Wonky Sonnet on Death by Bob Lucky

Wonky Sonnet on Death

What a responsibility to be alive,
and then we start looking for a purpose.

We want to save something
thinking it will save our souls — whales,
stray dogs, turtles, antique quilts, bottle caps,
comic books, owls, condors, any number
of frogs, family recipes, photo albums.
I could go on — elephants and tigers too.

Watching the news, it’s clear
everyone’s on trial and our souls
are the least of our worries.
How many of us fail to turn in
the room key when we check out?

We’ve forgotten how to die,
and what a responsibility that is.

*

Bob Lucky lives in Portugal. He is the author of Ethiopian Time (Red Bird Chapbooks, 2014), Conversation Starters in a Language No One Speaks (SurVision Books, 2018), and My Thology: Not Always True But Always Truth (Cyberwit, 2019).

Two Poems by JC Alfier

Dream Narrative with Mother and Others

I fall back on a memory decades old.
My mother slapping me
with the back of her hairbrush

for wetting it to groom myself.
Her hand fervidly pulled at the bristles
as if they were victims of drowning.

I swear I’d dried every shadow of dampness.
But no matter, for I thought back then
her swung hand was God’s vengeance

for my sixth-grade lust over a substitute teacher.
I believed back then no substitute
could possess the glamor that young woman did.

Tonight in the city’s falling dusk,
I shunned the overtures of a stripper
who offered what she named a friction dance.

She leaned into me, her skin the scent of a paradise lost.
Good friend, believe me: I’m solely here
to gawk the likes of her slinking down poles,

and for happy hour swill. So I turned her down.
And through a neon sneer she whispered
faggot, licked her fingers,

swept them across my cheek, then tapped
my lips, leaving trace evidence
that dared me to prove she was here at all.

*

She Speaks of Her Town — Parrish, Alabama

Her clothes hold the grainy scent of feedstores
and autumns yet to arrive. Sparrows

dive low across her yard where wind
troubles clover in a child’s hands.

Sidewalks thin into open country.
The damp air breathes with fumes

and wet rust, turns daylight stale.
Someone leaves a market stall

with a mess of collards bundled in newsprint.
A breeze pulls notes from chimes

hung from her eaves.
We watch a hawk fix a zone of vigilance,

wait to leap with a single note
through a clean orbit of hunger.

At night she tells me This is an ugly town
to miss a lover from, and hums

a hymn to the pulse of freight engines
miles off in the ambient distance.

A windfelled branch thumps
against her door, like a startled horse.

*

JC Alfier’s (they/them) most recent book of poetry, The Shadow Field, was published by Louisiana Literature Press (2020). Journal credits include Faultline, New York Quarterly, Notre Dame Review, Penn Review, Raleigh Review, Southern Poetry Review, and Vassar Review. They are also an artist doing collage and double-exposure work.

Alone by Sally Nacker

Alone

Alone, pausing to appreciate
the snow, I hear a train— its whistle blow—
in the near distance. The sound
through falling snow, through white
air (even in rain I have heard it so),
a carving through the atmosphere
like string music, or nostalgia. And I
so small here in the wood,
inside the sound inside the snow.

*

Sally Nacker lives in a small house in the woods of Redding, CT with her husband and two cats. Recent publishing credits include Canary, The Orchard’s Poetry Journal, ONE ART, Third Wednesday, and The Sunlight Press. Kindness in Winter is her newest collection.

Rereading Thomas Bernhard’s Concrete by Clint Margrave

Rereading Thomas Bernhard’s Concrete

The same copy
I first read twenty years ago
with only one
sentence underlined:

It is our misfortune that we always decide
in favor of something
that turns out to be contrary
to our wishes.

And I wonder about
the young guy who marked this,
if he still agrees with it
and what he wished for
and whether or not
he got it.

*

Clint Margrave is the author of several books of fiction and poetry, including the novel Lying Bastard (Run-Amok Books), and three poetry collections Salute the Wreckage, The Early Death of Men, and most recently, Visitor, all from NYQ Books. His work has appeared in The Threepenny Review, Rattle, The Moth, ONE ART, and Los Angeles Review of Books, among others.

Fresh Water by Josette Akresh-Gonzales

Fresh Water

“Here, only the narrowest line separates life from death.”
           —Planet Earth, episode 3

Our neighbor died without explanation.
On the receiving line, his wife said nothing.

Nothing—a tremor rivered out the door
and down the hall, into the wilderness—

thirst, hunger, all directions. She snapped
in charge of things. I would find her poised

outside, clipping hedges, winding out hose,
her silver bob bent over her task, her hips

perpetually young, in black jeans, black boots.
My husband went to her husband’s wake

and held me closer with his heart emojis
than he had in weeks.

*

Josette Akresh-Gonzales is the author of “Apocalypse on the Linoleum” (Lily Poetry Review Press). Her work has been published or is forthcoming in The Southern Review, The Indianapolis Review, Atticus Review, JAMA, The Pinch, The Journal, Breakwater Review, PANK, and many other journals. A recent poem has been included in the anthology Choice Words (Haymarket). She co-founded the journal Clarion and was its editor for two years. Josette lives in the Boston area with her husband and two boys and rides her bike to work at a nonprofit medical publisher. Website: josettepoet.com.

Passport Stamps from Narnia by Avery Chu

Passport Stamps from Narnia

I, who never fell through mirror to Wonderland, who never
sailed in tornado to Oz, who never paddled across acetate oceans.

I, who never found Narnia. I, who seek. I catalog childhood
fibs as incantations. Paper fairies shuttered my blinds last night:

I was staring at halogen bulbs, tungsten on retina, when one trembled
past. I glued my own wings from candlewax and magazine clippings.

I jumped from rooftop to trampoline, springs shuddering as I
collided. I was not floating in shipwreck debris in the Aegean.

I narrate subway commutes as Shakespearean. Mundanities heap.
Narnia is not through this doorway, nor through the turnstiles.

I wait for the express, the summons. I wait for the wardrobe.

*

Avery Chu is a high school student. Her poems have appeared in Filter Coffee Zine.

Ode to the Memories I’ve Made in Boston by Annalisa Hansford

Ode to the Memories I’ve Made in Boston

Some days I want to decay. Rot away in bed
until my sheets are littered with dead skin cells

and strands of unwashed hair. My memories
could fill up hundreds of rolls of film, and I’m afraid

of the day I’ll forget them. Every year that goes
by, I lose a reel. In ten years, I won’t remember

the Bostonian singing Phoebe Bridgers in the park
across my junior dorm. How she whittled someone

else’s sadness down to a chord progression. Days before,
me in the backseat of an Uber, trying to act sober

after two margaritas and two shots of tequila. Failing,
then telling my ex-lover how much I miss my dead friend.

How she would’ve loved the city if she had lived long enough
to visit. If her ex-boyfriend didn’t stab her on that July morning

three years ago. Didn’t leave her lying on the concrete
of the abandoned train station parking lot to bleed and bleed

and bleed in that deadly heat. In eight years, I won’t remember
abandoning a Halloween party with my roommate five minutes

after arriving. How we couldn’t find any alcohol in the house,
just empty bottles of Chardonnay and cigarette butts. We went

back to our dorm, ordered pizza and vegan cheesy bread, watched
The Great Pumpkin instead. In six years, I won’t remember

walking through a New England blizzard with my partner
to the nearest Dunkin Donuts. Wind whipping against our faces,

hail hammering onto our winter coats, just for a cup of matcha.
My tongue turning the color of August, the month I met her. Boston,

I’m sorry I resented you for so long. All this time, you were just
trying to understand the loneliness within me without unraveling it.

*

Annalisa Hansford (they/them) studies Creative Writing at Emerson College. Their poetry appears or is forthcoming in The West Review, The Lumiere Review, and Heavy Feather Review. They are the co-editor-in-chief of hand picked poetry, a poetry editor for The Emerson Review and Hominum Journal, and a reader for Sundress Publications.

Two Poems by Callie Little

Headstone

The text was three words:
Your mom passed.

My fifteen minute break.
Break like: my last baby tooth hits cement.

And then I was
back on the sales floor
where everything was plastic-wrapped perfection
where I did my best have-a-great-day smiling
impression of myself.

My coworker said they’d just gotten the worst text.
I wanted to say I bet I can top it, but I folded the tissue
paper behind the register, instead. Buried it.
And you might think that I wanted to go home,
but I wanted to stay tucked into the name tag
that was holding me together.

And then I was
outside.
It isn’t beautiful and poetic to tell you it was raining—
it just was. The rain pours in Seattle no matter how you feel.
I said the impossible words into my phone
The my and the mom and the died
And my spouse came to me.

And then I was
at a restaurant.
I bought us dinner. I bought us drinks.
I spent every minimum-wage dollar I had
and bought every appetizer on the menu
and too much dessert. A mudslide.
A warm apple pie a la mode,
the all-American mother ice cream dream.
I wanted to say, your mom only dies once
to the waiter but I didn’t feel like seeing him hurt for me
so I just said it to the person who loves me most.

And then I was
home.
And the grief only sat beside me, waiting.
I thought it might leave me in the night
like I might wake up
and it would just be another day.
I’d gone two years without hearing her voice
so it wouldn’t be any different.

And then I was
awake
and it was
cement.

*

Every Other Tuesday

Therapy begins at the same time as it always does
this morning, and it’s not the first time my voice
is all stone truth: “I think I might be cursed.”

My licensed therapist who is also secretly a witch
sees the light in my eyes flicker, and their hair stands on end.
They say, “that’s a sign that there’s truth there.”

This is how it works, therapy: I hand them a tangle
made of all my smallest pieces, they point to it
and say, “what a mess.”

Sometimes, this is enough magic to feel
a little bit like sanity— just being told
I’m not imagining it all.

*

Callie Little (she/they) is an artist and author from the Pacific Northwest. Her writing has appeared in VICE, Harper’s BAZAAR, Architectural Digest, and many more fine publications. Her debut non-fiction book, Every Little Thing You Do Is Magic, and its coordinating tarot deck featuring her illustrations will be published by Clarkson Potter in August 2024.

Mind-too-full-ness by Judy Kronenfeld

Mind-too-full-ness

With every fragment of my one precious,
dwindling life, I am trying to focus
on these strawberries I bought for breakfast
as I wash them—enormous berries,
that look as if they’ve been given hormones,
like steers and heifers, and a little too crisp
on my knife, I notice, as I quarter them
into a bowl—unlike the miniscule
and profoundly sweet wild ones I would like
to find in a hilltop patch in some idyllic future—
berries that would stain my hands as I stuff them,
three after two in my mouth, whose juices
would dribble down my chin.

I drag my attention, kicking, back to the present,
marvel at the multitude of strawberry
seeds on each piece—tiny slightly quizzical
eyebrows all over the red flesh—which lead me
away to nature’s contingency plans,
her overcompensation for bad odds:
the leathery pomegranate pouch packed
with hundreds of arils bejeweled in glistening,
delicious ruby pulp; frogs that produce thousand-egg
clouds; fish that release millions at one go.
And oh! the hundred little turtle hatchlings
I watched on a video last week. Cheered
by onlookers, they clambered out of the nest,
then flippered laboriously over mountains
and valleys of sand to the sea, where maybe
one in a thousand (on a good day) or one
in ten thousand (on a bad) won’t be scooped up
by a barracuda or plucked by a gull.

I’m trying to tug my eyes back
to the cheerful strawberries in their white bowl,
trying to haul myself with gratitude back
to the warmth of my kitchen, back to my right arm—
almost healed from a fracture months ago—
actually lifting the bowl, back to your brightening
eyes as I set the berries on our breakfast table
next to the buttered toast.

But, love, I can’t not see the ruined world—
how it empties of deliciousness, brightness
and warmth, how it fills with the sounds
of annihilation by enormous bombs, dulls
to the uniform grey of destroyed cities,
how irrevocably it numbs the starving and stunned,
sitting on the mutilated ground hunched
over their fires—trying to bake a little
ashen bread with the last of the flour.

*

Judy Kronenfeld’s full-length books of poetry include Groaning and Singing (FutureCycle, 2022), Bird Flying through the Banquet (FutureCycle, 2017), and Shimmer (WordTech, 2012). Her poems have appeared in four dozen anthologies and widely in journals. Her eighth collection, a chapbook of poems, If Only There Were Stations of the Air, will be published by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions in early 2024, and her ninth, another chapbook, Oh Memory, You Unlocked Cabinet of Amazements!, will be released by Bamboo Dart Press in June, 2024. Her memoir-in-essays, Apartness, is forthcoming from Inlandia Books in 2024/2025. Judy is Lecturer Emerita, Creative Writing Department, UC Riverside.

Drought by Lisa Shulman

Drought

Brown hills hunker down
parched soil hardens,
the land pants
under a merciless sun
vernal pools once loud with frog song, silent.
The weary world waits for rain.

I dream men burn bridges
over dry riverbeds,
crush thin bright bones of trout
beneath their boots.
Then awaken to lush lawns soft as moss
tended by those far from home.

Corn withers on cracked stalks
limp squash leaves wilt,
roots of fruit trees brittle in their search.
Swollen-tongued deer flee flames, singed coyotes
pad down city streets
lost while the earth thirsts.

We see and don’t see
families camped by roaring rivers
of cars, in sagging tents and flapping blue tarps,
we see and turn away
sail past those tattered flags,
our own lucky wallets stuffed like fat fish.

Dressed in ashflakes beneath a burning sun
children stand silent,
their eyes flat dry stones
hard as hearts.
They watch us, waiting
like the land, longing for our tears.

*

Lisa Shulman is a writer, children’s book author, and teacher. Her work has appeared in Catamaran, Minnow Literary Magazine, California Quarterly, The Best Small Fictions, and a number of other magazines and anthologies. Nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and a winner in the Jessamyn West Creative Writing contest, Lisa’s poetry has also been performed by Off the Page Readers Theater. Her chapbook Fragile Bones, Fierce Heart is forthcoming from Finishing Line Press. Lisa lives in Northern California where she teaches poetry with California Poets in the Schools. lisashulman.com

Until I Saw Photos from Bahkmut by Cathryn Essinger

Until I Saw Photos from Bahkmut

I didn’t care much for the surrealists,
those artists who have no use for reason’s

steady narrative, preferring the gut punch
of the injured psyche, the bruise of a dream

that leaves us wounded even when awake.
But today, this photograph of a country town,

a photo journalist’s image taken quickly–
no time for composition, no time to shape

our common reality–has changed my mind.
It was just a hamlet really, before the bombs

fell, leaving steeples and cottages in ruin.
The focal point a soldier working a backhoe,

clearing rubble from the town square,
digging around the roots of an ancient oak

that was supposed to anchor this scene
in a fairy tale. In the foreground, a blood

stained pillow and lace curtains tangled
in the mud, and closer still, a child dangling

a stuffed rabbit by its paw and a woman in
a fur coat adjusting her pink cashmere hat.

*

Cathryn Essinger is the author of five books of poetry–A Desk in the Elephant House, from Texas Tech University Press, My Dog Does Not Read Plato, and What I Know About Innocence, both from Main Street Rag. Her most recent collections are The Apricot and the Moon and Wings, Or Does the Caterpillar Dream of Flight?, both from Dos Madres Press. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, The New England Review, The Southern Review, Rattle, New Directions anthologies, Ecotone, Terrain and other journals. Her poems have been nominated for Pushcarts and “Best of the Net,” featured on The Writer’s Almanac, and reprinted in American Life in Poetry.

Oh Mia Patria Sì Bella e Perduta by Hilary Sideris

Oh Mia Patria Sì Bella e Perduta
                                          — Nabucco

What can he say? His mom loved
Mussolini, not only as a girl,
but when she died at ninety-two.
Did she romanticize her Fascist gioventú?
Was she ecstatic about Addis Ababa?
Vincenzo says she was hungry.
Il Duce put pane on her plate,

carne in her pan. Amore,
your country, too…Vincenzo
argues as Verdi’s chorus sings
of a homeland. Shhh, I say,
zitto. He understands, has pietà.
It happens at all! he smiles,
meaning all empires fall.

*

Hilary Sideris is the author of Un Amore Veloce (Kelsay Books 2019), The Silent B (Dos Madres Press 2019), Animals in English (Dos Madres Press 2020), and Liberty Laundry (Dos Madres Press 2022.) Her new collection, Calliope, is forthcoming from Broadstone Books. Sideris works as a professional developer for CUNY Start, a program for underserved, limited-income students at The City University of New York. She can be found online at hilarysiderispoetry.com

Sixth Blessing by Lois Perch Villemaire

Sixth Blessing

It was a floral and satin wedding.
I was honored to be asked
by my niece and her husband-to-be
to recite one of the seven blessings.
I was number six.

As number five concluded
I floated to the chuppah
The rabbi lifted his chin
and motioned,
I stepped to the designated spot
noticing the sea of guests,
bride and groom beaming,
intoxicated with joy.

I felt calm,
but my Apple Watch
tapped my wrist,
I glanced down at the message—
heart rate high.

*

Lois Perch Villemaire is the author of “My Eight Greats,” a family history in poetry and prose published in 2023. Her work has appeared in such places as ONE ART, The Ekphrastic Review, Pen In Hand, and anthologies including I Am My Father’s Daughter. Lois lives in Annapolis, MD. where she enjoys researching family history connections, fun photography, and doting over her collection of African violets.

Snow Parable by Audrey Hackett

Snow Parable

The world grows
smaller the way company
narrows a room.

A crack of smoke rises,
a pavement
drawn in air.

Snow laid down
like linen
makes a light-filled bed.

We pass through
the needle, not rich

but lavishly poor.

*

Audrey Hackett lives and walks in Yellow Springs, Ohio. Her poems have appeared in The Bitter Oleander, Alba, Right Hand Pointing, Green Ink Poetry, and ONE ART, and have been aired on NPR affiliate WYSO. She holds an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts and currently works as a communications consultant.

a change in weather by Michael Liu

a change in weather

My father pulls off I-38
three hundred miles east of Omaha.
I grew up on this fringe of tornado alley.

When I was younger I would imagine
the winds that colonized
these yellow fields were radio waves
sent by extraterrestrials. Aliens,
I was in the land of their prophecies.

As flatness elongated the torque
of the Earth, my father would tell
me stories from his world.
He handed me a photo from the 1980s.
He was biking through a market in Changsha.

These memories that are not mine
linger with the half life of uranium.
The sun is lucid in that image,
like it has been replaced,
different from the one in Iowa
as it reflects the humid sky on
my fathers face that is odd
and disturbed by a different radiation.
He is the ancient moon, craterless,
before eons of meteors.

*

Michael Liu is a writer from Naperville, Illinois. He is a junior at Naperville Central High School. His works have been recognized by Foyle Young Poets and Scholastic Art & Writing Awards along with having been published in the Daphne Review, Bow Seat, Polyphony, among other journals.

Two Poems by Taylor Mallay

Hard Water

My mother said we had hard water,
and that was why our fine, ash blonde
locks broke off like lizard tails,
day-by-day settled into a simmering
copper color.

But then
I didn’t mind climbing out
of the tub with knots
at my roots, brass-toned
strands wiry as
a chain link fence.
At 12, that moment
of full, flushed warmth,
head submerged, hearing only
a heartbeat, a breath—
I was sure that was worth
even the slow, dry death
of my prepubescent tresses.

Later, after my stepfather left,
and my mother lost her job,
and all the faucets quit,
my brother and I
would make the trek into town,
bear-hugging big plastic bottles
against our hips.

One by one, we filled them
at a fountain by the park.
Sometimes shrieks of laughter
would float our way, and we’d glance
at each other instead of at the kids
criss-crossing through the monkey bars,
lifting themselves up on the swings
as high as they could,
clouds in their eyes.

But then
winter came,
and the fountains froze.
For a while, I tried leaving
the largest tupperware we had
in the backyard overnight,
praying, please,
give me rain,
give me snow—

the sting of the morning air,
the basin caked with frost,
and me—hurrying to dip my head
in a bucket of slush
before the bus arrived,
my heart in my throat
as I shuffled into school with hair
still slick from the thick
dollar store conditioner
I could never fully rinse.

* 

Following the Tide

We walked the winding path
to the lake in darkness,
cicadas pulsing in the pines above,
flashlight guiding our way.

Peeling off sweat-soaked clothes,
we slid naked into cool black water.
I allowed myself to drift; you pulled me close.
We stayed like that for a while.

When our fingers pruned,
we swam back to shore,
water sliding down our shoulders, hair dripping.
The flashlight cast long shadows behind us—

your hand in my hand,
barefoot in the damp grass,
your steps sure
as I stumbled into sunrise
with you.

*

Taylor Mallay is a Vermont-based Midwesterner who enjoys tinkering away at poems here and there. Her work has previously appeared in The Dewdrop, The Write Launch, and West Trade Review, among other publications.

What Love Feels Like by Alejandro Escudé

What Love Feels Like

If a single dad loses his teaching career, he loses
Everything. So I work out. I start with the bicep curl

Machine. I hear the grunts of the man five machines
Down. I think about my Corolla in the dark lot.

The gray things and the shadows up there. I think
Too much, and then at the gym I think no more.

The towels are white and stiff. I drink tap water
From a middle school fountain near the restroom.

Both my kids fill my heart in my small apartment,
Especially when my tween daughter asks to watch

The Amazing World of Gumball. I record it for her.
Long ago, I long-term subbed for a chemistry class.

The teacher kept a bearded dragon. It ate when I ate.
I remember thinking this is what love feels like.

*

Alejandro Escudé’s latest book of poems, “The Book of the Unclaimed Dead,” published by Main Street Rag Press in 2019, is now available. He received a master’s degree in creative writing from UC Davis.

Love In the Time of a Two Year Renovation by Laurie Rosen

Love In the Time of a Two Year Renovation

For you I would go down to the depths
of our foul basement with the dead mice
and dripping water that may or may not be sewage.

I would dig through the damp, dust covered boxes
for your copper pots, blue ceramic bowls
and stainless steel spatulas.

Although you can find any recipe online
I’d happily herniate my L5 disc carrying
the book-filled crates upstairs so you could

sift through dank covers till you find
your Sicilian lamb, eggplant cacciatore
and ginger cookie recipes.

I’d unearth the plastic tubs tangled in webs,
covered in sawdust and mouse droppings
to find dishes, silverware and wine glasses,

wash it all in the makeshift sink, head back
down to locate the linen and candle sticks.
Good-bye paper plates, plastic forks and cups,

for you babe, I’d scrub the table,
vacuum the wood shavings,
make a setting worthy of your delicacies––

the aroma of rosemary, garlic and just baked cookies
masking the stench of wet paper, rotted flesh
and mold.

*

Laurie Rosen is a lifelong New Englander. Her poetry has appeared in Peregrine, Gyroscope Review, Zig Zag Lit Mag, New Verse News, Oddball Magazine, The Inquisitive Eater: a journal of The New School, ONE ART and elsewhere. Laurie won first place in poetry at the 2023 Marblehead, MA Festival of the Arts.

Anniversary Memento by Cathryn Shea

Anniversary Memento

I throw on my housecoat
so before breaking the fast
I can fetch the morning paper,
that archaic medium for news.
Then time to remove accumulations
of body and soul. I mean bathe.
The long détente of parenting
and employment years behind us.
It’s our anniversary.
Instead of a bejeweled gift
I will settle for a carafe
or crockpot. An inverse memento mori,
interlocking cells of marriage spilling.
I know my husband in our housewares.
Having brushed him with my tongue
many years during our misdemeanor
home life, era more like error,
with its dabbling in booze and drugs,
and slamming of doors.
There was a brief Paradiso Terrestre,
fleeting cataracts of Edens.
Now our routine is forgiving,
my conscience feels swaddled.
I resist anxiety. Never mind remorse
that we didn’t behave better
in this earthly life, as I dream we did
in a nocturnal shadow life.
I cede to acceptance, this bundle of years.
*

Cathryn Shea’s second full-length poetry collection, “Ghost Matinee,” will be published in 2025. Her first is “Genealogy Lesson for the Laity” (both with Unsolicited Press). A Best of the Net nominee, Cathryn’s poetry has been in several anthologies and appears in Rust + Moth, Schuylkill Valley Journal, Gargoyle, and widely elsewhere. Cathryn served as editor for Marin Poetry Center Anthology, and she’s a fourth-generation northern Californian living with her family in Fairfax, CA. See cathrynshea.com

Life with Fish by Henry Stimpson

Life with Fish

1.
Struck mute, my father points
his thumb to his parched mouth,
takes one sip of apple juice, gags
and coughs, sweat beading his face.
I feel awful, but then
he reaches for Suzanne’s hand.
“We love you!” I say. He nods off
in his reclining wheelchair.

2.
A social worker disguised as the mailman
was spying on him, Dad muttered.
He slammed the salt shaker on his plate,
shattering it, then skulked into the basement
to hone his hunting knives
on his whining power grindstone.
My supper turned to ashes. I was eleven.

After more breakdowns and shock treatments,
Dad was too fragile to keep a job for long
but still fished for bass, scup, tautog,
bluefish, flounder, trout and perch
he fileted expertly, dusted in cornmeal
and pan-fried to golden succulence.

3.
Handsome and poker-faced at 29,
Dad holds up a mottled gray-black tautog
with one hand and with the other
cradles me and his lethal speargun.
Forever six in my striped T-shirt,
I’m thrilled to be with him.

4.
Seventeen years later in the same tiny kitchen,
Dad, balding and mustached,
and I, bearded, with a dark curly nimbus,
grin showing off two fierce big bluefish.

He’s 83, a widower.
I anxiously shadow him
as he hops goat-like across boulders
to a fishing ledge above the sea.
No fish for the camera that day.

5.
I wheel my bony dad
out into the chill winter sun
and soon roll him back inside
by the tropical fish tank, his theater
in the nursing home. The cast includes
a small slow urchin, a shy red shrimp,
and “the boss,” a beaky fluorescent-yellow tang
that chases off the darting blue damsels
and made him chuckle.

He’s 93 today. He’s still asleep,
so I tuck in next to him a birthday card
with a popup trout and a joke
about its exaggerated size.

Two hours later they call me.
Now I’m a fish out of water.

*

Henry Stimpson’s poems have appeared in many publications, including Poet Lore, Rolling Stone, Lighten Up Online, Atlanta Review, Delmarva Review, On the Seawall, Scientific American (forthcoming) and others. A diehard Boston Celtics fan, he lives in Eastern Massachusetts and also writes essays and humor. Stimpson is a semi-retired public relations practitioner and a longtime volunteer ESOL tutor, currently helping a fine Moldovan man speak English better.

Two Poems by Martha Silano

Postcard from Some Unknown Part of My Brain
that may be missing an enzyme. Missive from I believed
my version of ruse and ruin. It’s true: at boulevards I seek out
the craziest donuts, Bear Mountain Bavarian, Triple Blitz Crunch.
Everywhere I turn, the tulips are redder than the Spanish word
for blood. Everywhere the curbs are crumbling (don’t go barefoot).
Everywhere: prosecco fountains empty into cruise-able rivers.
I want the dead to be what pops when I shake the bottle,
aim the cork at the hedges. What I promise is the tenderness
of a tamed tiger, a small gray cat crawling under your duvet.
Did you say permission or persimmon? Either way,
I will be your plankton, what keeps you phosphorescent.
Together let’s venture into imperishable brightness,
dimness suddenly strobing. Find a seat beside a bed
of crocuses, which you’ll remind me is where we get saffron.
Dine on and shine on. Become more than a chainsaw
and its log. At our feet the space junk of the 60s and 70s,
scraps of the lunar module that carried Neil and Buzz.
It’s true: I get mean when I don’t get my way, when I’m forced
to build a nest in the future tense, when I’m forbidden
the call of an osprey. When heat gives way to dusk.
*
Self-Appraisal at 62
Sometimes, it’s okay to ask which cracked terracotta pot,
what about this place called Earth, though sometimes
it’s okay to not ask permission to appear
in a low-cut gold-lame dress higher up the thigh than someone, somewhere,
considers appropriate. Mainly, it’s staying in your reclined movie seat
till the very last credit, till you find out who wrote every song,
including “What Was I Made For?” Such a good question! Ask yourself,
and I will too. But mostly? Adventures in vexing. Dostoevsky-ishly
nuanced. Feeling more at home in my bosom-buddy body,
yet wrapped in every glass of Pinot Grigio, every oops-no-SPF suntanning afternoon.
Something like inexorably, not to be discouraging. As I often say to my life partner,
would you rather the alternative? Despite juicy maggots and blowflies,
I carry on with the bubbly, my plate piled high with Pasta alla Norma,
always stop at that bakery in Cashmere with the baguette straight out
of Anjou. It’s too soon to know how bad it will get,
but for now there are sexual pleasure tools out the wazoo. I mean,
the MRI revealed a white spot on my right frontal lobe,
so I Dr. Googled: possible early sign of dementia.
SO fun! (as I like to text), but today all my Nutter Butters and Lorna Doone’s
are exactly where they belong, and I’m coming and going
like a subway line to Queens.
It’s not quite a choose your own adventure, though I do make sure
to roll down grassy hills, to stand in line for an ice cream novelty
when the rainbow van pulls up, to make a little lotus blossom
with my fingertips. Sometimes, it’s a good idea to take a long, good look
in the mirror, ask Change? Why would I change? To give the future
both the finger and a thumbs up.
*
Martha Silano is a poet living with ALS. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, Paris Review, American Poetry Review, The Cincinnati Review, and The Missouri Review, among others. Martha’s most recent collection is Gravity Assist (Saturnalia Books, 2019).

Two Poems by Sandra Kohler

Tonawanda Street Scene #6, Mourning

Will you live for days, dear friend, or weeks ¬–
you whose doctors had given you at most six
months something like a year ago? Today,
hearing that you’d fallen four times in less
than an hour after you’d been moved into
a new facility, ostensibly compassionate,
for the incurably ill, I began to wish for your
death, to imagine a death more conscious,
more accepting, than the one into which
you seem to be blundering. I want you able
to say goodbye to those you love, fully
yourself, rational, though tender at heart;
not confused, struggling, fighting your fate.
I have no power to make any of this real.
I grieve for you while you are still alive,
struggling. The best in you is your enemy:
that will to live, fight on, betraying you
now. All I can do is mourn for it, for you.

*

Realization

Dreaming, I am trying to imagine how to console
my two grandchildren, Kit almost thirteen, Sam
just turned eleven, for my death, for my husband’s,
their beloved grandfather. We are alive but so old
that surely they will have to endure our loss; what
can I do or say to teach them how to suffer that?

Thirteen, eleven. In the dream I realize that when
my mother died I was nine. For most of my life I’ve
believed that I did not mourn her, that my sister’s
narrative of how she had lost a mother, but I had
not, because she would mother me, was the true
story. True story indeed –a fake tale, a makeshift,
shift that for all its lack of substance blinded me:
I believed I never mourned, suffered. Dreaming,

I am reliving that time, recognizing my own agon,
passion, loss. For years, I conspired with my enemy,
robbing my child self of the reality of her pain.
In dream I am given back what was taken from me:
I know what I suffered. Is there some kind of
forgiveness in this dream? Not of my sister, but
of my child self, whom I had judged for decades.
If so, it is not forgiveness, it is healing at last.

* 

Sandra Kohler’s third collection of poems, Improbable Music (WordTech) appeared in May, 2011. Earlier collections are The Country of Women (Calyx, 1995) and The Ceremonies of Longing, (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2003). Her poems have appeared in journals, including The Beloit Poetry Journal, Prairie Schooner, Illuminations, Tar River Poetry and many others over the past 45 years. In 2018, a poem of hers was chosen to be part of Jenny Holzer’s permanent installation at the new Comcast Technology Center in Philadelphia.

Two Poems by Christopher W. Smith

Let’s go to a venue from our college days and see a band we don’t know.

We’ll spend the night
talking about what has changed
and what little has changed.

We’ll tell the other attendees
that they’ve been robbed–This band
is better live.–and see if they get the reference.

We’ll regale the bartenders about
how we used to drink PBRs with our
fake IDs, and hold the cans up at a song’s end.

Now, it’s just phones raised up and
recording. We’ll start slapping them out
of their owners’ hands. We’ll scream

You don’t need proof you were
here. Enjoy the moment for your
self. No one gives a fuck anyway.

Maybe we’ll be bounced. Or maybe
we’ll reconcile over rounds of White Claw. Or maybe
we’ll find an excuse not to go in the first place.

*

Let’s scream at the waitstaff

and we’ll time how
long it takes for a
manager to appear at
Applebee’s vs. Alinea,
for someone to tell us to fuck

off and escort us
by squeezing our arms, above
our elbows. But we’ll wait
until our appetizer arrives,
one drink, so it’s not without

reason we forgot that
Kenneth or Alessandra or Kimi
has their own mouth to feed
and needs a Xanax before coming
to work and having us spit

out bullshit simply
because we can.
And it always comes as a surprise
that it takes so so long
for someone to intervene.

*

Christopher W. Smith is a poet from rural Georgia. His poems are forthcoming from North Dakota Quarterly and have appeared in Peanut Butter Shrimp. He is the founder of Quarter Press, and you can find out more on Instagram @quarterpresspics.

Grist by Bonnie Proudfoot

Grist

I didn’t know where I was going, but I went along,
because who was out there to keep me from
this adventure, and why shouldn’t we, just to see
if we could? We started at midnight behind a dorm,
headed into a maintenance building, found a dimly lit
concrete stairwell, crossed a semi-flooded hallway
lit only by our flashlights, and another stairwell appeared.
Up we climbed, then slipped through an ancient oak door,
and we were in the back of the rare books collection
in Lockwood Memorial Library, padded leather armchairs,
first editions of Joyce, Steinbeck, folios of Whitman,
Shakespeare, and us, not an alarm or guard in sight. We
touched what we could, left books on couches, then
slipped back downstairs into more tunnels, toward
the student union, the bookstore next door, no doors
locked there, the Norton Anthology, Riverside Shakespeare,
texts I had just bought stacked on shelves, as if
for free, no one to tell us where not to be, what not to see,
and isn’t that what Ram Dass meant by “grist for the mill?”
Someone had a can of spray paint, someone kept guard,
soon flowers and peace signs blossomed on block walls,
and who knows if anyone ever saw those, but for all time,
and for almighty glee, we signed it, nobody, 1972.

*

Bonnie Proudfoot has published fiction, essays, reviews, and poetry in a variety of journals and anthologies. Her writing has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. Her debut novel, Goshen Road, (Swallow Press) was named 2022 WCONA Book of the Year and was long-listed for the 2021 PEN/ Hemingway. Her first chapbook of poems (Household Gods, Sheila-Na-Gig Editions) was released in September 2022. She lives on a ridgetop outside of Athens, Ohio, with her songwriter husband, Dan Canterbury. To find out more about Bonnie, check her website: bonnieproudfoot.com

The Redeemer by Sandy Rochelle

The Redeemer

40 years since you choose the wrong husband.

And your regret is palpable.

Somehow your beauty remains untouched.

Your tormentor now gone.

You have magically sidestepped your history.

You have redeemed what seemed nonredeemable.

Your light embraces us all.

*

Sandy Rochelle is a poet, actress and filmmaker. She is a member of the Acting Company of Lincoln Center. And is a Voting Member of The Recording Academy (The Grammy’s) in the Spoken Word Category. Publications include: Connecticut Review, Verse Virtual, Dissident Voice, Every Day Writer, Spillwords Press, Impspired, and others. Sandy hosted and narrated the PBS series, ‘On Our Own’ recipient of The President’s Award.

Two Poems by Julie Weiss

Celebration

Nobody told you how you´d glow
in this city, how fast your energy
would flow. Most days, you criss-cross
its neighborhoods as though riding a bolt
of electricity. It´s only been a week
since you landed on the other side
of the world, but your body, once
unyielding as routine, has become
a metallic version of your pre-nomad self
and you, conductor of emotion, vow
to bend towards any adventure that beckons.
This is your very own renaissance!
You relish the nightlife best, zipping
from café to bar to afterhours hot spots,
ordering food and drinks in the language
you came here to learn. Sometimes
coiled lovers or boisterous groups
of friends flash a glance your way,
which prickles just a bit, but even
as a child, you wore solitude like
a cherished pendant, pressing it to your
chest whenever you felt imperceptible
or were elbowed aside. It was enough
to contemplate other people´s lives.
Besides, when your classmates warm
to your quirky interests, your silences
and eccentricities, you too will have
an arm or three to link yours through.
In high school, you treated your birthday
as a frayed wire you hoped wouldn´t
flare into celebration, but now, halfway
across the world, the lights are off, your
teacher is walking into the classroom
with a cake, everyone is singing to you
in the language you´re all trying to learn
together, and the face in the flames
glows not with shame but euphoria.

*

A Different Kind of Restaurant

           –after reading about Alabama´s Drexell & Honeybee´s

Later, you´ll paint the barbecued ribs
in handsome shades of walnut,
submerge them in springs of hot gravy,
color of cedar. Add sizzle, tang. A taste
that transports you to the backyards
of your childhood, Sunday afternoons spent
scaling trees with your friends while
parents guzzled beers, swapped gossip.
You´ll need a full palette to portray
the vegetables, their flamboyance, the way
they spin across your taste buds clad in nothing
but flavor. They remind you of salsa
dancing, or how your legs lost rhythm after
the divorce. It´s been decades since you ate
a dish that merited an impressionistic flair,
waves of cheese crashing over macaroni shells,
more cheese cascading over the edge of your
senses, a hypnotic landscape of yellows,
oranges, and creams, your fork diving
and diving through the velvety tide, oxygen
an afterthought to perfection. You consider
telling the volunteer about the waterfront job
you lost last month, but there are so many people
waiting in line, so many stories. You´d like
to paint the owners´ portraits, their heart-shaped
faces, eyes generous enough to hold an entire
community in their depths. But first you want
to get the cobbler right. An estuary of berries
gushing out of the crust, crust floating
on an estuary of berries. Only the perfect mix
of blues can capture sweet summer nostalgia.
If you´d nabbed an important career when
dreams of prosperity were still up for grabs,
you´d be able to leave money for today´s
full belly. Instead, you drop a note of gratitude
in the donation box. Promise to return
another day with an offering of beauty.

*

Julie Weiss (she/her) is the author of The Places We Empty, her debut collection published by Kelsay books, and a chapbook, The Jolt: Twenty-One Love Poems in Homage to Adrienne Rich, published by Bottlecap Press. Her “Poem Written in the Eight Seconds I Lost Sight of My Children” was selected as a finalist for Sundress´s 2023 Best of the Net anthology. She won Sheila-Na-Gig´s editor´s choice award for her poem “Cumbre Vieja,” was named a finalist for the 2022 Saguaro Prize, and was shortlisted for Kissing Dynamite´s 2021 Microchap Series. A Pushcart Prize nominee, her work appears in ONE ART, Chestnut Review, and Random Sample Review, among others. Originally from California, she lives in Spain with her wife and two young children. You can find her at julieweisspoet.com.

Three Poems by Joan Mazza

Those Big Numbers

I like tables at Farmer’s Markets
or textbook color plates of the varieties
of fruits and vegetables—

4,000 species of potatoes
10,000 species of tomatoes
7,500 of apples

4,000 chile peppers, 50,000 of all kinds.
A whopping 350,000 known types
of beetles. More found every day.

How many trees? How many lichens
and slime molds? The world is abundant
with varieties, each with its own flavor, texture,

purpose. How many kinds of unique
people? Surely more than the Zodiac’s
charts or sixteen types for Myers-Briggs.

I love big numbers—galaxies and stars
in the universe, habitable planets, light
years to travel to any of them.

Over five thousand books in my house,
and I’m still buying. Still reading.
I haven’t read half.

These odd factoids give me a sprinkle
of joy, a sense that all is right in this world.
The crows chatter, indifferent to the news.

*

Late to Badassery

No one has ever called me
reckless or impulsive. I’ve never
been wild by others’ standards,
have kept my wildness caged,
corralled, tamped, and tamed.

For once, I’d like to let loose, dye
my hair pink or purple, wear orange
polka dots with purple stripes, don
a crazy, outrageous hat like Carmen
Miranda. After turning invisible,

I’d like to turn heads for a change,
have people wonder if I’m insane
or dangerous when I talk out loud
to myself in public, purchase a cart
full of cookies and ice cream.

What would happen if I gave
voice to my thoughts, said the things
I shouldn’t say, let my inner volcano
erupt with lava and pyroclastic flow?
I’m too staid, predictable, dependable,

too steadfast and available for my own
good. Don’t train me by saying you can
count on me. Don’t be surprised when
I’m out of character, a bit deranged.
You’ve been warned.

*

Imagining a Road Trip

I can see myself packing the car,
working from a list I’ve prepared
so I don’t forget rain boots and hat,
or the chargers for my iPhone, iPad,
and laptop. I like the notion of heading
west, no destination, except toward
mountains. No one to answer to, no one
who expects me to explain my choices.

I bring a stack of books, notebooks, some
of them old and already full of ideas
and flagged with Post-Its. Since most
motels have microwaves, I could bring
frozen homemade foods in a cooler
so I wouldn’t have to eat fast food
on the way. The call to drive and drive
comes to me in early morning darkness

as it did that year I took care of my mother
while she was dying when I wanted to run
away from the life I’d chosen, however
temporary. Even to me, this seems odd—
this desire to run. What would I be
running from? I live alone. My last dog
died, as did my two indoor cats. The feral
felines would miss their twice daily meals,

and they are not a burden, never waking me
or finding fault. I do as I like, buy whatever
I want, fill my bedroom surfaces with books
I’ll read next. No one interrupts or presses
me to show up where I don’t want to be.
What am I longing for that seems out there
waiting after a couple of hundred miles
on an open road? Old as I am, my cravings
and hungers are still mysterious.

*

Joan Mazza has worked as a medical microbiologist, psychotherapist, seminar leader, and is the author of self-help psychology six books, including Dreaming Your Real Self (Penguin/Putnam). Her work has appeared in Crab Orchard Review, Prairie Schooner, The MacGuffin, Poet Lore, Slant, and The Nation. She lives in rural central Virginia.

Dysphoria by Mikela Bjork

Dysphoria

After making love to me for the first time since I miscarried
you say: I love you my almost wife.

It has been 6 weeks and some days
since I caught you in a betrayal.

Living feels harder with you
in my life, stirring up chaos, a smattering of
disorder.

Awake late at night under a blanket
of sleepless overwhelm

while you snore next to me
Snuggly in a cocoon of denial.

The wind stirs and reminds me
I am alive.

There is time to
get out.

There is time to
escape this tumult,

time to shield myself from your empty promises,
broken.

Like us.
Like you.

*

Mikela Bjork (she/her) is a queer creative, scholar and mother. She is a tenured professor at the University of Redlands in the School of Education and the co-director of the Center for Educational Justice. Her poetry has been published in Intima: A journal of narrative medicine, The Bombay Literary Review, and (forthcoming) Cutthroat A Journal of the Arts. Her creative non-fiction piece entitled, “How we Met” was a finalist in the 2022 Brooklyn Film and Arts Festival. Her writing centers around social (in)justice, identity formation, motherhood, womxnhood, capitalism and sexuality.

Don’t Hate the Men by Andreea Ceplinschi

Don’t Hate the Men

who offer to carry your bag and hold the door open,
corral you with benign hands on the small of your back.
Don’t resent the flowers they leave dead
on your doorstep for you to throw out,
the shade of their torsos, damp moss chest hair,
rustled breathing, balding heads and sweaty balls
they unstick from thigh skin when you’re not watching.
Don’t flinch when they slip inside and you fit
their notions of affection, a worn-in leather glove
love letters signed with “don’t forget the milk.”
Don’t hate the men who ask for permission
when they don’t want to, who let you climb them
limb by tattooed limb, hardwood flesh footholds,
their flogging fingers in worship,
they want you, yes! It’s your featherless body
they squirm for, the men that haven’t broken you yet,
don’t hate them
because they don’t know

*

Andreea Ceplinschi is a Romanian immigrant writer, waitress, and kitchen troll living and working at the tip of Cape Cod. She writes poetry, fiction, and creative non-fiction. Her work has been featured in Solstice Literary Magazine, Cathexis Northwest Press, Hare’s Paw Literary Journal, The Blood Pudding, and elsewhere. When not writing for herself, she volunteers for Passengers Journal. Find out more about her at poetryandbookdesign.com

Break-in by Yana Kane

Break-in

The storm recedes.
Moonlight slips through the thinning clouds.

A tree has broken into a derelict house.

A branch that smashed a bedroom window
splays wide its twigs,
as if to find, as if to wake a sleeper.

That tree, bought with good money,
was planted here to serve the house
as winter windbreak and as summer shade—
a touch of nature pleasing to the eye.

The house, a dutiful tree-owner in its day,
made sure the outdoor tap watered the thirsty roots;
the basement shelves stocked spray for killing bugs
(pest, pollinator—what’s the difference?);
the shed sent out the pruning hook each spring
to set bounds on the growing limbs.

The chemicals, the tools, the shed
all vanished long ago.

Door hinges rusted shut.

Outside,
when spring is generous with rains
the tree grows taller, wider.
When drought strikes,
it drops scorched, shriveled leaves.
It suffers woodborers.
It blooms, seducing bees.

The house stays closed.

Stayed, until this storm.

The jagged opening will now invite
birds, squirrels, bats
to make their homes inside—
to over-winter, safe from bitter winds;
to set up nurseries for their young.
When their time comes,
to hide in secret nooks and die in peace.

The storm has passed.

The moonlit tree keeps watch over the roof.
The limbs embrace the walls.

*

Yana Kane came to the United States as a refugee from the USSR. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Princeton University, and a PhD in Statistics from Cornell University. Having retired after a successful technical career, she is pursuing an MFA in Literary Translation and Poetry at Fairleigh Dickinson University. Her recent and upcoming publications include 128 LIT, Allium, American Chordata, EastWest Literary Forum, The Los Angeles Review, Platform Review, RHINO Poetry, and Точка.Зрения/View.Point. “View.Point” recognized her translations of poetry of witness from Ukraine and Russia as among the “Best of 2022.” 128 LIT nominated her translation for the Deep Vellum Best Literary Translations Anthology 2025. Her bilingual poetry book, Kingfisher/Зимородок, was published in 2020.

2024 ONE ART Haiku Anthology

2024 ONE ART Haiku Anthology (Online Issue) 

How to Submit: Please email up to five haiku/senyru in the body of an email to:
onearthaiku@gmail.com and include a brief bio for use if accepted for curation.

Submission Window: March 1st-31st, 2024

Curation Decision From Katie Dozier by: April 7th, 2024

Anthology Publication Date: April 17th, 2024, National Haiku Day

Requirements: Previously uncurated, though sharing on personal sites (including social media) is great! Simultaneous submissions are also good; just please reply to your own emailed submission to let me know if it was accepted elsewhere.

What I’m Looking For: Despite what so many of us were taught in school, a three-line poem composed of five, then seven, then five syllables is not an accurate nor a complete definition of the art form of haiku. (For more on why, please read this article by Michael Dylan Welch.) Haiku cannot be distilled to being a short poem of a designated number of syllables; contemporary English haiku are constantly evolving and stretching the bounds of how much poem can be packed into a tiny package.

So what are haiku? As he outlined on our episode of The Poetry Space_, Timothy Green defines haiku as “two worlds in one breath,” which I haven’t been able to improve upon! Excellent haiku hinge upon the juxtaposition between two entities in an astonishingly quick amount of time—without the need to arbitrarily count syllables. The best haiku enable you to see both of the two worlds with a deeper understanding.

With that in mind, please do not submit 5-7-5 haiku that lack the juxtaposition at the heart of what makes haiku beat. Modern Haiku, Frogpond, and Rattle are excellent sources for what constitutes the fascinating scope of contemporary English haiku; and they are a great representation of the kind of poems I am excited to curate for ONE ART’s first ever Haiku Anthology.

I can’t wait to read your haiku and, in the meantime, find me over on X (aka. Twitter).

Best of Luck,

Katie Dozier
Haiku Editor

Two Poems by Luís Costa

screen time

I’m touching the wine stains on the dining table,
each imperfect circle tells me a different story,
many open, almost rings, purple as bruises;
indelible tales echoing between hickory
and my skin. I put down my glass,
pick up the phone and I delete
your location from my
weather app.

*

travel diary, Iceland, September 2023

I walked between raindrops,
gulped mist from the waterfalls,

bones carrying the sad weight
of my soaked heart. I longed for

peace from the drinks that birth
time, and I watched waves wiping

the vast darkness of coarse sand.
I tried to make my tears disappear

inside the echoes of the caves,
drenched myself in the fair songs

of hot springs, gazing upon night
skies, black as liquorice, filling up

with stars. I left two things behind:
a gift from you and a part of me. I

saw the northern lights, another life.

*

Luís Costa (he/they) is a queer poet featured in Visual Verse, Stone of Madness, Queerlings, Inksounds, Farside Review, FEED, Roi Fainéant, many worl(d)s and Boats Against The Current. His debut pamphlet Two Dying Lovers Holding a Cat was published by Fourteen Poems in 2023. He holds a PhD from Goldsmiths and lives in London with the ghost of his cat Pierożek. You can find him on Twitter @captainiberia

Two Poems by Jane Zwart

Two Points Define a Line

The conspiracy theorists have this much right:
there are strings. I don’t mean to indulge
their yarns—tabloids plotting Elvis’s posthumous
cameos, paranoid collages with dead presidents
at center—just the yarn itself. I mean just
that it’s twine all the way down; that underfoot
there are untold filaments, tangled, slack;
and that there are not seven degrees of separation,
that two points define a line. Think of the rope
waiting for the youths who will take sides
and straighten it between them, hand over hand,
until they are close enough to embrace. Think
of the string taut between tin can handsets. You
and I: there is a ribbon between us. I will reel
the looseness from it if you will. Think of the dash
some couples stretch between their two surnames.

*

Cleansing

Once it was hyssop
for mortals and fire
for metals, and then
we learned to make
soap out of ashes.
When that was not
enough, we soaked
our sheets in sour milk.
But life was short
and lye was slow.
Impatience is invention’s
other mother; her son
mixed the first bleach.
To be clear, blood never
fell out of favor.
Sometimes, also,
we tried forgiveness.

*

Jane Zwart teaches at Calvin University, where she co-directs the Calvin Center for Faith & Writing. Her poems have appeared in Poetry, The Southern Review, Threepenny Review, Ploughshares, and–once before–in ONE ART.

My Mother’s Purse by Robbi Nester

My Mother’s Purse

Cleaning out her bedroom closet before I sold the house,
I discovered it in a graveyard of old purses, stocked with
ticket stubs, and subway tokens, a pair of yellowed
leather gloves. Capacious as the womb that housed me,
wallet bulging, dispensary of coins and folded bills,
condiments and sweets. Both hospital and supermarket.
it weighed her shoulder down. Soon it will join her
gold teeth, comb—all that will mean nothing once I’m gone.

*

Robbi Nester is the author of four books of poetry and editor of three anthologies. She is a retired college educator and elected member of the Academy of American Poets. Her website is at RobbiNester.net

At the Perky Pot by Jerry Krajnak

At the Perky Pot

They gather here once more after Herbert’s service,
their meeting site this pockmarked window table
where they come to talk around nine most days
since they sold their farms. Tree shaded lawns
became new families’ backyard pools, their barns
just parking spots for leisure toys. Their tractors
gone. Old bailers gone. Now, Herbert too.
They sit beside the bird-spotted glass and watch
occasional cars pass by, their minds at work
recalling the fragrance of diesel fumes and dust,
of freshly turned soil, the sweetness of dried alfalfa.
In clean flannel shirts and pin-striped Carhartt overalls,
thanks to daughters who now watch over them,
they grieve for lost mornings when breeze and sun would stroke
their cheeks and soothe sore bones back in John Deere days.

*

Jerry Krajnak is a Vietnam veteran who later survived forty years in public school classrooms and collected degrees from UW Eau Claire, Wichita State, and the University of Kansas. He shares an old cabin in the North Carolina mountains with rescue animals, grows heirloom tomatoes, and writes a little. Recent poetry appears in Star 82 Review, New Verse News, I-70 Review, Autumn Sky Poetry, Rat’s Ass Review, SBLAAM, and other journals and anthologies. You can see more at jerrykrajnak.com.

Working the Overnight by Lisa Seidenberg

Working the Overnight

The Midwest is nothing like the coasts.
Opiated lakes scatter
amid thirsty prairies pining for a kiss.
It’s a flat landscape.

I knew Kat was not flat when she entered
the 24 hour sub shop where I worked the overnight
decked out in studded jean jacket and silver chain-strap boots.
Read the love poems she wrote
scrawled over the bathroom walls
in dripping swirls of medieval script.

Until then the night shift
brought only boisterous boys
at 4 in the morning
who drank too much and ordered sub sandwiches with extra onions
and yellow squares of American cheese.
But she ordered nothing so when dawn
came I took her home we woke
and went for breakfast Kat ordered spaghetti and meatballs,
devoured as if she hadn’t eaten for days.
I didn’t ask.

Her boots clanked as she walked away
down the flat sidewalk of a bank-owned town.
A stray cat in silver and blue.

*

Lisa Seidenberg is a filmmaker and writer who brings a cinematic sensibility to her written work. Her poems and literary criticism are published in NewVerseNews, Atticus Review, ONE ART: A Journal of Poetry and VENU Magazine. Her documentaries and poetry films have been screened widely in Europe, and in the U.S., inc. the Sundance Film Festival and Berlin and London Film Festivals. Her photo essay book, “Dark Pools” was featured at the NY Art Book Festival and Rendez-Vous Image (RDVI) in Strasbourg.

Buy One Egg McMuffin Get One Free by Susan Cossette

Buy One Egg McMuffin Get One Free
Douglas Drive, Crystal Minnesota

Every cracked sign has the sirens’ lure.

We clean cars better than the rest,
repair vacuums, examine eyes.
There are free X-rays for new dental patients,
all-you-can eat shrimp Thursdays at
the boiling seafood Cajun kitchen.

No McFibs, just real ribs at Arby’s
and bargain cremations at Washburn McCreavy’s.

Put a quarter in the shopping cart at Aldi,
gather fresh produce and meat,
house-brand snacks and cheap cheddar cheese.

This ecosystem of minimum-wage workers,
these canned beans, rice, and pasta will feed me for days.

But the Target superstore oversees all,
its red dot a plastic knowing, omnipotent eye—
rusted cars darting in and out
of the kinetic concrete hive.

*

Susan Cossette lives and writes in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Author of Peggy Sue Messed Up, she is a recipient of the University of Connecticut’s Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize. A two-time Pushcart Prize nominee, look for her work in Rust and Moth, The Eunoia Review, The Rat’s Ass Review, New York Quarterly, ONE ART, As it Ought to Be, Anti-Heroin Chic, Crow & Cross Keys, Loch Raven Review, and in the anthologies Fast Fallen Women (Woodhall Press) and Tuesdays at Curley’s (Yuganta Press).

The Feast Of Busby Berkeley by Christine Potter

The Feast Of Busby Berkeley

Big holidays are often because of things
that weren’t the disaster you’d imagine—
often events you wouldn’t even notice

if you weren’t paying attention: lots of
oil, a state execution foiled, death taking
its unfixable thievery elsewhere. The old

friend released from the hospital, the
Aurora showing its dragon-green dance
to a solitary teacher driving the reservoir

causeway on her way to school just before
dawn, radio in her car untouched by any
solar storm. And this black and white

movie: ninety years old, three hundred
showgirls camped overnight in an arena-
sized rehearsal hall, learning a new routine,

each of them equipped with a negligee,
swimsuit, and waterproof makeup: every bit
as crazy a story as you getting to watch it

now and stop mourning the news. You did,
too, after clicking a single button thrice.
Later you stepped out on the porch into air

deep with frost and midnight, taken by a
hilarious delirium. Everything hushed, the
creek shuffling water. So. Why not believe?

*

Christine Potter’s poetry has been curated by Rattle, Kestrel, Third Wednesday, Thimble, Eclectica, The Midwest Quarterly, and Autumn Sky Poetry Daily—and featured by ABC Radio News. She has work forthcoming in The McNeese Review. Her young adult novels, The Bean Books, are published by Evernight Teen, and her third full-length collection of poetry, Unforgetting, by Kelsay Books.

Three Poems by Alan Perry

At the Barcelona Airport

She pushes her luggage cart
through the concourse, tissue to her eyes.
I barely notice she’s crying until
I roll past her with my carry-on.
Her blouse is wrinkled, hair uncombed
and a long sweater wraps itself
around her waist in a hug – remnants
maybe from the Atlanta red-eye.
As I look over my shoulder
she pauses, leans on her cart heaped
with a satchel and two huge bags
and seems to compose herself.
She changes her pace intermittently,
checks her phone, then glances
at the glass ceiling as if dawn
signals relief. I feel better
hoping her despair has eased.
Was it bad news from home?
A break-up with her partner?
The death of a loved one?
I want to intrude, ask several
none-of-your-business questions,
text the sad scene to friends I’m meeting
in Madrid – but I won’t. Certain grief
moves on wheels, brakes for no reason,
then veers off, carrying its weight
to an unexpected exit. At my gate, I see her
pass by again as I queue up for boarding –
her head still bowed as she turns
a sharp corner near the duty-free shop
and disappears down the escalator.
I want her to be on a flight to Istanbul,
where continents meet in narrow straits,
cross over to each other freely, even if
some cargo is never fully unloaded.

*

Necessary Matter

No matter how a freakish snowfall
burdens the mesquite tree that leans
so heavily it bows to the equinox.

No matter that the palo verde in the median
can’t bear the weight of change,
halves itself so one shaft survives.

No matter that mourning doves tell me
they are contented with rainfall,
with each other, with their calling.

What matters is the moment
before absence, when recollection swells
amid breakdown, when there’s nothing

beyond horizon but sky. That’s when
there is no loss, only precedent
for grief—unbounded, sacred.

I want to tell you when my best friend died,
I wasn’t there. My phone rang off-key,
rattled and clicked like slipping breath.

There were only liminal spaces before
that winter, half of us bending toward earth
like a snow-laden trunk.

And in the moments after snow melts,
rivers come alive, reservoirs re-fill,
depth gradually returns.

*

Pulling Over

The figure emerges in the rearview mirror
shadowed by a dimly lit sunset,

a gentle distraction from the miles ahead.
It may be my father, guiding

my young hands on the wheel, teaching
me to steer into the oncoming turn

or showing me how to change oil,
replace worn tires, tune the engine

so all the pieces work in unison.
Though it could be my mother extending

her forearm in front of my chest,
a maternal seatbelt holding me away

from the dashboard, inches from my head.
But most likely, it’s you in mirrored glass

waving hello and goodbye, smiling
as I drive our Impala, the one

with fins, wind finding open windows,
you sitting next to me, never wanting an exit.

Your hand caresses my neck
while you proclaim our road as endless.

I hear you again, humming to the radio
like tread on pavement, a white noise

of comfort that lingers as I drive,
decelerating as tires swerve to the shoulder.

Idling there in the moment, I remember
how much I wanted to write this down

before I forgot how far we’d driven.

*

Alan Perry is a poet and editor whose debut chapbook, Clerk of the Dead, was a finalist and honorable mention in the Cathy Smith Bowers Poetry Competition and was released by Main Street Rag Press in 2020. He is a founder and Co-Managing Editor of RockPaperPoem, a Senior Poetry Editor for Typehouse Magazine, and a Best of the Net nominee. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Valparaiso Poetry Review, Tahoma Literary Review, Third Wednesday, Ocotillo Review, Panoply, Schuylkill Valley Journal, and elsewhere. Alan holds a BA in English from the University of Minnesota, and he and his wife divide their time between a suburb of Minneapolis, MN and Tucson, AZ. More at: alanperrypoetry.com

Rentrez by Rose Jeanou

Rentrez

Let’s go back
To fortyfive-ten
White trellis and doors of green
Where I could be nineteen again
And we would ever be.
We once lived by the park on the corner
Where the cool clothes drift on the line
And brown cats roam free
And the roof’s open
We could climb up into the sky.
When I didn’t feel worried I’d lose it
I was losing it all the time
We straddled the slackline and never slipped off—
Well, I bet I’d feel just the same.
What’s the difference between
Ami et coloc?
I know I would feel the same.
There was nothing in life
Except for my friends
Except except except
Those rotted green doors to fortyfive-ten
The white pigeonshit on the terrasse,
Where we’d stand and smoke cigarettes under the cross—
We were four, we were two, with one name.
Overlooking the Esplanade
Flicking the ash—

*

Rose Jeanou is a lesbian writer and high school teacher based in Providence, Rhode Island. Her fiction and poetry has been featured in HAD, Wrong Publishing, Schuylkill Valley Journal, and many more journals and anthologies. Read her work at rosejeanwrites.com or follow her @rosejeanou on Instagram and Substack.

Thought from a Cape Town Coffee Spot by Rachel Orta

Thought from a Cape Town Coffee Spot

Table Mountain, rooibos tea
looking out over this sea,

who has assured me it’s worthwhile in essence
yet validated with each rise my fears of its violence.

Indian Ocean just as the ways of men,
Tepid, salt-encrusted, aiming to enchant and then

within a moment, as riptide or time it takes for coffee pour,
rage boils over, ripping all away, as to the ocean’s floor.

*

Rachel Orta (she/her) is from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. She gravitates towards dream-like themes, often inspired by mysteries of nature and complexities of family. Orta’s writing has recently appeared in FERAL and Heimat Review. A list of her recent publications and links to social media can be found here – https://linktr.ee/RachelOrta.

winter coat & a half glimpse of the world by john compton

winter coat & a half glimpse of the world

fingers crackle like a frigid bough.
an ice blossom sprouts.

summer is my grandmother’s voice
asking if i’d like a bowl of chili.

*

john compton (he/him) is a gay poet who lives with his husband josh and their dogs and cats. he is the poet with 14 published chapbooks/books, with the latest book: the castration of a minor god (Ghost City Press; december 2022) and next chapbook: melancholy arcadia (Harbor Editions; may 2024)

18 Reasons Why I Haven’t Lost Weight by Debbie Feit

18 Reasons Why I Haven’t Lost Weight

1. Because if I crunch enough of these potato chips it might drown out the house full of people who have shown up to say they are sorry. I offer them some of my chips.

2. Because chicken noodle soup, even with extra noodles, can’t really cure everything but damned if I’m not going to try.

3. Because the mirrors are already covered up for shiva, so I won’t have to see the extra chin I’ve acquired.

4. Because it’s too difficult to count calories when I’m busy counting books as I pack them up into banker boxes. I am up to fifty-one boxes.

5. Because my heart broke and rainbow cookies keep showing up as more people come to make a shiva call. But no matter how bright the red, green and yellow layers, all is gray.

6. Because if I eat enough Jeni’s Blackout Chocolate Cake ice cream I can become big enough to fill not just my seat but his as well at Ari’s college graduation and Max’s wedding and my book launch and Dave’s retirement party and all the simchas to come.

7. Because egg rolls, falafel, and apple fritters are indicative of my physical and mental state. Fried.

8. Because tacos fall apart as easily as I do.

9. Because pastrami on rye is salty enough to mask the taste of my own tears.

10. Because the skin of barbecued chicken crackles. The meat almost tender. The core raw. Especially when he was at the grill.

11. Because schnitzel makes sense when coated in grief.

12. Because Orville Redenbacher’s Butter Gourmet microwave popcorn seems appropriate given that my world has been nuked.

13. Because I can’t track grams of protein and carbs when I’m busy tracking down investment accounts, retirement benefits, and vintage furniture stores that might be interested in his mid-century modern bedroom set.

14. Because brisket is so tender it falls off the bone. Like I do.

15. Because pizza.

16. Because we need ten people to say Kaddish and these decadent chocolate truffles are worthy of being worshiped. I decide eating them is like a minyan in my mouth.

17. Because grief is an acquired taste that becomes more palatable with each sip.

18. Because my father died.

*

Debbie Feit is an accidental mental health advocate, unrelenting Jewish mother and author of The Parent’s Guide to Speech and Language Problems (McGraw-Hill) in addition to texts to her kids that go unanswered. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Five South, Passengers Journal and on her mother’s bulletin board. She has been a reader for Five Minutes, an advertising copywriter, and a person who used to be able to sleep without pharmaceutical intervention. Read about her thoughts on mental health issues, her life as a writer and her husband’s inability to see crumbs on the kitchen counter on Instagram @debbiefeit or at debbiefeit.com.

Ex-Ballerina by Trish Hopkinson

Ex-Ballerina

You bring home pointe shoes
from the studio’s lost-and-found.
They were in there for weeks, you say.
They are rigid, barely broken in,
as you try to fold one in half.
The satin ribbons caress
your wrists. Do they fit? I ask.
I don’t know, you reply, taunting
the wooden toe with your fingertips
and turning it over in your hands.
They are small, like your feet,
still fitting the size-four Converse,
filthy with wear from eighth grade.
You eye the slight imperfections,
each rehearsal blemish. You bend
at the waist and the shoe slips
around your foot. No longer
a ballerina, you will call me years later
to say how you always compared yourself
to dancers with perfect form
—the shape and bend of their feet,
born for ballet. You tell
me, Now I know why I’m
always afraid I’m not enough.

*

Trish Hopkinson is a poet and advocate for the literary arts. You can find her online at SelfishPoet.com and in western Colorado where she runs the regional poetry group Rock Canyon Poets and is a board member of the International Women’s Writing Guild. Her poetry has been published in Sugar House Review, TAB: The Journal of Poetry & Poetics, and The Penn Review; and her most recent book A Godless Ascends is forthcoming from Lithic Press in March 2024. Hopkinson happily answers to labels such as atheist, feminist, and empty nester; and enjoys traveling, live music, and craft beer.

ONE ART’s Top 25 Most-Read Poets of 2023

~ ONE ART’s Top 25 Most-Read Poets of 2023 ~

1. Abby E. Murray
2. Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer
3. Betsy Mars
4. Donna Hilbert
5. Linda Laderman
6. Alison Luterman
7. Julie Weiss
8. Robbi Nester
9. Roseanne Freed
10. Karen Paul Holmes
11. Heather Swan
12. Timothy Green
13. James Diaz
14. Jane Edna Mohler
15. John Amen
16. Barbara Crooker
17. Jim Daniels
18. Susan Vespoli
19. Sean Kelbley
20. Susan Zimmerman
21. Kip Knott
22. Jennifer Garfield
23. Margaret Dornaus
24. Paula J. Lambert
25. Gail Thomas

Rummage Sale by Robin Wright

Rummage Sale

My uncle died three days
before his 92nd birthday.
Now, we sort through belongings,
dismantling his life, offer gems
to the next people maneuvering
their way through the years.

I hurry to my parents’ house,
set up tables, hang clothes
on racks, price tools
that belonged to my uncle.

Geese honk and fly south,
synchronized, as if taught
this special feat to amaze
those of us here below.

I’m about to hang my uncle’s red shirt
as a lone goose flies overhead.
It’s more vocal, flies closer
than the others. I glance at the shirt
in my hands, my uncle’s favorite.

*

Robin Wright lives in Southern Indiana. Her work has appeared in As it Ought to Be, The Beatnik Cowboy, Loch Raven Review, ONE ART, Spank the Carp, The New Verse News, Rat’s Ass Review, Fevers of the Mind, and others. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and her first chapbook, Ready or Not, was published by Finishing Line Press in 2020.

The Sound of Sought Release by Joan Leotta

The Sound of Sought Release

My friend writes of
sitting at her mother’s side
listening to the persistent
rattle in her mom’s breath.
I learned that sound,
when I kept watch
over my grandmother’s
final earthly days.

Rasping like wind
caught in a jar
pushing on the
loose top that
blocks its exit
from life on this earth,
the soul knocks, rattles
at body’s barriers,
yearning for release
in the last of its
appointed days.

Louder, then softer,
those last breaths,
resound until at last,
reflecting reluctant to leave
body’s fragile jar,
for the sake of
those remaining
until at last, a rasping gasp—
soul’s struggle is resolved
and we who remain
fill the aural void with
the sound of falling tears.

*

Joan Leotta plays with words on page and stage. She performs tales of food, family, strong women. Internationally published as an essayist, poet, short story writer, and novelist, she’s a 2021 and 2022 Pushcart nominee, Best of the Net 2022 nominee, and 2022 runner-up in Robert Frost Competition. Her essays, poems, and fiction appear in Ekphrastic Review, Verse Visual, Verse Virtual, anti-heroin chic, Gargoyle, Active Muse, Silver Birch, Yellow Mama, Mystery Tribune, Ovunquesiamo, MacQueen’s Quinterly and others. Her poetry chapbooks are Languid Lusciousness with Lemon and Feathers on Stone.

Memento Mori by Susan Zimmerman

Memento Mori

No need for a skull on my desk.

All I see will survive me,
be handed on, arrive at last
in the Goodwill jumble,
handled or worn or read by strangers.
All things escape as if leaving me

when I am the one leaving.
Some things seem close in time
but far in distance. I cull my life.
Sheets of paper, so light, multiply,

grow heavy. If I try
to remember it all, I’ll go mad.
When rings melt down for gold—

Let go, let go, they sing
in their melting.

*

Susan Zimmerman’s chapbook, Nothing is Lost, was published by Caitlin Press in 1980. Her poems have more recently appeared or are forthcoming in literary journals such as Prairie Fire, Gyroscope Review, The Maynard, and SWWIM Every Day. A poem of hers is also included in the new anthology The Path to Kindness: Poems of Connection and Joy, edited by James Crews.

Two Poems by Tim Moder

Driving Home Across The Mackinac Bridge, Tired, Early Morning June 12, 2012
(after seeing Radiohead and Caribou in Chicago and Detroit)
I can’t dream when I’m not amazed. Hypnotic signals stretch the
skies feeling for a tower. Helpless in the driver seat I don’t sleep.
Today I thought I saw a bird’s nest in the trees, hanging, made
of grasses, threaded twigs and leaves. It turned out to be a giant
spider web that mulched abandoned missives collected by the wind.
It waited, gigantic, a hairy catcher’s mitt, for unaware ideas to arrive.
I can always be amazed while driving. I can hear them in the back
sleeping. Friends, and friends of friends, and family. When we were
kids, we dreamed of being out of control, leaving when we heard the
call, sworn to the moon as secret celebrants. I wait to hear the night.
I suppose the light of the moon is just reflection. I see it in the sky,
and in front of me on the mirror of two great lakes. I can’t tell
which isn’t real. I wait with the wind to liberate pinned places from
the names we printed in bold letters on unfolded wrinkled maps.
*
Low Gas Salton Sea, October 3, 2018
(on the way to Phoenix to see The Mystic Valley Band and Phoebe Bridgers)
You are playing Hot Fuss on the stereo.
The needle moves idly across the GPS.
I say “I’ll get the next gas.”
We have a quarter tank.
From the back seat I could see
boarded up/pulled up/dug up stations,
each with a listing on the internet.
Unplugged mid-day warning signs.
Leisure moved on. Commerce moved on.
I could see an empty cigarette machine
dials and grips play it like foosball.
An empty yard with an Astro-turf veranda,
bumpy with iridescent happiness.
An empty bucket of rain water
dripping with Osprey feathers.
I’ve been reading the diary of a Buddhist
Monk, written while visiting a Shinto shrine.
In this pure land are many mansions,
most of them abandoned.
Sand is wind-embraced along the naked highway.
I don’t mind being a passenger today
as the car comes to an inevitable rolling
stop near Desert Center
I say “I’ll get the next gas.”
*
Tim Moder is a poet living in northern Wisconsin. His poems have appeared in Native Skin, River Mouth Review, Free State Review, Coachella Review, and others. He is the author of the chapbooks All true Heavens (Alien Buddha Press 2022) and American Parade Routes (Seven Kitchens 2023) He is a member of The Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa.

In the Margin by Jennifer L. Abod

In the Margin

My purpose lost, I wander
into the living room.
One dusty bookcase
catches my eye.

I sit on the wood floor,
choose a fat book,
thumb pages, until
I reach a yellow stickie.

In the margins, in pencil,
Angela’s clear
handwritten notes.
here I find her,
hear her voice.

*

Jennifer L. Abod, PhD. Her poems appear in Sinister Wisdom, One Art Journal, The Metro Washington Weekly, Silver Birch Press, Wild Crone Wisdom, Artemis Journal, and forthcoming in Spillway Magazine. Dr. Abod is a jazz singer, award-winning documentary filmmaker, and radio broadcaster. She is a former assistant professor of Communications and Women’s Studies. www.jenniferabod.com

Farrier’s Work by Conor Gearin

Farrier’s Work
After Gerard Manley Hopkins

I have never held the hammer and tongs,
smacked sparks from orange iron,
in fact it turns out I’m anemic,
not even enough iron in my blood—

so why am I thinking again of Felix Randal
the farrier, battering his horseshoes,
a blacksmith I heard of from another poet
who also couldn’t stop thinking about blacksmiths—

why do I keep returning to this place
where I explain my work to myself:
furnace-glow in the dark, the silence
of rhythm, turning over and over the red sickle

shaping the perfect question mark

*

Conor Gearin is a writer from St. Louis living in Omaha. He’s the managing producer of BirdNote Daily, a daily radio program and podcast. His work has appeared in The Atlantic online, Chariton Review, New Scientist, Mochila Review, MIT Technology Review, and Foliate Oak Literary Magazine.

The Flowers by Michael Hettich

The Flowers

That first year in the tropics, we’d swim out farther
than we dared—though we did it—until we reached the sandbar
almost out of sight of land, where the gently-lapping water
was so shallow we could sit down and let its gentle rocking
soothe us until we were drowsy—not tired
exactly but half-dreaming, gazing at the vastly deeper
water beyond us and the darker currents running there.

We’d wade along that sandy ridge watching minnows scatter
and the bigger fish flash like flint and disappear.
Pelicans, anhinga and black skimmers let us come close—
somehow our human threat was almost vanished there.

We’d moved from the gray north; our bones still ached with cold.

That ocean smelled like flowers whose names we hadn’t learned yet,
and it was warm enough for us to take our suits off
and sing like little children, and talk like children back and forth,
not baby-talk but a kind of innocence—

then we’d push off to swim in, across the calm but teeming water
back to the city with its dancing and its rage
and its many kinds of flowers whose names we also didn’t know,
though we were determined to learn them.

*

Michael Hettich’s most recent book of poetry, The Halo of Bees: New and Selected Poems, 1990-2022 was published in May 2023 by Press 53. His poetry, essays, and reviews have appeared widely in many journals and anthologies, and he has published more than a dozen books of poetry across four decades. His honors include several Individual Artist Fellowships from the Florida Division of Cultural Affairs, The Tampa Review Prize in Poetry, the David Martinson/Meadowhawk Prize, a Florida Book Award, the Lena M. Shull Book Award from the North Carolina Poetry Society, and the inaugural Hudson-Fowler Prize from Slant magazine at the University of Central Arkansas. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Miami and taught for many years at Miami Dade College where he was awarded an Endowed Teaching Chair. His website is michaelhettich.com.

Three Poems by Betsy Mars

Hawaiian Sunset

Before the house was turned over to renters,
still strangers, before the renovations,
before the turning over of the key
to the bank – before the trustee took pity
on my daughter and me, and left us
some privacy to say goodbye,
we spent a week with what was left:
a bed, two plates, two knives, two –
you get the idea. In the evenings
we sat in folding chairs and watched
the sun go down over the sea
where my mother’s ashes once eddied.

We said goodbye to the blood-stained carpet,
the puckering paint, the rusting window frames,
to the familiar view. Farewell to the presence
of the man we loved, moved to assisted living.
We even said goodbye to the flying cockroaches
surely skulking nearby, to the flip flop shoes
that we relied on to keep them at bay.
In the distance the volcano loomed, teasing
with inactivity. I learned that week how to let go.

The last morning they came for the bed,
the dresser, all that remained that could be of use,
and we drove away with our memories
packed, boarded the plane. I can’t say
we never looked back.

*

Inside my Mother’s Mind

Inside my mother’s mind there were rooms
her mother had decorated like a carnival
of doom, mirrors etched with venom.

The body that housed her mind was a place
her father had built from conditional love and guilt—
any flaws— imperfect nose, a mole
subject to surgical correction.
Her body ever on display,
staged and scented with perfection.

When my mother spoke there was a guarded space
inside her eyes; sometimes, when I was graced,
she let me see what cowered behind them.

*

Hospital Rest

My father’s breath rasps and bangs.
Wheeled beds bump down the corridor,
code blue over the intercom,
the ins and outs, button-pushing, chart-updating.
Pain on a scale of one through ten?

There is no rest for those of us undrugged.
Caffeine courses through veins in the shift’s eleventh hour,
the pulse so loud at times I can almost hear it
from the sofa bed where my head sorts its way
through the maze of sound, divining urgent from innocent.

The nurse administers morphine—
the word triggers an inner alarm:
images of death throes and agony, then
my father’s unnatural quiet, my stifled sobs.
Instead he settles, breath calmed.

The nurse returns, checks his pulse, turns him on his side.
He faces away from me toward the door.
The morning starts to creep through the dust-free blinds,
thick glass. There is no rush of traffic, no chirp of birds.

*

Betsy Mars is a prize-winning poet, photographer, and assistant editor at Gyroscope Review. Her poetry has been published in numerous journals and anthologies. Recent poems can be found in Minyan, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Sheila-Na-Gig, and Autumn Sky Poetry Daily. Her photos have appeared online and in print, including one which served as the Rattle Ekphrastic Challenge prompt in 2019. She has two books, Alinea, and her most recent, co-written with Alan Walowitz, In the Muddle of the Night. In addition, she also frequently collaborates with San Diego artist Judith Christensen, most recently on an installation entitled “Mapping Our Future Selves.”

Four Poems by Luke Johnson

Memory

of my dad
on the deck

with a blunt
& bottle of rum.

watch him
bop his

skinny hips
to Patsy Cline

then smile
when he sees

me staring
from my

bedroom window,
a loon

in the foreground
lifting.

*

Memory

of my nana
holding

a single pearl
in lavender light,

then spinning
it over and over,

as if somewhere
inside it

a whisper
is trapped,

the voice
of her stillborn son.

*

Memory

when my
sister was a pig

and the next
a snake,

and no matter
what the pastor

prayed,
would switch

each week
to a new animalia,

and sneak
out into the dark.

*

Memory

of dad
threshing brush
with a sickle

and the first
spark first snarl,

when smoke
would rise
like twisting

columns
from tinder

and carry his
baritone,
each dumb joke,

over
neighboring oaks

and once,
after his
brother died

of heart disease,
when both of us

wandered
acres deep
for chantarelles

and the chill
in the air a bouquet

of scalpels,
the way he’d reach
then I’d reach back,

the rain
our ritual song.

*

Luke Johnson is the author of Quiver (Texas Review Press), a finalist for The Jake Adam York Prize, The Levis Award, The Vassar Miller Prize and the Brittingham. His second book A Slow Indwelling, a call and response with the poet Megan Merchant, is forthcoming from Harbor Editions Fall 2024. You can find more of his work at Kenyon Review, Prairie Schooner, Narrative Magazine, Poetry Northwest and elsewhere. Connect on Twitter at @Lukesrant or through email: writerswharfmb@gmail.com

Two Poems by Homa Mojadidi

Political Prisoner

My grandfather made
tasbih beads from the insides
of bread he was fed

while being held
at an undisclosed
prison in Kabul—

on his last days on earth
he chose to feed
not his body but his soul

I wish I could have seen him
praying on the bare moldy floor
the walls smeared with blood

dignified and self-composed
while his enemies plotted
how and when to kill him

and make his body disappear
so that his loved ones
would never find him—

*

Breath

The breath
a bridge—between
the tangible and the abstract

connecting the elusive strands
of memory

gluing thoughts to place
scents to sounds
the face of a loved one

calling to us
across the years
holding their outstretched hand

Time expanding—
and contracting
with every breath

We breathe—not to live
but to remember

*

Homa Mojadidi is an Afghan American poet and translator. Her translation of a Baidel ghazal appeared in the November 14 issue of the Asymptote blog. In her own poetry, Homa explores the themes of loss, exile, memory, and mysticism. She is fluent in English, Farsi, and Urdu. Homa has an M.A. in English Literature from the University of North Florida and is pursuing an M.F.A. in Creative Writing with a concentration in poetry from George Mason University. She has taught English Composition and Literature classes at the University of Florida where she was pursuing her Ph.D. in Postcolonial Literature and currently teaches English Composition at George Mason University.

Glassblowing Class by Julia Caroline Knowlton

Glassblowing Class

We pick our colors: I choose “gems.”
Staring at the furnace blaze
beyond white hot, beyond any word,
I think of my body after my death.

I drive the thought away.
It is my turn to blow air into
an ash-colored blob of viscous glass.
We are all middle-aged,

tired, on a cloudy afternoon.
We stand in a half circle. Pushing
every bit of air out of my lungs,
I push the death thought away.

At the end of the steel blowpipe
my fiery lump opens into secrets
of ruby and emerald, sapphire and amethyst,
a pure sphere blooming like a wish.

*

Julia Caroline Knowlton teaches French and creative writing at Agnes Scott College in Atlanta. Recognition for her poetry includes an Academy of American Poets College Prize and a 2018 GA Author of the Year award. She is the author of six books, including her 2023 chapbook Life of the Mind (Kelsay Books).

Mourning Doves by Donna Hilbert

Mourning Doves

Because the potted plant
on the back porch needs water,
I come nose to beak
with a brooding dove,
too late to stop the water
pouring from my pitcher.
I flood the nest.

Her mate watches from powerlines.
She moves to a nearby ledge,
leaving the egg alone in the sodden pot.

Throughout the day, I go outside
and see the doves maintaining vigil.

By nightfall, the pair is gone.
I peer into the pot.
Nothing remains of nest or feather.
Not a trace of shell.

*

Donna Hilbert’s latest book is Threnody, from Moon Tide Press. Earlier books include Gravity: New & Selected Poems, Tebot Bach, 2018. She is a monthly contributing writer to the on-line journal Verse-Virtual. Work has appeared in The Los Angeles Times, Braided Way, Chiron Review, Sheila-Na-Gig, Rattle, Zocalo Public Square, ONE ART, and numerous anthologies. Poems have been featured on The Writer’s Almanac and on Lyric Life. She writes and leads private workshops in Southern California, where she makes her home, and during residencies at Write On Door County. Learn more at donnahilbert.com

Hope Is the Thing in Emails by Marissa Glover

Hope Is the Thing in Emails

I got an email the other day
with the subject line
“Bible Flower Heals Hemorrhoids.”

Don’t worry—I didn’t open it.

I checked to see the sender,
assumed it was my mother,
but it was spam (of course,
it was, you knew that).

But it got me thinking.

About hemorrhoids, sure,
but about Bible flowers too.
And healing. Namely healing.

So, while it’s true I didn’t open it—
I couldn’t bring myself to delete it either.

*

Marissa Glover lives in Florida, where she’s busy dodging storms and swatting bugs. Her poetry collection Let Go of the Hands You Hold was released by Mercer University Press in 2021. Box Office Gospel was published by Mercer in 2023. Follow her on Twitter at _MarissaGlover_.

Your Name by Jennifer Mills Kerr

Your Name

Heavy on my tongue,
hard candy that doesn’t
melt or sweeten,
the taste of old pennies
in spring water.

Once I shared it with others–
and you sparkled, floating, dust
motes in light.

Many women miscarry,
my doctor says.
Within my silence
a tiny black coffin

Imagining your face–
at one, at ten, at thirteen–
anchors me–
then your features fade,
sand beneath salt waves

Shifting, half seen–
a ghost I create–
to give birth
to you again
and again

*

Jennifer Mills Kerr is the founder & lead teacher of A World in a Line, an organization that inspires poets from around the world through virtual workshops. Lit-amorous, she’s on a perpetual quest for the next amazing poem to read, savor, and share. Connect with her at JenniferMillsKerr.com

Two Poems by Iris Cai

Bakersfield, CA

The entire drive, heavy rain gifts lightning
as a hairline fissure in the horizon.

Sixteen years ago, you shielded
your eyes with a baseball cap—crumpled
in the backseat, away from these roads. You thought
your smallness could hide you from the night.
You had other kinds of armor then.

They gave you a lucky bracelet for your first month,
wiry gold and tooth-marked. Swept into pieces
during an argument. For years, each time
you caught a glint in sidewalk rivulets, you imagined
another splintering.

Half-empty suitcases jangle with each turn
of the wheel. You never know exactly
how much to bring—once, your suitcase spilled its seams.
You packed so many clothes, it felt like
you were packing your life away.

Outside, the dark desert grass is cowless, untouched.
Every tree bent in wretched agony, reaching for
home. You suddenly knew your mother when she stood
in the doorway watching you leave. The clouds
can rain and rain but never touch the bleeding fields.
You pull into a gas station and weep.

Eventually, you gather your keys, unspooling
inside city lights, in the embrace
of a distant mountain. You are headed towards
the sun, a milepost somewhere along the road.

Somehow the sky is just big enough to hold the plains.
Know this, and drive.

*

Painted Bodies We Give Up

Single-swiped lottery tickets and late night
walks to the convenience store. America
striped with lakes and rolling hills, city upon
steel city. My father and I, we are sharp
and foreign as lightning rods, seeking out
Illinois’s tiny Chinatown despite driving
two thousand miles for a change of scenery. Here
are familiar voices. Every breath is a scattering
for a bird plucked dry. My skin is tough
now, seared by relentless California sun
and slurs at beer-stained street corners.
I stopped being angry years ago.
We climb Sears Tower and my father points
to cars on the highway, headlights a constellation
beneath us. In the sky, cowherd and weaver girl
join hands. I don’t tell him all I see is red
candy, a spangled prom dress. I wonder if
likening folklore to consumerism means
I have finally assimilated. I am mistaken:
the next day we are given wrong directions
at the mall. We wander through a gift shop
of patriotic paraphernalia. This handheld flag
for five dollars, this case of body paint. It will last
two hours in the sun, maybe three.

*

Iris Cai is a junior from the SF Bay Area. She is a 2024 YoungArts Award Winner with Distinction. Her poetry has also been recognized by the Poetry Society of America and the Alliance for Young Artists & Writers, and published in or forthcoming from On the Seawall, Neologism Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. An alumna of the Iowa Young Writers’ Studio, she is co-editor-in-chief of Eucalyptus Lit. When she’s not writing, Iris plays piano and takes too many pictures of her cat.

A moment in Maui by LeeAnn Pickrell

A moment in Maui

Setting out at 5 a.m. for the sea turtles’
morning march into the water at Kalepolepo Park.
The night is as inky dark as the water.
A man says he counted twenty-eight turtles
two days ago. Today I see only
one turtle pop its head above the water
before descending again. But the moon is full,
reflecting the sun and the day to come.
For almost a week, I’ve tried to silence
the world’s cruelty, really our cruelty,
our chaos, our wars, our hearts closed
to others’ suffering. Later, volunteers
will put up flags to keep us twenty feet
from the turtles that return to nap at low tide.
Everything needs to be protected from us.
The clouds slowly pinken as I wade into the ocean,
and the moon falls into my opened palms.

*

LeeAnn Pickrell is a poet, freelance editor, and managing editor of Jung Journal: Culture & Psyche. Her work has appeared in a variety of online and print journals, including ONE ART, Loud Coffee Press, Atlanta Review, and MacQueen’s Quinterly. She has a book forthcoming from Unsolicited Press. She lives in Richmond, California, with her partner and two fabulous cats.

Doubt by Bill Garvey

Doubt

The movie triggers the memory –
Father Richard Lavigne inspecting us
while we sat obediently in pews,
touching our fingertips,
praying for that certain boy.

On his deathbed he confessed
to pushing that boy into the river –
fifty years later.

I avoided the river because
I was never one of his special boys.

I remember when my dad
found me in the woods
building a fort with my friends.
I was supposed to be at altar boy practice.

I told him, He wants me to buy a manicure kit.
I wish I could say he
looked very concerned. Truth is,
he gave me the silent treatment all the way home.

When Saturday came around again,
I was ready for practice. Dad said,
You’re not going. No explanation given.
But I’ve never doubted why.

*

Bill Garvey’s poetry has been or will be in Rattle, Cimarron Review, ONE ART, The New Quarterly, New Verse News, Connecticut River Review and several others. His most recent book of poetry, The basement on Biella, was published by DarkWinter Press in Fall 2023. He and his wife live in Toronto and Nova Scotia for equal parts of the year.

Baby Bird by Jessica Natasha Lawrence

Baby Bird

There comes a time when hunger
surpasses the ability to devour,
when the ache confines you to the floor,
and you see that desperation
is a germaphobe
begging you to spit in her mouth.
I mean that hope is a flaky cereal
I’m asking you to chew for me,
I am asking you to cup me in your hands
and honor my newborn feathers,
I am saying that I will only survive
if you understand what I am.

*

Jessica Natasha Lawrence writes about chronic illness, realistic hope, and the beauty and trials of ordinary life. Her work has appeared in The Clayjar Review, Tiny Wren Lit, Write or Die Magazine, 50-Word Stories, and To Write Love on Her Arms. She also runs a Substack called Dust and Birdsong.

Restraint by Lake Angela

Restraint

Opaque rooms fall in line behind four sets of metal doors
and twice the number of locks and keys. From the stale gray
cloud appears the imposing metal chair with weighted leather
straps for head, neck, wrists, waist, ankles, and two solitary feet.

The ground is graced with scuffs from shoes with laces removed,
scarlet nail polish scabs left by strangled bare toes thrashing
after the grass they will never again feel, no trace of the feet
swaddled in sticky-soled socks all hospitals issue except
the rancid scent of fear steeped in breathless acrylic sweat.

The silence is a grey smoke; the camera obscures your face.
In the room with padded, grey walls, any restraint is for your
safety. Still it seems that punishment is devoid of movement,
is, in fact, the lack thereof—the promise of perpetual stillness.

*

Lake Angela creates at the confluence of poetry and the language of dance movement. She holds a PhD in the intersemiotic translation of Austrian Expressionist poetry into dance and has her MFA in poetry. She is a medieval mystic, beguine, and nonhuman creature. Her books include Organblooms and Words for the Dead (FutureCycle Press), and Scivias Choreomaniae is forthcoming from Spuyten Duyvil. Recent work appears in The Bitter Oleander, Seneca Review, filling Station, Poetry Salzburg Review, Passages North, Lotus-eater Magazine, and others. Lake is poetry editor for Punt Volat and neurodivergence advocacy writer for Brainz Magazine. As director of the poetry-dance group Companyia Lake Angela, she presents the value of schizophrenia spectrum creativity. She welcomes visitors at www.lakeangeladance.com.

Parole Denied by Ace Boggess

Parole Denied

The victim spoke unforgiving words.
Now members of the Board won’t hear your pleas
or see redemption when the noise of loss re-grieves.
They tell you no, condemning you again
for actions seven years ago in drugged numb

of absent self-control. You should be home,
smoking a thin cigarette, telling your friends
your heart has filled with love.
Now you squeeze hurt into a stone.
Pity the head that rests on it—jagged, hard.

*

Ace Boggess is author of six books of poetry, including Escape Envy (Brick Road Poetry Press, 2021), I Have Lost the Art of Dreaming It So, and The Prisoners. His writing has appeared in Michigan Quarterly Review, Notre Dame Review, Harvard Review, Mid-American Review, and other journals. An ex-con, he lives in Charleston, West Virginia, where he writes and tries to stay out of trouble.

Two Poems by Tony Gloeggler

REMINDERS

I didn’t guess the 12 year old
girl in the novel I’m reading
would get chronic kidney disease,
didn’t expect it would remind me
too often of the endless medical
appointments, bad news turning
worse, strict diet, limited liquid
intake, weighing like penance,
the drudgery of dialysis, three days
a week for three and a half hours
a session, the light headedness,
cramping. At least my brother
offered me a kidney, tested
as a perfect match. We went
into the hospital that summer,
his teacher-wife taking care
of their 2 young kids. My father,
already dead, didn’t have to track
down my wayward mother, fail
to convince her to be a donor.
When the girl’s condition
plummeted, they ended up
using a recently car-wrecked
stranger for the transplant.
The girl contracted pneumonia
a day after, died while I sat
stunned in my rocking chair,
the reading lamp burning,
too shaken to try and sleep.

*

SPECIAL NEEDS

One of my facebook friends
has put up one of those post
and paste things about special
needs kids, that they’re not
weird or odd and just want
to be accepted. He’s asking
me to share the statement
and I’m thinking he never
hung out with Jesse or Larry.
One’s autistic and I spend
a weekend a month with him
in Vermont. The other’s down
syndrome, my favorite guy
at the residence since day one.
They both love ripping things.
One goes to school wearing
a sweater, winter coat, comes
home on the school bus, his balls
semi-secure in a knotted dish rag,
a bath towel half draped over
his shoulders, shoes thrown
out the window. The other hums
happily in his room, shreds books,
cooking magazines. One pirouettes
like a chunky ballerina every half
block or so, refuses to ever wear
socks, punches himself under
his left eye when he’s pissed off.
This one time actually missing
his spot and hitting himself
right in the eye while I couldn’t
stop laughing at the shock
his face showed. The other
tosses rocks in lakes, little leaps
of joy when the stone plops
into the water. Both repeat
phrases endlessly. One bites
his arm when frustrated. Both
love pizza and French fries.
Neither really gives a fuck
what anyone thinks about them
as long as they’re treated well
by the people around them,
just don’t get in the way
of their routines. One barely
acknowledges the existence
of strangers. One loves hugs,
snuggling, while I need to ask
the other for hello, goodbye
squeezes. He’ll repeat sque-ee-eze,
lightly hold me for less than ten
seconds. Both laugh boundlessly.
Not exactly sure why, but I always
feel good around these two, find it
fascinating and fun, like my day’s
instantly injected with a dose
of happiness, glad to help them
do any of the things they love.

*

Tony Gloeggler is a life-long resident of NYC and managed group homes for the mentally challenged for over 40 years. His work has appeared in Rattle, New Ohio Review, Vox Populi, Gargoyle. His most recent book, What Kind Of Man with NYQ Books, was a finalist for the 2021 Paterson Poetry Prize and long listed for Jacar Press’ Julie Suk Award.

Resemblance by Donna Vorreyer

Resemblance

I never thought I looked like anyone
in my family, my hair red, my skin
dotted with freckles, so different from
my brown-haired parents, one brother’s
frame crowned with that same dark,
the other brother with features that
copied my grandfather’s face.

The first person who ever spoke of
a resemblance was the ambulance
attendant who brought my mother
home from hospice to die. You favor her,
she smiled, as she helped me adjust
the oxygen tubes. Then, at the wake,
each friend and neighbor echoed the same.

In the old photograph of the two of us,
we wear matching dresses and the same
conspiratorial smirk, and I see that I have
always carried her in me. Now that she is
gone, the mirror is where I find her.
Sometimes, I catch a glimpse of
my own face or hands and say hello.

*

Donna Vorreyer is the author of To Everything There Is (2020), Every Love Story is an Apocalypse Story (2016) and A House of Many Windows (2013), all from Sundress Publications. Her poetry, fiction, and essay work have appeared in Ploughshares, Cherry Tree, Poet Lore, Salamander, Harpur Palate, Booth, and many others. She lives and creates in the Chicago area and hosts the monthly online reading series A Hundred Pitchers of Honey.

Three Poems by Kaothar Kadir

Panadol Extra As An Heirloom

My mother used to swallow the two white
pills with a wince.
Now it dissolves like chalk onto her spotted tongue.
Jaws churning like the innards of a great ship.
A casual pet to the cat beneath the driver’s seat. What comes after,
is a yawn for water. Warm with a sting of steel,
of capped humidity, of sun-baked plastic.
The bottle is half-empty

sunk into the cup-holder where it rubs shoulders
with discarded jewelry.
We talk about the weather and
bad-mouth extended families.
A tiny yielding to the pain. An inch added to the mile of
‘you win this round today.’

Well, tomorrow comes.
And it’s the getting home after the long hot drive that does it.
Now its less about the pain
and more about the bargain.
Now its less about the headache,
and more about my brain stewing in its own fluid.
Now its genetic. An iron moistness haunts my taste-buds.
Now its my daughter licking the blackboard
and
the heat
melting the gold off my wristwatch.

*

A Mentos in Coke

The days line up like a set of dentist-fixed
ivory teeth. They are made of me and from me
in equal capacities. I wake up and its always morning.
I always want my bowl of pap, sugared lightly. The
pigeons are always cooing. I always wait for some
kind of chaos to barge in.

I am swimming through a pit of tar. The sky is black and
weeping above me. I am in my mind mind mind.
I am bubbling like a Mentos in coke. I am
my window, closing my blinds,
ashamed to see.

My hands are always empty.

I’d take up knitting, but then tomorrow, I’d have to knit. And
I’d murder a friend but then I’d have to deal with the body,
the thought, guilty or if I’m laughing it off.
And it would fit with a click. It is
everything I already do
and already did.

Everything has a red line, everything, a red smile.
I could die, but who knows
what awaits. More numbness,
more stillness, more undoing,
more days.

*

Lonely as a Fever

White-winged and feverish.
You always swooped in before I came
crashing. But I always liked teeth
bashed in. Smeared across the pavement
like ash across a forehead.

It’s a following. Rancid and green and
the ceiling goes further away the more you
stare at it. I tried to change the light-bulb once
and my toes pirouetted on their own accord. My
hands on the knob, before I could stop myself

and in came the outside air like a punch
to the face. So fresh, it ate my rot. So plenty,
it entered through the pores of my skin.
I see your shadow. Latching onto my marrow.
Black-winged. Frantic.

Swooping in before I come crashing. But I
always found the bottom and its skeletons inviting.
An open door. I hope it locks. And the outside
is kept in.

*

Kaothar Kadir is a twenty-one year old poet living in Nigeria. She began writing poetry at the age of seven. She was shortlisted in the Nigerian Students Poetry Prize in 2022. She’s currently in her final year of pursuing a bachelor’s degree in History and International Studies in the University of Ilorin. And when she’s not bent over her laptop writing, she can be found reading (or rereading) a book, watching A24 movies or dancing to her self-curated Spotify playlists.

Instructions for the Morning After the Terrible Haircut by Gloria Heffernan

Instructions for the Morning After the Terrible Haircut

First, do not look in the mirror
until after you have had your coffee.
Everything looks better after coffee.
When it still does not look better,
do not drink a second cup of coffee.
It will not make your hair grow faster,
and it will make you jittery while wondering
if anyone would find it odd
if you showed up at work
wearing a bee-keeper’s hood.

Next, go to your jewelry box and take out
the largest pair of earrings you own—
the ones with peacock feathers and beads
to draw attention away from the terrible haircut.
Then dig out the tube of red lipstick
you bought last New Year’s Eve and swore
you would never wear again
because it made you look like a clown.
Nothing distracts from a terrible haircut
like a crimson neon sign across your face

Before heading out the door,
sit still for a little while
and listen to the morning news.
No, I mean really listen.
Then go back and wash your face.
Return to your usual
understated silver earrings.
Be thankful that this morning,
a terrible haircut
is your biggest problem.

*

Gloria Heffernan’s Exploring Poetry of Presence (Back Porch Productions) won the 2021 CNY Book Award for Nonfiction. She received the 2022 Naugatuck River Review Narrative Poetry Prize. Gloria is the author of the collections Peregrinatio: Poems for Antarctica (Kelsay Books), and What the Gratitude List Said to the Bucket List (New York Quarterly Books). Her forthcoming chapbook, Animal Grace, was selected for the Keystone Chapbook Series. Her work has appeared in over 100 publications including Poetry of Presence (vol. 2). She teaches poetry at Syracuse YMCA’s Downtown Writers Center and on Phillis Cole-Dai’s Substack platform, The Raft. To learn more, visit: www.gloriaheffernan.wordpress.com.

Anthropology 101 by Susana H. Case

Anthropology 101

Our professor, red-eyed, disheveled, blew her nose, announced to the class that her good friend—lover, I thought—charged with murdering his wife, and without an alibi, had just been found not guilty. The verdict, the professor was adamant, forgotten ethnographic text in hand, restored her confidence in criminal justice. Students nodded, closed their notebooks, looked up again when she admitted her certainty that he’d done it. Something roiling in him, she told us, whenever he talked about his marriage. I believed she was right: he probably did do it, femicide having such an intimate face. She told us it was a good thing a jury had erred on the side of innocence. Then she brushed her hair and applied red lipstick. We opened our books to the Ituri forest people, how these short-statured men climb more than 100 feet into the canopy to collect honey from the bees, the product they most prize.

*

Susana H. Case is the award-winning author of nine books of poetry, most recently, If This Isn’t Love, Broadstone Books, 2023 and co-editor with Margo Taft Stever of I Wanna Be Loved by You: Poems on Marilyn Monroe, Milk & Cake Press, 2022. The first of her five chapbooks, The Scottish Café, Slapering Hol Press, was re-released in an English-Polish version, Kawiarnia Szkocka by Opole University Press and is forthcoming as an English-Ukrainian edition. Case is currently a co-editor of Slapering Hol Press. susanahcase.com

Four Poems by Ann Kammerer

Blackbird

Whenever Dad left
Mom sang,
sometimes in the kitchen,
sometimes in the living room,
sometimes outside hanging clothes,
anywhere,
anytime,
only when
he was gone.

Me and Janie joined in,
her teaching us songs and rhythms,
teaching us how to sing in parts.

“You’re just like those kids
in ‘The Sound of Music,’” she said.
“And I’m like Julie Andrews.”

Clad in a frilled apron,
Mom conducted
with a wooden spoon.
She tapped the dinette table,
waiting for us
to stand up straight,
then held her arms
angled and high,
pointing from me to Janie,
telling us when
to come in.

“You then you.”
She whispered lyrics
that slid across our tongues,
strange, lilting, and messy,
making spit bubble
on Janie’s lips.

“Frer-a-shau-ka,
Frer-a-shau-ka,” she sang.
“Door-may-voo.
Door-may voo.”

We scampered in verse,
singing something about
“son-na-may-na TINA,”
Janie clapping her hands,
shouting “where’s Tina?”
looking around for the little girl
who jumped rope in the alley,
wanting to play.

“That’s a French song,” Mom said,
saying it was about church bells,
big pretty ones
that woke up little girls,
just like the bells
on the Catholic church
down the street,
the ones that rang Sundays
commanding us to
don eyelet dresses,
cover our hair with veils,
and clutch change purses
filled with dimes
to give to usher boys
passing baskets
at the end of mass.

“Go play now.”
Mom glanced at the clock
nearing 4 p.m.,
returning her makeshift wand
to the silverware drawer.
“Your Dad’ll be home soon.
He’ll want dinner.”

We dashed out the screen door
and into the backyard,
me still singing,
Janie looking for Tina
through the rusted
chain-link fence.

“Tina, Tina,” Janie cried.
“Son-na-may-na Tina.”

I bounced a red ball
then stopped,
seeing Mom through
the back window,
pouring an amber drink
as she absently sang.

“Pack up all my cares and woe,”
here I go,
winging low,
bye, bye, blackbird.”

Her voice floated then broke,
mixing with Janie’s.
Picking up a piece
of sidewalk chalk,
I redrew my picture
of sun, flowers, and trees
Dad had swept away.

*

Jaywalking

When Mike left
and didn’t come home all weekend,
I jaywalked across the highway
to a neighborhood
with wood-sided ranches
and chain-link fences
dividing the lawns.

Girls in flared jeans
and sheer paisley shirts
stepped out in platform shoes,
their long parted hair
washed with twilight.
Guys in vinyl jackets
idled in Novas or Cutlasses,
peeling from blacktop drives
as girls hopped in.

I lit a cigarette
and stood on a curb,
transfixed by the glow
of Tiffany lamps
and console TVs
through picture windows.
A few women saw me,
their lipsticked mouths
skewed tight,
waving for husbands
to rise from La-Z-Boys
and close the drapes.

I crossed back to the trailer park
stopping first at the party store
for a six-pack
and Marlboro Lights.
George, the owner,
looked over his glasses,
asking about my man,
saying a girl like me
shouldn’t be out alone.

“Did he leave you with that?”
He touched his papery cheek,
then pointed to my black eye.

“No, no.”
I pulled up my hood
and dug for bills.
“I got hit.
By the door, I mean.
Last night.
When he swung it open.”

George muttered and rang me up.
He broke a roll of quarters
on the register drawer.

“What door?” he said.
“Your man.
He’s useless.”

I cracked a Busch
in the parking lot,
stepping through shadows
to my single-wide.
The silhouette of
the next-door neighbor
floated behind yellowed curtains,
his window tossing light
on my dark trailer.

I caught the tail end
of “All in the Family,”
then changed the channel
to a TV Movie about a boxer
with an Italian name.
I drank and smoked,
watching him duck
and weave,
his face swollen,
getting knocked down
and getting back up,
the bell ringing
before the network cut
to a commercial break.

My cheek throbbed
so I closed my eyes,
holding a cool can
to the bruise.
I took cold medicine
to help me sleep,
setting an alarm for 8 a.m.,
just in time to call in sick
to my job.

Curling on the sofa,
I drifted,
soothed by the murmur of TV.
I thought of my mom
and wondered where she was,
if she was still with the man
who rubbed my leg
and said not to tell,
trying not to think
of how she left me
for booze and pills,
remembering instead
how she held me
when I was little,
stroking my hair,
saying to be good
and not to be bad,
saying maybe then
she could love me
like other mommies did
with their girls.

*

Burnouts

Mom didn’t look for a job
for a few months.
She said she was too busy
to pound the pavement,
that she needed time
to unpack,
to get used to a new place,
and to get Janie situated
mopping floors
and wiping down tables
at Wendy’s.

“It’s exhausting,” she said.
“For both me and her.”

She and my sister
had moved to Battle Creek
after leaving Dad,
renting an apartment
in old military housing
not far from where
she grew up.
Post and Kellogg
were a few miles north
and over a hill,
the smoke from the factories
leaving skinny plumes
that changed from
gray to pink to orange
at sunset.

Her friend’s daughter
and a few guys
had moved her things,
loading up a caravan
of rusted pickups and vans,
doing something, Mom said,
I would never do.

“Shelley,” she said.
“She’s like my daughter.
And I’m like the mom
she wished she could have.”

Mom never called me
but Janie did,
mostly to ask
about girls from high school.
We’d joke a bit
about Friday night dances,
how “burn-outs” and “jocks”
never mixed,
and how our friend Scotty
always wore a poncho
and passed out
from too much tequila,
his long blonde hair
a mess of knotted tinsel.

“Yeah. Scotty,” she said.
“Scotty.
Like yeah. Scotty.”

Janie said his name
over and over.
She giggled and whispered
the way she always did
when she didn’t want Mom
to hear.
She talked endlessly
about the burnout kids,
the ones who took her along
when they skipped class,
giving her cigarettes
and sips of beer,
sometimes a nose hit,
but not microdot,
never making fun
of her stiff crooked walk
or her slow speech
and semi-crossed eyes.
Scotty even called her pretty,
asking her to slow dance
to “Stairway to Heaven”
beneath the colored lights.

“Yeah. Scotty.” I’d say
We’d talk a bit more
before I asked about Mom,
if she had a job yet,
Janie saying she didn’t know.

“Maybe ask Shelley,” she said.
“She’d know.”
Janie went on then
about Cindy and Debbie
and Patty and Angie,
about girls
in gauzy shirts
and bell bottoms
that dragged along the ground.

“Yeah,” I said.
“I remember them.
They were fun.”

We talked about
their boyfriends, too,
the Marks and Gregs
and Steves and Dougs,
the guys in leather jackets
and headbands
and open-neck shirts,
beads dangling
on their hairless chests.

“Yeah, yeah,” she tittered,
me lighting a cigarette,
thinking about
my old boyfriend Tim,
the one who blasted Hendrix
and took me to cul-de-sacs,
saying life was just a joke
when his pupils swelled
from acid,
making me wish
I was with Dave,
a quiet guy in wire rims
who listened to
the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band,
gave me cut zinnias,
and liked laying in the grass
to look at clouds
while we passed a joint
between us.

*

But Beautiful

One stands,
one sits,
another close by,
catching the shade
of a half-dead tree.

“You’re beautiful,” the standing man says.
He claps his hands
and tips a greasy ball cap,
his face smeared
with Hershey’s chocolate.

“Be quiet,” the sitting man says.
“No one wants to hear you.”
Squaring his pork-pie hat,
he leans into his cane,
his tarnished cufflinks
illuminating the sleeves
of a pinstriped shirt.

“All you. Shut up.”
A woman peers
from sunspots,
her hair curled,
her face cracked porcelain.
“Let her decide.”
She lifts her hand,
a brittle wafer,
nearly toppling
as she slaps
the standing man’s rear.

“Thank you,” I say,
“but I don’t mind.”

“You will,” she says,
her voice a rasp,
her eyes wide,
as I squint
into the blaze.

*

Ann Kammerer lives in Oak Park, Illinois, having relocated from her home state of Michigan. Her work has appeared in The Thoughtful Dog, Open Arts Forum, The Ekphrastic Review, Fictive Dream, and anthologies by Crow Woods Publishing and Querencia Press. She has received top honors and made the short list in several writing contests. Her debut chapbook of narrative poetry was published in 2023 by Bottlecap Press, with a collection forthcoming in 2024 from Kelsay Books.

Today I Imagined Your Face In Shadow by Rachael Mayer

Today I Imagined Your Face In Shadow

Be with me in that place
where the sun’s rays shine so brightly on the tall grass
the earth is a child who feels understood

let the bed be made and unmade

imagine the world with me
imagine the world without me

some days I’m perched like a bird looking down at what we used to be

some days I’m so deeply rooted
the roots are frozen, impossible to pull from the earth
until spring
it’s just us rooted
in transactional weather

sometimes I’m intent on seeing the future,
I look to any body of water
to suggest
who we might become.

*

Rachael Mayer is a social worker, teacher, and poet who lives in Montclair, New Jersey. Her work has appeared in numerous publications including The Kenyon Review, The Hiram Poetry Review, The Chattahoochee Review, The Avatar Review, Mothers Always Write, Street Light Press, and Typishly.

After a long dark night of grief by Susan Vespoli

After a long dark night of grief

get out of bed. Step over the sleeping
dogs. Open all the shutters. Go outside
and look at the sky. Watch the fiery fried egg
rise from the horizon under gray puffball
clouds that suddenly turn pink, like an ocean
of cotton candy and you remember the young
woman at Tuesday’s Buddhist 12-Step meeting
who said something about a pink-cloud moment,
and you realize that this is a pink-cloud moment
as a ring of birds starts circling and circling
above the palm trees as if they are dancing.

*

Susan Vespoli is a poet from Phoenix, AZ. Her poems have appeared in ONE ART, Rattle, Anti-Heroin Chic, Gyroscope Review, and others. She is the author of Blame It on the Serpent (Finishing Line Press), Cactus As Bad Boy (Kelsay Books), and One of Them Was Mine (Kelsay Books). susanvespoli.com

ONE ART’s Top 10 Most-Read Poets of December 2023

~ ONE ART’s Top 10 Most-Read Poets of December 2023 ~

  1. Abby E. Murray – Three Poems
  2. Betsy Mars – Delivery
  3. Mick Cochrane – Dabbs Greer
  4. Roseanne Freed – My wet eyes stared into their lights
  5. James Diaz – Once More, Into The Light
  6. Linda Laderman – On Thanksgiving no one wants to hear poetry
  7. Dick Westheimer – CT Scan Assay
  8. Michelle Bitting – Poor Yorick
  9. Lynne Knight – Three Poems
  10. Karen Paul Holmes – Two Poems  

Grand Re-Openings by Ashley Steineger

Grand Re-Openings

Love is another kind of open,
a café that never closes.
The sign is flipped, the lights inside

are blinked-out stars, the only
employee is an old man
running a mop again and again

over the mess. The walls are
your muted heart who beats under
the café’s shut eyelid, the chairs

scattered like debris after
a windstorm, functional
but dizzied, glass rims stained

with that one shade of dated
red lipstick, coffee drips as
fevered brown tears down

smooth ceramic. It’s quiet now
but never for long. Have you seen
the handsome stranger, there

at the clouded window with
a peace flag of white lilies?
Have you seen how they hold

each flower’s lithe stem? Can you
hear their whisper begging
you, open the door…please try again.

*

Ashley Steineger is a holistic psychologist who believes poetry is the language of healing. Her poetry has appeared in The Night Heron Barks, Apricity Press, The Lumiere Review, and Palette Poetry, among others. She currently lives and writes out of Raleigh, NC, where she enjoys forest bathing, collecting tattoos, and untranslatable words.

Karaoke at the Artists’ Residency by Marjorie Maddox

Karaoke at the Artists’ Residency
Ok, not exactly like a story you dreamed then started forgetting
as soon as you stretched your mouth in a yawn and each word
tumbled into the stark bright of day’s dementia, but, never-
theless, somehow any sweet and clear half-note you ever
claimed in morning’s showers—yes, any—now trip
on the hot mist of memory, crack all ribs, and end up
far off-key and stranded in this place of friendly strangers
crooning their lungs out with mic and screen. Artists, photographers,
writers not in the outside world of tavern, but instead here in the donor-
funded upscale living room, where they (no shower background necessary)
throw back their heads and wail gloriously, not a glint or glimmer
of “Whose skin do I live in?” flashing in the chorus. And bravo,
kudos, and all prize nominations! What good is envy
when they belt out with such joy their favorite
“oldies” (separated from yours by twenty years) both so
unabashedly beautiful and exuberantly shattered with drunken
crescendos—each millennial apologizing for “advanced” age, while your real
tail-end-of-baby-boomer generation and wallflower membership politely goes
noticed but un-mentioned. And for this you are grateful: when you stumble
repeatedly—not from drink but from late-hour self-consciousness—
every one of them waves their arms, opens wide their throats
to bellow the lyrics boldly, graciously buoying your attempts
with camaraderie and the night’s call-and-response
of kindness—your own belated harmony
this off-kilter poem, all
you have to offer.
*
Professor of English at Lock Haven University, Marjorie Maddox has published 14 collections of poetry—including Transplant, Transport, Transubstantiation (Yellowglen Prize); Begin with a Question (Paraclete, International Book Award and Illumination Book Award Winner); and the Shanti Arts ekphrastic collaborations Heart Speaks, Is Spoken For (with photographer Karen Elias) and In the Museum of My Daughter’s Mind. In addition, she has published the short story collection What She Was Saying (Fomite) and 4 children’s and YA books—including Inside Out: Poems on Writing and Reading Poems with Insider Exercises (Finalist International Book Awards), A Crossing of Zebras: Animal Packs in Poetry; I’m Feeling Blue, Too! (a 2021 NCTE Notable Poetry Book), and Rules of the Game: Baseball Poems. She is co-editor of Common Wealth: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania and the forthcoming Keystone: Contemporary Poets on Pennsylvania (PSU Press) and is assistant editor of Presence. Please see www.marjoriemaddox.com

CT Scan Assay by Dick Westheimer

CT Scan Assay

          Load every rift with ore.
               —John Keats

First, there is a body
then its soft parts.
From above a voice
says breathe, now
hold. Now
let go. No good
god would speak
such a thing.
She would say nothing
to be seen here
as the machine turns
its sensor, detects
tissue invisible
unless a tumor,
a mass attached
to the barium-lined,
the X-ray lit.

Now is the time
to look into darkness,
examine oneself
for impurities and for how
much must be smelted
from every last moment,
from each line
from the deep rift left
between now and when
I end, no matter what
the person with the loupe
sees examining
the ore of me,
determines
the denominator
of my days
remaining.

*

Dick Westheimer lives in rural southwest Ohio. He is a Rattle Poetry Prize finalist. His poems have appeared or are upcoming in Whale Road Review, Tony Seed, Gyroscope Review, Minyan, Rattle, Stone Poetry Quarterly, Pine Mountain Sand and Gravel, and Cutthroat. His chapbook, A Sword in Both Hands, Poems Responding to Russia’s War on Ukraine, is published by SheilaNaGig. More at www.dickwestheimer.com

Questions for the New Year by Michael S. Glaser

Questions for the New Year

How do I recognize
the boundaries I have created
hoping they will keep me safe?

How do I leave
the wilderness
of my shoulds?

*

Michael S. Glaser is a Professor Emeritus at St. Mary’s College of Maryland and served as Poet Laureate of Maryland from 2004 – 2009. The recipient of several awards for his teaching, his service to poetry and for his poetry, he has published several prize winning collections of his own poetry, most recently The Threshold of Light (Bright Hills Press, 2019) and Elemental Things, (The Poetry Box, 2022) . He has also edited three anthologies and co-edited The Collected Poems of Lucille Clifton (BOA 2012). (more at michaelsglaser.com )

Hiking Cadillac Mountain at Sunrise by Carol Berg

Hiking Cadillac Mountain at Sunrise
                For Rob Orrison

So much of it I don’t remember
except of course that you were alive
then, groom on his honeymoon and all of us
hungover and was it a gift to the bride?
She stopping in mid-hike, needing to be
whispered to convincingly continue—
the rest of us bewildered that you
could find the blue marks up the trail
in the pre-dawn dark merely with flashlight
to guide us. But on the way back down
you kept getting us lost: the whole mountain
in a daze of dayness, the blue marks disappearing
like breath. So we all wandered among
the boulders for a tired time, all of us bleary,
all of us in some kind of shared nuptial bliss.

*

Carol Berg’s poems are forthcoming or in Gyroscope, Crab Creek Review (Poetry Finalist 2017), DMQ Review, Hospital Drive (Contest Runner-Up 2017), Sou’wester, Spillway, Redactions, Radar Poetry, and Up the Staircase Quarterly. Her chapbooks, Her Vena Amoris (Red Bird Chapbooks), and “Self-Portraits” in Ides (Silver Birch Press) are available. Her poems have been nominated for Pushcart Prizes and Best of the Net. She was winner of a scholarship to Poets on the Coast and a recipient of a Finalist Grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council.

Delivery by Betsy Mars

Delivery

In the night something changed, though I had never
delivered before and wondered how I would ever know
when labor came, but here it was, a dull pain in my back,
and I knew, played the music carefully chosen to guide me
through these hours, calm my fear of what was to come.

Van Morrison sang Take good care of your boy, and how I have tried
these thirty-plus years, to little or no avail.
You’re pointing a finger at me, but I have borne you as best I could,
and still I strive to keep you here.

I still get choked up when I hear Van sing about the little red shoes
remembering the hospital preparations, the duffel bag,
the ice chips, the exhortations to resist the urge to push—
the insistent craving for expulsion, you,
one week overdue.

I was ready to come to terms, ready for the rush,
to finally arrive at this meeting, at this inevitable morning,
at this transformation of everything I thought I knew, of the day
to day, of the child I was before you slipped from my body
into the doctor’s hands,
and I was born again.

* with lines from Van Morrison’s song, Astral Weeks

*

Betsy Mars is a prize-winning poet, photographer, and assistant editor at Gyroscope Review. Her poetry has been published in numerous journals and anthologies. Recent poems can be found in Minyan, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Sheila-Na-Gig, and Autumn Sky Poetry Daily. Her photos have appeared online and in print, including one which served as the Rattle Ekphrastic Challenge prompt in 2019. She has two books, Alinea, and her most recent, co-written with Alan Walowitz, In the Muddle of the Night. In addition, she also frequently collaborates with San Diego artist Judith Christensen, most recently on an installation entitled “Mapping Our Future Selves.”

Burdock by Jennifer Browne

Burdock

The house cat swishes
her tail through burdock,
its insistent cling a tool
distributing seed. Back
home, she grooms burrs,
tail twitching, cast bracts
rasp the blanket. I have
latched onto you. In that
persistence, what spines
am I causing you to carry
back into the softness
of your bed. There’s no
growing ground, just a
warm, dislodging mouth
sleeking yourself clean.

*

Jennifer Browne falls in love easily with other people’s dogs. Her chapbooks—Whisper Song (tiny wren publishing) and The Salt of the Geologic World (Bottlecap Features)—range landscapes of her fascinations, which include landscapes. Her poems are forthcoming or have recently appeared in the Poem for Cleveland anthology, the Women of Appalachia Project’s Women Speak 15th Anniversary Volume, Steel Jackdaw, Gargoyle, South Broadway Ghost Society, and Humana Obscura. She lives in Frostburg, MD.

Once More, Into The Light by James Diaz

Once More, Into The Light

My brother, my sister, my other
Doubled over in spirit on the kitchen floor tonight
Doing the math all wrong
East of wherever that sweet tree of life falls
Into the clear blue yonder
Once more, Into this light

Shake your fists, your barrel of worries out in the night
We’re all counting backwards from a deep dark wound,
that pounding beautiful hurt in your ears
Pain brain, come on now
Let it rain
Turn them numbers inward
Wreck and weep, muscle through the drywall
Say your prayers with a hammer
Once more, Into this life

Hold that line
Until the divine bites the hook
We’re eating mercy tonight
Shell the peas, husk the corn
Save some room for the reckoning
For tomorrow’s fuckery and pain
And all them who never known it as bad as we coming at us
With the numbers and the due dates
And don’t you know it won’t stop
And neither can you
Once more, Into that light

Go bright burning in your god tongue
Tell em this life sent you
And one two three
And you and me
Scraping hell’s bottom for whatever serves as star shine
In the deep abiding dark of us
Once more, into this light.

*

James Diaz is a poet/learner/listener/struggler still very much figuring it all out. Author of three full length collections, the most recent being Motel Prayers (Alien Buddha, 2022,) Diaz lives in upstate New York where they edit the intentional literary arts journal Anti-Heroin Chic.

Serving Coffee in the ICU by Madeleine French

Serving Coffee in the ICU

My supervisor said not to, my first day,
her face closing off the words
as if she were pulling a curtain around a bed.
Families would come to demand it, and
I was there to clean the room.

But the woman huddled in the recliner
clutching an e-reader
tears shining silver on her cheeks
accepted it graciously,
cradling the styrofoam cup like fine china.

Her eyes pooling depths of despair,
she mustered a smile to thank me.
Not just for the coffee, she said.
For your kindness.

Pushing my cart toward the door
I could read one word upside down:
Hope.

*

Madeleine French lives in Florida and Virginia with her husband. A Best of the Net nominee, her work appears in Dust Poetry Magazine, West Trade Review, Schuylkill Valley Journal, Door Is A Jar, San Antonio Review, and elsewhere. She is working on a full-length poetry collection.

Journal note by Paulette Laufer

Journal note

Write out Gratitude
in large sprawling letters
whenever you feel well.
Let the start of G be good, curved,
the slight huddle of someone
deep in thought before
springing forward, middle letters
tumbling towards each other
like small acrobats of elation,
welcome them to carry you along
on their strong shoulders, let
the end “e” be your rejoicing.

*

Paulette Laufer’s poems have appeared in Blue Heron Review, Moss Piglet, Bramble Literary Magazine, Island Intersections (celebrating the 50th anniversary of Apostle Islands National Lakeshore through the intersections of science, art, and poetry), and the anthology Halfway to the North Pole: Door County in Poetry. She received an honorable mention from the Wisconsin Academy/Wisconsin People & Ideas 2017 poetry contest; her work has also been seen in several regional art and poetry exhibits. Now living in Sturgeon Bay, WI, she previously worked in theater in the Washington, D.C., area for many years.

Three Poems by Jessica Whipple

For Erin

A mother can
watch a mare with its newborn foal
dozing in dusty sunlight
and remember earliest days
when all there was
was sleep.

She will nod in understanding
when later, the foal learns
about grass, water
because a mother can
never stop teaching.

And someday the mother
will watch her own offspring
riding together
maybe too far out
maybe into the brambles
but if there’s anyone
who can call them back,
a mother can.

*

Farm Couple on a Pyrex Bowl

In the wedding picture
they stood closer than they ever had.
She felt a tickle on her palm
his young hands dry already.¬

Every night she shook out her apron
hung it on peg rail in the bedroom
where between them something germinated.

When she worked, the rustling:
the shisk-shisk of desiccated husk
supplanted the silence in their valley

and with the tractor in the barn,
at night his mind was quiet
just enough to hear it, too.

How willingly resentment grows.
If only they had known
it’s nothing like wheat.

*

Lady in Church

Nobody minds
how loudly she proclaims
“I love you I love you”
white-haired, she is the child
we’re jealous of this vision
she has gained
where every day is Sunday
and nobody wonders,
“Is it sad,
or is it beautiful?”

*

Jessica Whipple writes children’s picture books and poetry, and has published two of the former this year. Her poetry has appeared in print and online literary magazines like ONE ART, Pine Hills Review, Anti-Heroin Chic, Funicular, and others. She enjoys exploring domestic life, parenting, faith, and childhood in her work. To read more of her work, visit AuthorJessicaWhipple.com.

Math for Older Parents by Liona T. Burnham

Math for Older Parents

Take the age at which your husband’s father died.
Young, yes, young.
Now, subtract your age from it.
Now, add the age of your preschooler
to the difference.
That age is the reason
you’re out running around the lake
on a fall day, tennis shoes splashing through puddles.
Red leaves rustle in the warm wind,
and the ducks stretch out straight
as they flap their wings and skim across the water.
You can feel the effort in your shoulder blades,
as if you, too, are putting the work into flying.

*

Liona T. Burnham teaches writing to community college students in the Pacific Northwest and Northern Virginia. She has poems published or forthcoming in Stone Poetry Quarterly, Sky Island Journal, and The Northern Virginia Review.

Dabbs Greer by Mick Cochrane

Dabbs Greer

Who would play you in the movie
version of your life? A stupid question
I love to ask. My brother-in-law, a quiet
Minnesota man I’m always trying to draw
out, doesn’t hesitate. “Dabbs Greer,” he says.
Sixty years of supporting roles: Dabbs played
Angry Man, Impatient Postal Customer, Stoolie,
Tutor, Bus Driver, Night Elevator Operator, Seldom
Seen Slim, Motel Manager, Sheriff, Minister,
Parole Officer, Stoner, and Robbed Man.
Clair will earn no residuals for his performance
this season. He plays the guy who rubs his sick
wife’s feet. He appears several times a week as Waiting
Room Man and Chemo Companion. Today he’s driver
and dishwasher, guy who write checks and waits
on hold with an insurance provider. Late at night,
he plays anxious man in a recliner, solitaire fiend,
worried man who hums a worried song, cold
pizza and Diet Coke guy, maker of lists, reciter
of childish prayers to a God who never answers.
He says yes to every role, always shows up
on time and requires no direction. Doesn’t need
Stanislavsky to tell him. There are no small parts.

*

Mick Cochrane lives in Buffalo, NY, and teaches writing at Canisius University. He is the author of four novels and has published poems and stories in THE SUN, FIVE POINTS, CINCINNATI REVIEW, HIRAM POETRY REVIEW, and elsewhere.

On Thanksgiving no one wants to hear poetry by Linda Laderman

On Thanksgiving no one wants to hear poetry

I ask my son; would you like to listen to a poem?
Not really, he says, do you want to hear football scores?

His newly divorced friend says you know I should read
poetry. I liked it in college, though he says he doesn’t recall

which poets he read. It’s too long ago, but I liked Frankenstein.
I remind him that it’s Mary Shelley’s novel, not Percy’s, the poet,

My granddaughter, the swimmer, scrunches her nose when
I mention how she could have fun with sonnets, write 14 lines,

or take lines from other poets and create your own poem, a cento.
Think of it like swimming, each stroke builds on the next one.

She rolls her eyes and takes another bite of mashed potatoes.
Everyone explains why poetry holds no metaphor for their lives—

how they never liked verse, except maybe Mother Goose,
and who has time to learn to read or write poetry when

they’re busy with work and kids? My daughter-in-law
says, I remember a poem by Emily Dickinson, about a feather.

That gives me hope, so I ask my grandson what he’s read.
We read Keats and Poe, sophomore year, but I’ve forgotten it all.

When the dishes are cleared, we sit near the fireplace.
I’m going to read a poem, I say, and pull a paper from my purse

After I’m finished, my daughter-in-law’s eyes well. My son fidgets
with his watch and asks if anyone knows who’s winning the game.

*

Linda Laderman is a Michigan writer and poet. She is the 2023 recipient of The Jewish Woman’s Prize from Harbor Review. Her micro-chapbook, “What I Didn’t Know I Didn’t Know” will be published online at Harbor Review in September, 2023. Her poetry has appeared in The Gyroscope Review, The Jewish Literary Journal, SWWIM, ONE ART, Poetica Magazine, and Rust & Moth, among others. She has work forthcoming in Thimble Literary Magazine and Minyan Magazine. For nearly a decade, she volunteered as a docent at the Zekelman Holocaust Center in Farmington Hills, Michigan. Find her at lindaladerman.com

Median by Brian Dolan

Median

The tales Pop told
come back to me sometimes
like the one about his pal John
who lost his hair
when he stuck his finger into a socket
but now I know he fell asleep
on the couch smoking a cigarette
and the whole thing erupted in flames
and for a long time after
he had to wear
one of those compression suits
to keep all his skin from falling off.
Pop was funny like that
given to myth-making.
I couldn’t always tell
how much of what he said
he believed.
He didn’t drink
but occasionally when I went to visit
there’d be a bottle of Woodford Reserve
well preserved
in the otherwise barren refrigerator
and he’d say a friend who visited left it.
Years later a tractor-trailer ran that friend over
while he was wandering
down the center lane of Sunrise Highway.
That one is true. It was in the papers. You can read all about it.
Isn’t that proof enough?

*

Brian Dolan is a poet and fiction writer based in Brooklyn, NY. His writing has appeared or is forthcoming in the Bangalore Review, the Bosphorus Review of Books, Plum Tree Tavern, the Beatnik Cowboy, and New Verse News.

ONE ART’s 2024 Pushcart Prize Nominations

ONE ART’s 2024 Pushcart Prize Nominations

Abby E. Murray – What It’s Like to Wonder Whose Country It Was First (12.11.23)

Bonnie Naradzay – Bede’s Sparrow (11.1.23)

Linda Laderman – Final Score (10.9.23)

Hayley Mitchell Haugen – Reserved (8.27.23)

Jennifer Garfield – self portrait at 39 (8.2.23)

Cheryl Baldi – THE DAY FALLING TO PIECES (7.30.23)

Stargazing by Jill McCabe Johnson

Stargazing

A normal star forms from a clump of dust and gas in a stellar nursery.
—NASA

I can’t stop thinking
about dust motes, how,
waking from a nap,
I watched them, a galaxy
of golden stars drifting
across the late afternoon
of my living room. That night
my mother-in-law texted:
Prognosis very bad.
The PET scan overlaid
with the CT scan, lit up
its own molecular cloud galaxy
of red giants, white dwarfs,
neutron stars: a universe expanding
through the lungs and lymph
nodes of her eldest daughter.
At any time, the air can be laden
with dust motes and pollen,
microbial yeast, mold spores,
and, yes, even star dust
so tiny they’re impossible
to spot with the naked eye.

*

Jill McCabe Johnson is the author of three full-length poetry collections, including Tangled in Vow & Beseech (MoonPath Press), finalist in the Sally Albiso and Wheelbarrow Books Poetry Prizes, plus two chapbooks, and editor of three anthologies. Recent poetry, essays, and short fiction have appeared in Slate, Diode, Waxwing, The Brooklyn Review, and Fourth Genre. Jill is editor-in-chief of Wandering Aengus Press.

Three Poems by Sonya Schneider

Climbing Out Windows

For a while, I dyed my hair henna red,
wore old man pants cut off at the knee

and spent all my babysitting money
on a pair of 8-eye Doc Martens

that I never broke in. My friends
ditched class to smoke out

behind the teriyaki joint
while the boys ollied off curbs,

trying to impress the popular girl,
whose belly button stud sparkled

like a star above her low-rise jeans.
Once, when I was sleeping over

at a friend’s, we climbed
out her window and walked toward

the boardwalk lights and the salty smell
of dead fish. When we ended up

at the star-studded girl’s apartment,
her dad and brother sat hunched

at a table, cleaning handguns
in a haze of pot smoke,

their talk hushed and angry.
I spent that night stoned and listening

to the sound of rags wiping metal,
trying to hide behind a mask

of mauve lipstick. But once I climbed
back through my friend’s bedroom

window, the fear I’d hid rushed in.
When sleep finally came, it was swift,

and in my dream, I learned
to walk through doors.

*

Family Tree

The fall of my Uncle Rick was not his love
of taxidermy, rather the way he cut
his three siblings from his rib.
My father found a starving cat hiding
under a dead woman’s bed.
He gave her to me wrapped
in a red blanket—I named her Rainbow.
I was twenty when Aunt Ti swallowed
a bottle of Haloperidol – the sound
of her hitting the kitchen floor
still rings in my ears. Once,
on a full moon, Mom hunted
for seashells in the Negev.
Now she tucks in my aging brother,
their bedrooms connected by a narrow hall.
Zede’s birth name was Shlomo,
meaning peaceable. He changed it to Allan
when he enrolled in the war.
His mother was short but had hands
the size of sunflowers. Bubby kept
kosher plates on the top shelf.
All four of their kids have dark brown hair,
but only one believes in God. He lives
in Omaha, where his dogs roam
the shallow hills of snow.
Sometimes I remember to gaze
at the stars, but I’m always disappointed
if I don’t see one shooting across the sky.
I expect to witness startling encounters.
Like the Twin Towers toppling
just blocks from my work.
People walked north that day,
stopping at corner markets
for toilet paper, beer and bread.
I remember with crystalline detail
the time I met a clairvoyant,
but I don’t recall what she foretold
about my future.

*

My daughter explains the patriarchy

to my other daughter on the drive home from the beach.
The patriarchy is a society led by men, she says,
in which, sadly, women
are not allowed to hold power –
this is most societies.
I’ve never told them about the time my boss
pushed me against the wall, his breath reeking
of tuna fish. He held me pinned for just under
a second, long enough for fear and betrayal,
those twins some ancient woman birthed
and has spent a lifetime paying for. That was the last day
I worked for him. On the ride home, my youngest
has to pee. I pull the car to the side of the road
and guide her behind a Douglas fir,
but she is afraid someone might see her.
I pull down my shorts and squat,
legs grounded, bottom back.
Let them look, I say. If they dare.
For the rest of the car ride, they stare quietly
out the window. They make me think of the sea
anemones we saw last summer, luminescent
creatures who’ve learned to guard themselves
against every unwelcome touch.

*

Sonya Schneider is a playwright and poet living in Seattle, WA. Her poetry can be found in Catamaran Literary Reader, SWWIM Every Day, West Trestle Review and Mom Egg Review, among others. She was a finalist for the 2022 New Letters Patricia Cleary Miller Award for Poetry and her micro chapbook, Hunger, was shortlisted for Harbor Review’s 2023 Jewish Women’s Prize. She is a graduate of Stanford University and Pacific University’s MFA in Poetry.

First Rise by Cindy Buchanan

First Rise

Sixty-two years after I was lifted up
into the cab of my uncle’s farm truck,
I return to where my grandmother’s house
once stood. Only the light of the early morning sun
remains. What did I think I would find?

The start of that long ago trip north to Alaska
exists in a photograph someone took
as my grandmother, her back to the camera,
reached into the truck. Her hand on mine
will linger there until the photo fades.

The salty taste of missing can fill a mouth,
distort time the way a canyon
distorts sound. On this August morning,
I smell my grandmother’s bread baking,

feel her flour-dusted apron against my cheek.
I touch the rim of her ceramic bread bowl,
and I remember how bread rises before
it is punched down and shaped.

*

Cindy Buchanan grew up in Alaska, graduated from Gonzaga University, and lives in Seattle. Her work has been published previously in journals including Evening Street Press, Tipton Poetry Journal, Rabid Oak, The MacGuffin, Hole in the Head Review, and Chestnut Review. She is grateful to her monthly poetry groups and the community at Hugo House for their wisdom and support. Her first chapbook, Learning to Breathe, was published in 2023 by Finishing Line Press.

GI Joe by Sean Hanrahan

GI Joe
The shape of war felt so foreign to me. He lacked the vitality
of synthetic hair I could cut. No lopsided bob to glam the girl
up. This brute had bulges that hurt when you tapped him
against your palm. The camo colors were so ugly—nothing
you would want to paint a room. I refused to airdrop him
into a war zone shooting everything in sight. I never dreamt
of combat. I liked adventure stories, but stopped short
of mass destruction. Killing fascinates boys.
Wooly mammoths and other large game must be roaming
the blood-soaked plains of their imaginations. They certainly
were not interested in tip-toeing to London or Paris as my
shoeless doll was. So excited flying through countertop clouds
her feet never touched the ground. Her feet formed for lofty
ambitions. My doll and I were going to Hollywood. I wanted
something more than the playfighting of ordinary boys. I wanted
to be myself, but I was cautioned out of it. I took the scissors
and placed them in a drawer alongside the construction
paper silhouette of a boy I knew I had to become in order to survive.
*
Sean Hanrahan (he, him, his) is a poet from Philadelphia. He is the author of the full-length collections Safer Behind Popcorn (2019 Cajun Mutt) and Ghost Signs (2023 Alien Buddha), and the chapbooks Hardened Eyes on the Scan (2018 Moonstone) and Gay Cake (2020 Toho). His work has also been included in several anthologies, including Moonstone Featured Poets, Queer Around the World, and Stonewall’s Legacy, and several journals, including Impossible Archetype, Mobius, One Art, Poetica Review, Serotonin, and Voicemail Poems.

Three Poems by Lynne Knight

Poem for My Daughter

The past is a country of windows.
In some of them, faces, their histories
sealed by glass. In others,
white curtains. Shadows without name.
Better to create your own history
out of longing and desire
than to mourn the loss of unknown
faces in the photographs your father left
to you. Better to take loss as part of
memory, that long wind blowing past you
with what’s retrievable, or not.
Remember all the times it snowed so hard
the apple tree would vanish
from your window? Yet it was there.
So with my love. His death. His love.
Keep sight of what’s essential.
How, even in the worst storms,
green and blossom travel from the roots.

*

Shifting

A friend says not to focus on the negative
           all the time. Open your eyes to the good,
she tells me on the phone, when my husband

calls out that there’s a dead rabbit
           under the deck, having lifted boards
to find out why the sliding glass doors

on the patio won’t close—not because
           of the dead rabbit, whose good-luck foot
lies there, all that’s left besides the rib cage

with its beautiful architecture, the fine spine.
           A joist has settled, or the piling under it,
evidence that things are always shifting,

nothing is static, not even grief or love.
           Nothing’s static but death, my friend says when
I call back with news of the rabbit. At least

once all the decomposing stops. I think of all
           the words I’ve written, or spoken, or thought.
Even the saved ones are shifting: a blessing

is not what it was when I was a kid and it came
           directly from God. Now it can come from rain,
or the wind, or a child’s sigh as she sleeps.

*

Letter I Should Have Written Years Ago

Neither of you has any idea of the pain ahead.
She’s almost seven, and earlier she cried

because you pulled her front loose tooth,
only your big hand got the other one,

too, the one that wasn’t even loose.
She had to change her shirt for the photo,

it was so bloody. But she’s smiling now,
happy she can sing the song, get a double

visit from the tooth fairy. You’re looking down,
contrite, maybe, or just trying not to laugh.

I’ve never stopped loving her, but when I saw
this old photo, I remembered how I loved you

then, loved your strong, star-athlete body,
the way it wanted me. Before the pain

of seeing how unsuited we were for each other.
I don’t remember when it first began, the falling

out, but no hint of it here. Summer, your skin
beautifully tanned, warm light even inside

the house before those long dark winters.
Forgive me for forgetting who we were then.

*

Lynne Knight has published six full-length poetry collections and six chapbooks. Although she lived in the United States for most of her life, she now lives on Vancouver Island.

Saturday by J.R. Solonche

Saturday

Frank came to clean the place,
pick up branches, blow leaves.
My mother died last week, he said.
Oh, I’m sorry, Frank, I said.
She died in her sleep. She was 89,
he said. She lived a full life, I said.
It was peaceful in her sleep, he said.
That’s the best way. In your sleep,
I said. She lived a full life, he said.
I saw her more in the nursing home
than I saw her for thirty years,
he said. I understand. The yard
looks good, I said. But you have
to do something about this, he said,
pointing to the bare ground in front.
The rain coming down the back
is washing away the soil and the grass.
I see that. I should tend to that, I said.
You really need to or you’ll have
no lawn this summer, he said.
Thanks. I’ll tend to it. Sorry about
your mom, I said. Thanks. It’s okay.
I’m okay. We’re okay. She was 89.
She lived a full life. She died in her
sleep. Real peaceful. I hope I go
like that. In my sleep. Don’t forget
the lawn. And the garden needs
work, too. Don’t forget the garden,
he said. I won’t forget, I said.

*

Nominated for the National Book Award and nominated three times for the Pulitzer Prize, J.R. Solonche is the author of 35 books of poetry and coauthor of another. He lives in the Hudson Valley.

Two Poems by Lois Perch Villemaire

Museum Visit

On a visit
to the Franklin Institute
my brother and I
run ahead
of our parents
skipping up the steps
to wait at the heavy front doors.

We ask to go first
to our favorite exhibit—
The Giant Heart,
constructed
two stories tall,
big enough
to walk through.

We are thrilled to be in this space
reading signs,
exploring paths
of each chamber,
valve, and ventricle—
trying to imagine
the workings of our own hearts.

We touch veins
painted on the walls,
bulging red and purple.
We laugh nervously
hearing echoes
of lub-dub, lub-dub
as we crawl
through a giant artery
following the trail
blood flows
in our own tiny hearts.

*

Big Girl

After my mother taught me
how to make a bed with hospital corners,
by tucking the sheets just so,
I felt helpful.

After my mother showed me
how to flip a grilled cheese sandwich,
I thought I could cook.

After my mother handed me
a library card, I carried home
a pile of picture books,
I was happy

After my mother took me
to West Side Story for my 11th birthday,
I fell in love with show music.

After my mother and I,
wearing a dress
and patent leather shoes,
sat with my grandmother
at the Crystal Tea Room
on the 8th floor
of Wanamaker’s Department Store,
the largest dining room in Philadelphia,
decorated with huge chandeliers,
flowered tea cups
matching saucers,
I knew I was grown up.

*

Lois Perch Villemaire is the author of “My Eight Greats,” a family history in poetry and prose published in 2023. Her work has appeared in such places as Blue Mountain Review, Ekphrastic Review, One Art: A Journal of Poetry, Pen In Hand, Topical Poetry and an anthology entitled I Am My Father’s Daughter. She lives in Annapolis, MD.

Waxing Gibbous by Daye Phillippo

Waxing Gibbous

We sit around the bonfire, watch the farmer
across the road pull the red auger
to yet another field, tractor growling
as it drags the heavy long-neck, slowly
down the gravel road while we stretch
beside the fire toasting marshmallows
and watching embers, the old sun settling
behind the trees like a fire going dim.
Night coming on. Jupiter rising
on the eastern horizon. Our son tends
the fire, speaks of being a Boy Scout,
but not of the possibility of deployment.
His wife holds the baby, her first bonfire.
All of us eagle eye and warn the three
older children who are, of course, drawn
to the blaze. We listen closely for coyotes
and hear a great horned owl’s lonesome
from the darker darkness of the pines.
The wise old barn cat is a shadow lingering,
edge of our circle, keeping his distance
from owls and unpredictable children
hepped on too much sugar and the thrill
of being outdoors at this hour. Stars
and a waxing gibbous moon, white light
that glows on our grandson’s blond head
and illuminates the water I pour, my cup
to his sippy cup, moonwater, I tell him,
cold and refreshing. Ahhhhhh! we say,
same time, same way after taking a swig.

*

Daye Phillippo taught English at Purdue University and her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Poetry, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Presence, Cider Press Review, Twelve Mile Review, One Art, Shenandoah, The Windhover, and many others. She lives and writes in rural Indiana where she hosts a monthly Poetry Hour at her local library. Thunderhead (Slant, 2020) was her debut full-length collection.

The Ungiving by Nadine Hitchiner

The Ungiving

After your father texted, “the pigeons have hatched!

I felt the gift of life,
and the immediate counterpart of it

merge across the English Channel,
felt it even in the threads

of my nightgown, pulling
the silk back into the worm that spewed it,

and I stood in the bedroom, naked
of death. Ungiven it.

In your father’s garden, everything
is life, which sometimes means “memory”—

the pebbles, the rose
from your Nan’s garden.

The frogspawn growing their chirps,
and the goldfish spawning—between them

the small pathway, the lilies and roses.
My love, there isn’t a way in this world

a feather on a stone will make anything lighter.
And I know, sadness

has dressed me, and trumpeted on.
Each time, wish I were a beginner, again

at my own grief. Skill-less and accidental.
To know nothing, and live.

We brought a small plant back home
from your father’s garden, at our last visit.

When you stand there, hovering over it
as if to make another leaf grow,

I remember, you, too, grew in that garden.
When you dress me,

because I can’t, you are life,
dressing me.

*

Nadine Hitchiner is a German poet and author of Practising Ascending (Cathexis Northwest Press, 2023), as well as the chapbook Bruises, Birthmarks & Other Calamities (Cathexis Northwest Press, 2021). She is a Pushcart Prize nominee and a 2023 Best of the Net Finalist. Her work has been published in The Lumiere Review, Bending Genres, Hayden’s Ferry Review and others. She lives in her hometown with her husband and their dog.