson-Fowler Prize for a five poem submission from Slant. marymakofske.com

When I Turned Sixteen by Lisa Low

When I Turned Sixteen

And achieved some of the greatness young girls
aspire, outgrowing my childish body—that lanky,
long-thorned thing—and became a woman,
with hips and thighs and cup-able breasts,
enough to fill a grown man’s hands, my mother
bought me a new pair of pants. My father
must have been drinking that day, for when
I tried them on, he grabbed me from behind
and screamed with a shrill, excited, bird-like
call, sliding in his socks behind me, as if
I were a carnival. I twisted free, fled upstairs,
and locked myself in my room, spending
the rest of that friendless night alone, my face
wet against the pillow, bereft in a comfortless dark.

*

Lisa Low was first runner-up for the Shakespeare Prize at University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Her work has been shortlisted for Ploughshares and has appeared in or is forthcoming in many literary journals including The Adroit Journal, The Boston Review, The Massachusetts Review, Pleiades, Southern Indian Review, Conduit, The Hopkins Review, and ONE ART. She has been nominated for Best New Poets 2025. Her chapbook, Late in the Day was issued in July 2025 from Seven Kitchens Press.

Let’s Make a Deal by Julie Standig

Let’s Make a Deal

1. No Big Deal

My dad’s words to me
during a fireside chat—
I need you to keep a promise
you have yet to make,
and you won’t like,
but I need it just the same.

What he neglected to add,
despite how difficult and necessary,
was how this final act would taunt.

2. Easy Deal

My mom also wanted me to help
end her life. I smiled, if only
you had asked me forty years ago…
But when the hospital called at 3am
I did kick in, no tubes, no thanks.

3. Raw Deal

The good daughter did the deed. Twice.
As told. And yet, I can’t shake
the hard fact I was the one, not nature,
not doctors, I alone was responsible
for ending their days, hours, minutes.

4. My Deal

Know this, my children—
for future reference,
it was always the right thing to do.
No big deal.

*

Julie Standig, is the author of two poetry books— The Forsaken Little Black Book, (Kelsay Books) which was nominated for an Eric Hoffer Award and a chapbook, Memsahib Memoirs (Plan B Press). Her poems have appeared in Schuylkill Valley Journal, Gyroscope Review, New Verse News, Macqueen’s Quinterly, ONE ART and elsewhere. A lifetime New Yorker, she now resides in Bucks County with her husband and their springer spaniel.

Three Poems by Sonya Schneider

Desire of the Mind

For him, I ate the eye
of the Hamachi kama
in a little hole in the wall
in Palo Alto. We were young
and almost in love. He said
it was good luck to eat it.
I don’t believe in luck.
But the body! Oh, I believe
in the body. And desire
of the mind.
And since eyes
cradle the brain
in their knowing,
I savored the gooey
outer layer on my tongue
before swallowing
it whole.

*

Those Late-Night Drives

When they fought, when he’d slammed one too many doors
and called her by her maiden name, each vowel a dagger

thrown, my mother would grab her keys and drive away.
Sometimes, she took me with her, and we’d speed in silence

to where the highway burned infinity. It never seemed pure,
her anger, or sometimes, it seemed so pure it might melt

the leather skin off the steering wheel. I was never sure
when we’d return, or if more doors would slam, or if love

might lead them stumbling toward the bedroom.
If I hadn’t known those late-night drives, would I still

have chosen you? That old photograph with your thumbs
pointed skyward, those bright brown eyes looking hopefully

into the camera, despite your parents’ messy divorce.
Even when I’ve driven away, I long to come back to you.

*

Washing My Daughter’s Bra

Mom used to leave her bras swimming
in soapy water, their dark dyes turning
the water black. Then she’d sling
their thick straps onto the neck
of a plastic hanger and let them dry
in the sun. Once, in Italy, I saw a woman
hanging bras from her balcony, her private
world aired like bright, lacy flags.
She never noticed me below,
backpack heavy, my own bra smelling
of sweat and oil. My breasts were young
and firm, easy to carry and, when the time
was right, unveil. But holding my daughter’s bra
now in my hands, I remember
that it wasn’t just my lingerie I ignored.
I left my clothes strewn across my dorm room,
slept on unwashed sheets, dreaming of a freedom
I did not yet know how to manage.
Only after years lying in the low grasses
of neglect, did I learn how to care for myself.
Is this to be her fate, too?
For now, I scrub the supple under cups,
rinse until the water runs clean.
Then I unlatch the delicate hook and eye
and lay the piece flat, careful not to tug
the small silver heart sewn in the center.

*

Sonya Schneider’s poems have appeared in Rattle, The Penn Review, Potomac Review, Rust & Moth, Salamander, Moon City Review, ONE ART, Raleigh Review, SWWIM, Tar River Poetry and The Tusculum Review, among others. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and has placed in the Patricia Cleary Miller Award and the Laux & Millar Prize. A graduate of Stanford and Pacific University’s MFA in Poetry, she lives in Seattle with her family.

Two Poems by Lynn Glicklich Cohen

Another Sparrow

Another sparrow
hits glass, flies away
stunned to die
like the husband
of a woman I knew, a pillar
of his community. Left her
with five children
and gambling debts.

After the first few
I call a service
that installs peel and paste
film sheets in patterns
birds can see the way
we see guard rails
or blinking arrows—
row of white dots, dashes
a coded message
on every pane.

They tell me my brain
will adapt and I’ll stop seeing
them. I don’t have that kind
of time or faith
in what I’m told.
So I move the feeders further
from the house, hoping
for fewer dead birds,
feathers in flower beds.

I wonder if the woman
whose husband died
ever stops wondering
where he thought
he was going.

*

You Still Can

A peach pink line cuts through the sky at dusk,
a plane coming in for a sunset landing, so many
humans having been somewhere else. If I were not
already here, I’d want to be home.

I don’t travel anymore. I make excuses:
the cost, my dog, flying, inconvenience, discomfort.
It’s gotten embarrassing, like the clatter
of empty bottles, their skinny necks, residual fumes.

I awake with a spider-legged dread.
I belong in a story they won’t let me forget.
Another gathering of Jews bullet-sprayed.
Ancestral warnings. Shocked not surprised.

Hiding is one way to survive but no way
to live. I stay home, sweep crumbs, feed
the dog, pay bills. I fold sheets, make toast.
A plane? You mean you can go anywhere?

*

Lynn Glicklich Cohen is a poet from Milwaukee, WI. A once-upon-a-time social worker, a perennial cellist and semi-retired Rolfer, her poems have been published in Brushfire Literature and Arts Journal, Birmingham Arts Journal, Cantos, El Portal, Evening Street Review, Front Range Review, Grand Journal, Oberon, ONE ART, Peregrine, The Midwest Quarterly, The Phoenix, The Red Wheelbarrow, St. Katherine’s Review, Thin Air Magazine, Trampoline, Whistling Shade, and others. www.lynnglicklichcohenpoet.com

It’s Complicated by Elizabeth S. Wolf

It’s Complicated

          On my 20th birthday, my Dad, while in jail,
          traded his last pack of cigarettes at 7:30am
          to call me at the exact time that I was born.
          — from my daughter’s eulogy to her father

In this blue-hued kitchen’s waning light
a counter lined with containers of cookies,
candy, and chips. The humming fridge filled with
half empty take-out containers and catering
leftovers. The remains of my older brother’s
bottle of bourbon (was he unable to navigate
a 3-day visit without booze?). Around the house
arrangements of flowers are quietly dying,
dropping white rose petals, hydrangea corymbs,
fronds of ferns, baby’s breath, like discarded glitter.
A few days ago at the memorial we gathered
to hear eulogies and memories and listen
to all that was said and unsaid. His sobriety sponsor
described delivering a 6-year chip to the hospital.
In my mind I calculate how many years not sober;
how many trips to rehab, to jail; how many supervised
visitation orders, supervised living quarters;
how many hikes up mountains, canoe rides
down winding rivers, counting deer and birds
in the rustling woods, with perspective
eye-level to the ground. It is complicated
to honor a tormented man, a man who was loved,
a man who battled multiple addictions most of his life,
who married his rage and divorced his wife.
At meetings held in churches, conference rooms,
correctional facilities, in quiet conversations
in bright kitchens over bitter coffee, it is said:
it’s harder to mourn for the living than the dead.

*

Elizabeth S. Wolf has published 6 books, including the recently released Parenting in the Age of Columbine (2025). Elizabeth has placed over 160 poems and stories and received 4 Pushcart nominations. Her Did You Know? was a 2018 Rattle Chapbook Prize winner. Rattle Summer 2022 featured her project with Prisoner Express. In 2023 Elizabeth taped readings at the White House, Supreme Court, and US Capitol with The Scheherazade Project. Her video poem “April 1999” was screened at the Poetry in Motion Festival 2024 in Colorado. Her work has landed on the moon with the Lunar Codex.

If you Don’t Believe in God What Do you Believe in? by Joy Gaines-Friedler

If you Don’t Believe in God What Do you Believe in?

I believe there are no intimacies we don’t cherish.
That I live in a kind of grace & a kind of fear
all the time. I believe in process, in playing to win—
but not needing to. In the cops that stop traffic
to cross the homeless, in the trains I don’t get on,
the buses I don’t take, bars I don’t drink in,
& buying newspapers with exact change.
I believe in change. I believe that music
becomes a house you occupy, especially
the long extended notes of a minor chord,
the way a good rest on the couch is a gift
that occupies your muscles & settles your bones.
I believe in waiting for the trees to bud
& leaf-out, & I believe in math, which I hate
because it gives me anxiety but its usefulness
is necessary to build things, even weapons,
& to calibrate destruction. I believe in solutions
found in microscopes & test tubes. But I also
believe in looking through the objective lens,
the eye-piece focus, the chance to witness
the mystical shapes of what can be found there.

*

Farmington Hills, Michigan poet, Joy Gaines-Friedler, is a multiple Pushcart Prize nominee. Author of five books of poetry, including Capture Theory, a Forward Review Indie Press, Book of The Year Finalist, she won the 2022 Friends of Poetry Chapbook Prize for Stone on Your Stone. Her work shares the pages of many great poets in The Bloomsbury Anthology of Contemporary Jewish American Poetry. As well as James Crews’ The Path to Kindness, and Gerry LaFemina’s Fantastic Imaginary Creatures: An Anthology of Prose Poems. Joy teaches poetry and memoir for non-profits in Michigan where she has worked with male-lifers in prison, asylum seekers through Freedom House Detroit, for InsideOut Literary Arts Project, & “Haven” for abused women. Her latest book Secular Audacity came out in 2025 from Mayapple Press.

Caretaking by Alicia Lee

Caretaking

what do you do when your ex-husband has surgery?
you wake up at 5:00 AM to shuttle him, calm him
come back and smile as the anesthesia still clings to his words
settle him in his recliner, fetch the meds at the pharmacy
buy food, orange juice, stool softener

then notice the kitchen is “bachelor” clean, so
go to work wiping, sweeping, putting the clutter of condiments
into the empty fridge

hand wash the large, yellow bowl
with paintings of grapes that I had bought years ago,
when we still ate together
and entertained, serving salad from this bowl
now clean and storing onions on his shelf
next to the crock pot

so many items that remind me of when our life was
entangled, a picture of our son, the lamp
that used to be next to our bed
the mismatched fork that belonged to a full set,
a wedding gift from my uncle

he teases me between gratitudes
insists that I like giving him a hard time
picking on him while he’s down
but I am grateful too
tonight we eat at the same table
all the strange moments
led to this peace

*

Alicia Lee began writing poetry back in the late 1900’s. She graduated from The Evergreen State College with a major in Creative Writing. Her work has appeared in Impetus, Slightly West, 4th St. and Nocturnal Lyric.

Two Poems by Karly Randolph Pitman

Picking Up the Pieces

Sometimes you wish your life were as tidy
as a jigsaw puzzle, where each piece fits
and finds their place. You want to feel the release
as the jumble of colors come together
into an ordered whole. But it’s tension, not ease,
that holds the pieces together – a puzzle needs
enough difficulty to be fun. You think
a piece fits here but it lives somewhere else.
You get stuck, swap two pieces, and the puzzle
flows again. When there’s an odd shaped piece
you get confused, wonder if it’s in the wrong box.
But as the picture takes shape you discover how
even this stray piece belongs. This fills you with delight,
how something you thought was wrong turns out
to be right, how the puzzle needs every piece
to make sense. After the puzzle’s done these
strange pieces are the ones you remember,
not the ones you assembled quickly out of the box.
As the pieces click into place you wonder about
everything sideways in your life, the disordered
pieces that can’t possibly fit. You wonder
what picture they’re creating, what whole
they complete – how you might fit, too.
You live the puzzle of your life and wonder
what beauty will appear as each difficult,
mysterious, unloved piece finds their home.

*

New Math

“Money, what do you like most? Changing hands.” – Hazrat Inayat Khan

They arrive in the mail in white envelopes,
pleas for medicine and support for elephants.
You slice them open and read their stories –

the pregnant woman riding in the back of a truck
for hours, desperate to reach the hospital where
a surgery will save her life. The family from

Honduras sleeping for months with their four
children on city streets. You want to feed
every hungry envelope with hundred dollar bills.

When you can’t you’re surprised by your delight:
there are ten million charities in the world!
Ten million people who saw a need and said, yes.

There are so many places where people want to help
that you can’t possibly fill every envelope. It will take
thousands of you: I’ve got this one. You take another.

You know, today, there are families fleeing famine,
falling bombs and wildfires. You see the horror.
You also see ten million people lined up to help,

millions more who will send checks. As life
continues with its tragic loss others are already
planning: this is how we’ll take care of each other.

*

Karly Randolph Pitman is a writer, teacher, facilitator and mental health trainer who brings understanding to sugar addiction, overeating and other ways we care for trauma. You can find her poetry at O Nobly Born, a reader supported newsletter, and her healing work with food at her substack, When Food is Your Mother. She lives in Austin, Texas where she does as much as possible with her hands and is writing a book on bringing compassion to food suffering.

Five Poems by Erica Miriam Fabri

The Electric Lady

The grief counselor told me that widowhood is an amputation.
A part of me, cut away. I must learn to live
as a fraction of before. It had been a moon and a half
since you died. As she stared at me, a third eye
grew on her forehead. It had no lid. It never blinked.
She told me not to sleep too much. To take walks.
Do you like to garden? she asked. This made me think
of the cemetery. The way we planted you like a bulb.
I told her I feel like The Electric Lady. Who’s that? she asked.
It’s the nickname I gave to The Statue of Liberty, when I learned
that she is struck by lightning six-hundred times a year.
He wanted a son, I said to her third eye. The Electric Lady
was sculpted by her son. He used a hammer to strike copper,
until he re-shaped the shiny metal into his mother’s face.
She is one-hundred and fifty-one feet tall. She lives in a river,
but never gets to swim. Her insides are hollow. She is always tired,
but can never rest. At any moment the zig-zag light
will come for her, to set her nerves on fire,
for just part of a second,
and then again,
and again,
and again.

*

Widow Couture

They think I let myself go over the anguish of it all.
They don’t know I wanted this: black hair recycled
into silver wires, coiled antennae, conductors
to contact the afterlife.

I know my clothes are old. I don’t buy anything new
because these textiles lived in the same house as you.
They are passion relics, daily cassocks I nurture
as if sultan’s silk. I wash them with holy water.

I am ill-fit and shapeless on purpose. I am hiding
this body so no one can see how my skin moves
like train tracks, how I am made completely of teeth.

* 

The Evil Eye

On my sixteenth birthday, Nonna squeezed
three drops of olive oil into a blue water bowl.
We leaned over it, becoming hawks.
We watched the slick golden orbs float,
like alien ships, toward each other.
They merged into one almond shape:
Ah malocchio, she hissed, The evil eye
is watching you. Nonna poured salt
on my shoulder, hung a shiny horn
around my neck, and tucked garlic
underneath my breasts at bedtime.
But the headaches found me, my belly got sick,
and bad luck roared toward me like a parade.
She set my pillow on fire, got onto her knees
under the moon. Every day at breakfast
she held my hand under the kitchen table,
and told me that my skin was like silk.
She made us arrive at church, two hours early,
to sit in the very first pew. She rubbed holy water
on my neck, insisted we pray four rosaries
before mass began. Her shaky fingers,
bead-by-bead, prayer-by-prayer, begged Jesus
to let the curse in me find its way
out of my blood. She spent all of herself
trying to save me. I know I killed her.

*

Most of the People in the World Eat Rats

Most of the people in the world eat rats, he said.
We had just finished sex. Smoke was still rising
from his pelvis. They eat them on every continent,

he continued, rat-on-a-stick, rat stew, rat pie,
rats in cream sauce. It’s a delicacy. Most of the people
in the world don’t have electricity. So, they eat

their rats in the dark. Most of the people
in the world don’t put their wet clothes in a machine.
They use a rope. They hang their pants like flags

and let the wind take over. They go outside to pull
each flat arm and each flat leg off the rope, and then
someone who loves them calls them inside for dinner.

The dinner is rats. Most of the people in the world
don’t own an oven that plugs into a wall,
they use real fire, like I do. They ignite raw flame

to cook that day’s fresh batch of rats. If we lined-up
all the rats in the world, it would form a band of rats
that wraps around the planet forty-five times.

See how small we are? You and me? With all
of our big, hard decisions. See how slight
our two bodies are, here in this bed,

compared to a civilization of rat-eaters?
And yet, we found each other. And now,
I am certain there is no one else on Earth

that can make me roast and wither,
the way you do.

* 

Fever Dream

The ghost of my husband,
by now a heptagon of years dead,
was there, in the bed with us.
As that dog-eyed, extra-alive man
rushed through me like a river,
my husband’s shadow
perched on my shoulder.
His spirit-self wasn’t interrupting us,
he was guiding me. He was there
to remind me that this is the most
carnal part of having a body,
the mightiest bounty on Earth.
The rest of it is pain. This is all there is.
The tender spot. The quick.
In time, nerve endings expire. Fibers break.
The sensory pathway is interrupted,
a fallen bridge that once connected
a life of heat, and cold, and itch–
and then, no more neurons, no more
deep pressure, or fine touch.
His dissipated-self moaned
as we made love. He ordered me
to do everything he can no longer do:
trigger the involuntary muscles,
allow the unsacred parts to spasm.
Do not misspend your minutes.
Be greedy. Pirate every lick, every
grope. Before you evaporate.

*

Erica Miriam Fabri is a Brooklyn-based poet and the author of two books: Morphology (Write Bloody Publishing) and Dialect of a Skirt (Hanging Loose Press). Morphology was the winner of the Jack McCarthy Book Award and Dialect of a Skirt was a finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize and included on the bestseller lists for Small Press Distribution and the Poetry Foundation. She teaches writing at Pace University and College of Staten Island. ericafabri.com

Bending Toward Hope by Ann E. Wallace

Bending Toward Hope

A woman I’ve never met before—
a stranger, but also, soon,

a confidante—starts by telling
me she has good luck.

Before sharing her story, of cancer
and its recurrence, she needs

to establish this baseline truth
to remind herself,

and so I know to listen
with an ear bent toward hope.

*

Ann E. Wallace is Poet Laureate Emeritus of Jersey City, New Jersey and host of The WildStory: A Podcast of Poetry and Plants. She is the author of Keeping Room (forthcoming from Nixes Mate), Days of Grace and Silence: A Chronicle of COVID’s Long Haul (Kelsay Books) and Counting by Sevens (Main Street Rag). She is online at AnnWallacePhD.com and on Instagram @annwallace409.