Are You a Writer or Just a Person Who Owns Too Many Notebooks? A Quiz for the Perplexed by Merrill Oliver Douglas

Are You a Writer or Just a Person Who Owns Too Many Notebooks? A Quiz for the Perplexed

1. How many of those notebooks have you filled past page 15?
2. Who is your audience, and what have you done for them lately?
3. In 25 words or less, explain the distinction between “write” and “revise.”
4. Should you need to evacuate ahead of a wildfire, what provisions have you made to transport your notebooks?
5. What’s the difference between writing and raising tomatoes?
6. Where did Deirdre leave her glasses?
7. If they arrive simultaneously at an intersection, which has right of way, the pen or the keyboard? Please show your work.
8. Explain your relationship with the blank page.
9. Last time you rushed to the ER, did you grab a notebook on the way out?
10. Who wrote the Book of Love? Did you score a signed copy?
11. Which came first, the metaphor or the sting of the word on the tongue?
12. When telling the truth slant, what is the optimal angle?

Title adapted from an essay by Sabyasachi Roy posted on the Authors Publish web site, May 8, 2025.

*

Merrill Oliver Douglas’s first full length collection, Persephone Heads For the Gate, won the 2022 Gerald Cable Book Award from Silverfish Review Press. She is also the author of the poetry chapbook Parking Meters into Mermaids (Finishing Line Press, 2020). Her poems have appeared in Baltimore Review, Barrow Street, Tar River Poetry, Stone Canoe, SWWIM Every Day, Verse Daily and Whale Road Review, among others. She lives near Binghamton, New York.

Two Poems by Miriam Calleja

Women who switch roles

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

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

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

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

* 

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

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

*

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

Reflection by Rebecca Rush

Reflection

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

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

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

All those decades
I’ve lost hiding.

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

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

Now that I might not
be able to marry?

I might want to.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Only the most narrow perimeters
of change are possible and allowable

I stole that from a famous lesbian.

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

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

An AA tattoo was the only thing
permanent

about my sobriety.

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

*

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

Conversation Hearts by Angie Blake-Moore

Conversation Hearts

Do you remember those candy hearts
that come in little boxes
around Valentine’s Day?
They used to say things like SWEETIE
and CUTIE PIE
and then they updated them to say FER SURE
and FAX ME. Now they say ADORBS and LOL,
GOAT, and BAE.
My teenager and I make rude ones
to place around the house—
CAN U NOT,
UGH, AS IF!,
and WTF.

Not only do they look chalky–
those sickly-sweet pastels–
the candy hearts taste like chalk too
or how you imagine
chalk would taste.
Have you ever licked
a piece you found, white or yellow—
resting on the metal shelf
underneath your teacher’s chalkboard?
You could pretend to smoke a stick
instead of a cigarette, trying to
look cool as you clap out her erasers
during recess, coughing—
a cloud of chalk dust
hanging in the air as the bell rings,
calling you back to class.

*

Angie Blake-Moore has been a teacher of 3- and 4-year-olds in Washinton, DC for over 30 years. She’s had work published in Potomac Review, Green Mountains Review, ONE ART, and like a field among others, including the anthology Cabin Fever: Poets at Joaquin Miller’s Cabin 1984-2001. She had a poem chosen for a competition in her hometown of Arlington, VA, where her poem was displayed in county buses.

POEM IN WHICH GOD TALKS TO ME by Denise Duhamel

POEM IN WHICH GOD TALKS TO ME

I’m working really hard
up here. Everything I do
is for the family. I’ve heard
your prayers. Enough
already. Stop
being such a damn nag.

*

Denise Duhamel’s most recent books of poetry are Pink Lady (Pitt Poetry Series, 2025), Second Story (2021) and Scald (2017). Blowout (2013) was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. A distinguished university professor in the MFA program at Florida International University in Miami, she lives in Dania Beach.

Three Poems by Alexandra Umlas

Rules for Revision
Decide how long your lines and stanzas
will be, then stick to it, you can move them around
later. Break each one with beauty, falling
snow or something else that’s clever
or makes sense, but not too clever,
clever looks like cleaver, and that is what you need
to take to your poem. Chop the excess sinews, the thes,
those creepy adjectives that detract from the poem.
Be specific, write, no scrawl, Braeburns or Red Delicious
over apple, Poodle not dog, puddle not water,
fill your poem with p’s or toads or gardens, or wait…
didn’t I read that somewhere? Read! Then focus
on the real, but only if it seems real— like I believe
that Williams had a wheelbarrow, and that it was red
and glazed with rain – just don’t look up
What not to do in a plem, and misspell poem
Because the o and l are so darn close together –
you’ll only get articles on mucus-killing foods
and how to clear your throat. Stay on task, don’t let the poem drift
to places you can’t come back from.
Hold the wheel and drive, wait, that’s an Incubus
lyric. Move lyric to the previous line so two don’t end
with Incubus. Try not to say Incubus three times
in your poem. Instead, get stuck, take a walk,
walk the dog, oh no, not the dog again…walk
your grandma, wait… how did she get here? Know
that no matter how much you try to avoid writing
about your grandma, she will show up. Use imagery.
Include her orange tic-tac grandma-breath or some bells,
bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells—use similes too,
but not if they are about the moon. If the moon does fall
into your poem, smash it to shards, then edit out shards
please don’t make me explain why… reverse! reverse!
riding a poem is like writing a bike. Write it!
Be sure to leave everything open at the end, like wonder,
like windows, like wound, but keep the poem
on one page, concise, so as not to drone on
and on. Writing a poem is like going to war, but the poem
is your enemy… kill your darlings… when in doubt,
put down the pen and shoot your poem in the heart.
*
This is a Poem Whose Hand Holds a Leash
in the early morning, before the sun ruins
the sky’s brilliance, when the grass, too, is filled
with stars, and the world waits to be swallowed.
The poem doesn’t want to walk, although
it knows it will be better by it. Sometimes
it reluctantly takes the mile around the school,
or hits the pedestrian push button to ask
to cross Goldenwest into the park’s brightening
lagoons. The poem walks like a wave rolling
onto shore, like it has somewhere inevitable
and ordinary to land. It feels the morning’s cold
sincerity, its closed-flower gardens.
The poem is almost home when the sky wakes
half numinous night, half pink light yawning
and marvelous. The poem, still holding the leash, marvels—
*
Passport Office
The poem walks into the passport office.
He sits down next to a particularly well-
put-together villanelle. Even with
an appointment, the bench is hard,
his lines begin to fall asleep. He thinks
he needs a revision and can hear the sestina
on the other side of the room whisper
to her young couplet, they’ll let anything
be a sonnet these days. When he finally
gets called, they double check his paperwork:
title (too on-the-nose), place of publication
(substandard), line-length (not consistent),
and send him to the camera, where they snap
a photo of him that he is not happy with
and send him on his way. For six-weeks
he’ll wonder if the passport will come
in time. He tries to better himself before
his trip by cutting down on adverbs
and wishing Frost had been his father.
When the passport finally arrives,
he holds it in his end-words and similes.
*
Alexandra Umlas is from Long Beach, CA and currently lives in Huntington Beach, CA. She is the author of the full-length poetry collection At the Table of the Unknown (Moon Tide Press).

Two Poems by Brett Olsen

I Could Use A Win

After my folks were admitted to the hospital,
my boss’ body language reiterated
HR had resources if I needed them.
My brain converts needs into weaknesses,
so everything’s fine until those who love me
grow frustrated by the lie and begin to love me less.
I returned my neighbor’s book on Mindfulness
half-read and said Thank You.
The state lottery odds are 1 in 13,983,816,
and it’s up to 17 million. This is sufficient.
I am not greedy.
I don’t need to go to Space.
I need to buy a ranch for my parents
so they stop falling down stairs.
Whenever I am somewhere beautiful,
I concoct a speculative afterlife
meaning I am never alongside you
on this beach
but rather having a heart attack
and finally receiving a second chance
to appreciate what was once in front of me.
I multiply every bad thing
by infinite, other bad things.
Every Midwesterner is living the dream
and leaves it at that.
When a murder-suicide occurred
two blocks from my apartment,
I fixated on the hyphen
and wondered if the bullets sent them
to some shore or another cornfield.

*

Better Luck Next Time

Unmaintained bridges
separate you
from answers.
You want to be brave,
but it’d be foolish
to cross.
Is it nobler to crave
water or calories?
A different bad dream
on every island.
Get on all fours
and dig until you strike
something, anything.
What makes the hurt shut up?
Everything is rhetorical, idiot!
Books become heavier
when authors die.
Is it the casket
or the person inside
that makes gravity so combative?
Pallbearers carry on
and never share their flasks.
From Pangea to Purgatory,
you and love and loss,
dirt and truth and you
finally splashing water
against your face,
catching your breath,
exhaling and saying
okay then—what’s next?

*

Brett Olsen is a poet and humorist from Cleveland, Ohio. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English Literature from Kent State University. His writing has been featured on The Hard Times.

Two Poems by Hana Damon-Tollenaere

Gas Station Slurpee

About the time the hills bloom purple, it all falls
apart again, but don’t bother rebuilding, with plastic
straws and Poptart wrappers, five loose nickels and a fat
blue pill, haven’t you heard? For every biggest fish, there
comes a bigger one to eat it, so even vetch can’t survive
the winter, like uncareful tires crush lizards
on the asphalt, sure, we can listen to Sublime,
I know a thing or two about
doing it the wrong way.

*

Negotiations

If you’re lucky you can make this all
stop, if you write enough birthdays
in the calendar, and test the mattresses
at IKEA, I solemnly swear to buy only
white pressboard furniture, or map out
a life in grease pencils, like sectioning
a corpse of pork, crossing out the hole
in the kitchen wall, then a smudged
and dotted arrow, god forbid we
forget, the pair of green lamps
goes over there.

*

Hana Damon-Tollenaere lives in California with her girlfriend and a variety of reptiles and amphibians. Her published work can be found at hanadamontollenaere.carrd.co

Foamhenge by FM Stringer

Foamhenge

“Come one, come all to the marvelous Foamhenge! Foamhenge is our famous full-size Stonehenge replica made entirely of styrofoam!”

Summer 2012—

Was it your turn behind the wheel
when we pulled off the highway
at Natural Bridge, Virginia,
to stretch our legs, snap a photo,
or was it mine? Two weeks
in an ‘03 Jetta in an oil slick
of an August, finding out how much
of the long country we could see
before the apocalypse—It must have been
yours. I loved you then. Did I
tell you so as you leaned into the dash
and peered over your knockoff Ray-
Bans, as though to better see the road
turn primitive? O to be a fly
splattered to that windshield. To live
in this honeyed account. The dirt parking lot
staining our sneakers copper. The path
uphill, flanked by pines. These things
don’t last. An unseasonable storm
darkened a corner of sky, hurrying us.
Miles away, the ocean licked
an archipelago higher
than it ever had before. Up close:
The stones’ gray latex paint, weathered
in broad patches. The white
styrene pellets underneath, stuck
mid-spill. A ruin of a monument
to a ruin of a monument,
nevertheless, in its way,
spellbinding. Perhaps in part due
to the figure on the grassy fringe, a life-
size Merlin, also showing wear, posed
reaching to summon lightning, or to lift
the megalithic stones himself by magic.
His face, according to a sign nearby, cast
from a mold of a friend’s, a death mask.
One day, something’s here. The next—

In four years it would all come down,
migrate 170 miles northeast, the pieces
repaired, repainted, and re-placed
to align with the Summer solstice,
like its inspiration in England—
a temple, observatory, or tomb.
We didn’t know that then. And I
didn’t know that it would be, for us,
the last stop, the end of the road.
But from the parking lot, looking up
the hill, facing the sun and
the standing stones, from that distance
I could almost see it perfectly:
the persistence of it, thereness—
its character a holiness,
set among the dead—its having been
conceived, quarried, heaved—
its being of the same blue earth that was
nearing an ending all around us.

*

FM Stringer’s poems can be found or are forthcoming in The Penn Review, North American Review, West Trade Review, RHINO, and elsewhere. He lives in Pennsylvania with his wife and dogs.

Highland Boulevard by Bruce Morton

Highland Boulevard

I do not know if it was conceived as a grand design
Or the work of someone who had an appreciation
For metaphor and science, or who had just a sense
Of humor, because it is kind of funny in its naturally
Morbid way. Down the boulevard it is all progression
As gravity and life conflate, each a force doing what
It does. Sometimes you cannot help but be struck
By how things are laid out, a plot set to play out.
Be it plan or coincidence, it is genius nevertheless.
Not to mention logical in its simple elegance.
You make your way to the top of the hill,
Where the water tank looms large, a sentinel,
A monument to quench the thirst of affluence,
A resource that greedily absorbs the landscape,
Which from there flows down hill, sloping to
Main Street and the hum and drum of our daily
Life. It unfolds in order, as if by some divine
Invention, or intervention. Here, newly built, are
The upscale homes for senior citizens,
Then the apartments for those who desire
And can afford independent living nestled close
Up against the building for assisted living—as if
Anyone has ever lived unassisted. Next there
Are the offices that house the doctors, all specialties
Stacked for diagnosis and prognosis, each enjambed
To the hospital with its red-roofed emergency room,
A veritable medical smorgasbord. It is a complex
Thing this inevitable slide down the boulevard,
Nature at work, no control to the roll—such is
The nature of it. Until we must cross over
The street to the mortuary-crematorium, funereal
With its black smoke rising above its black hearse,
A dark cloud polluting our small universe.
Conveniently, we need only drive back across
The boulevard to Sunset Hills Cemetery, a misnomer
Because it is located at the east end of town.
Perhaps in consideration of reincarnation?
Situated between mortuary and cemetery is
A pre-school, its children loud with play,
A seeming incongruence. We sometimes see them
Cheerfully queued, plodding on the sidewalk
Up the boulevard, blissfully defying gravity.

*

Bruce Morton divides his time between Montana and Arizona. He is the author of two poetry collections: Planet Mort (2024) and Simple Arithmetic & Other Artifices (2014). His poems have appeared in numerous online and print venues. He was formerly dean at the Montana State University library.

AUTISTIC EVENING ROUTINE by Tony Gloeggler

AUTISTIC EVENING ROUTINE

Jesse walks through the living room,
grabs a broom to sweep the floor
before evening routine at 7:30 PM
when he sees mom coming around
the back, her part of the duplex, closing
the garden gate with the leather strap,
walking Oreo. Jesse dashes out the door,
skips across the blinking, Christmas lit porch
and she asks if he wants to come for a walk.
Yes, of course he does. So, go get dressed.
No, Tony doesn’t mind. Jesse hurries, finds
a long-sleeved shirt, socks, ski jacket, sneakers

Mom yells where’s your hat and Jesse turns around,
rushes back through the door, down basement
stairs. I hear whines, grunts, the way he says
where’s my blue hat, I always leave it here, before
I trudge down, ask what’s going on. We both start
looking, run all around the house. I say maybe
we left it on the bus. He says no on bus, makes
louder sounds. Mom comes in, searches too. When
we give up, she asks me to write information down.

We sit at a table. I ask for a few sit and breathes,
slow deep breaths please, then I print out big block
letters while reciting blue hat lost, blue hat gone,
goodbye blue hat, that’s it in my calm, level tone,
not my annoyed, cranky, end of the day voice. Just
put the orange one on, the one with polka dots and snow
flurries, they’re all the same. Jesse. do you even
like the dog? Jesse speed reads the note, pushes
it away, gets louder. I write down new hat tomorrow.
He says no tomorrow, stomps his feet. Me, mom,
exchange looks, worry an explosion’s near: teeth marks
on his forearm, head banging on the floor. She mouths
Target. We shrug shoulders and off they happily go.

Fifteen, twenty minutes, they’re back. He tosses a bag
on the table, a gray hat with a pack of briefs he opens.
Immediately he wants to cut off every tag from everything–
go get your scissors Jess–before anything else. Then,
all the briefs must go in basement bins. When mom asks
are you ready to walk Oreo, Jesse’s answer is a deep,
husky-throated no to show he means business: 7:30,
evening routine, brush teeth. I repeat evening routine,
7:30. He strides away satisfied. I start cracking up. Mom
looks at me funny. I say no walk dog tonight, point at Oreo
who looks like he’s got to pee real bad. Mom starts laughing.

*

Tony Gloeggler is a life-long resident of NYC and managed group homes for the mentally challenged for over 40 years. Poems have been published in Rattle, New Ohio Review, Vox Populi, Gargoyle, B O D Y. His most recent book, What Kind Of Man with NYQ Books, was a finalist for the 2021 Paterson Poetry Prize and Here on Earth will be published by NYQ
Books in 2024.

The Online Dating Profile of a Vain Poet by Rick Swann

The Online Dating Profile of a Vain Poet

I like hand-written letters, good wine
and late-night discourse. I can always
turn a phrase. I love fiercely, with great
passion. I will worship you and capture
our love so sublimely that we, perhaps,
will become immortal. If this moves you,
please contact me and be my muse.

*

Rick Swann is the author of the children’s book of linked poems Our School Garden! which was awarded the Growing Good Kids Book Award from the American Horticultural Society. His poems have been appeared in English Journal, Windfall, Autumn Sky Poetry, Typehouse, Last Stanza, Superpresent, Rockvale Review, and other publications as well as the anthologies Sing the Salmon Home and Washington Poetic Routes. He lives in Seattle where he is a member of the Greenwood Poets.

A History of Fireworks by Kari Gunter-Seymour

A History of Fireworks

It’s July 1st. Whose idea it was to wait
I can’t remember, but me, my son
and two granddaughters, nine and ten,
are at the fireworks warehouse,
along with scads of other pyromaniacs,
sorting out scenarios for night sky panoramas,
shelves heaped to the ceiling with firepower.

I do my best to maneuver the cart. My son
considers tube launchers, skyrockets, mortars.
A particularly hearty woman standing her ground
near the Roman candles cackles,
these flaming swords are the bomb,
it’s my third trip back, my kids love’em.

Flaming swords? I envision “Star Wars”
or “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,”
ER visits, burn salve at best, but when I mention
what I overheard, my son says, Awesome!

I pick up a petite pink sword, offer it
to my sweet baby girls.
The first says, I want that black sword.
The second looks up at the top shelf, stacked
to the hilt with Thor’s hammer look-alikes,
says, I want one of those conk busters.

Night of, dusk closing in,
the sword tip is lit, sparks fly—
a fountain of reds, greens and golds.
My grandgirl lunges and parries, the granddog
darts in/out of spark showers, barks,
oohs and ahhs abound—applause, applause.
Then comes the hammer,
held high and fierce.
For a few magnificent seconds
sparks fly, the dog dances,
then silence and a wee sputtering flame.

We scratch our heads, grumble,
give in to lost cause.
But my warrior girl persists,
Mjölnir aloft, double gripped,
feet planted firm and wide,
shouts her warrior oath—
then all hell breaks loose.

Flames shoot, whistles whine,
colorful spheres escape containment.
We clap and hoot, amazed at the splendor,
each of us sporting bits of confetti and soot,
the expressions on our faces hilarious,
my granddaughter’s the best face of all,
agog in the wonder of her power.

*

Kari Gunter-Seymour is the Poet Laureate of Ohio. Her current poetry collections include Dirt Songs (EastOver Press 2024) Alone in the House of My Heart (Ohio University Swallow Press, 2022), winner of the Legacy Book Award and Best Book Award. She is the executive director and editor of the Women of Appalachia Project’s Women Speak anthology series. Her work has been featured on Verse Daily, World Literature Today, American Book Review, The New York Times and Poem-a-Day.

Bad Luck Shirt by Dan Berick

Bad Luck Shirt

I have a bad luck shirt.
It’s not the shirt’s fault, I
know.
I shouldn’t blame the shirt for
the very stupid thing
I said
the last time that I wore it.

It’s fine.
(The shirt, I mean.)

They made it in a factory
ten thousand miles away. They didn’t weave
the bad luck in.

It has stripes. And barrel cuffs.
And a straight point
collar.

It’s a nice shirt,
that one.

The bad luck part is mine.
I said the stupid thing,
the shirt
doesn’t talk.

It’s not the shirt’s fault, but
I can’t wear it again.

It’s sitting in a pile of clothes that I
will give away
for someone else to wear,

and maybe they will have
some good luck
wearing
my bad luck shirt.

*

Dan Berick is a writer based in Cleveland, Ohio, whose poetry and fiction have appeared in The Storms and The Interpreter’s House, among others. Dan is also a lawyer, a husband, a father, and a graduate of Columbia University and the University of Chicago.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at Plagiarism by W. D. Ehrhart

Thirteen Ways of Looking at Plagiarism

1. My mom helped me a little.
2. Thomas Jefferson wrote that?
3. I did not use ChatGPT.
4. I’m not allowed to use ChatGPT?
5. I don’t know who put my name on this.
6. Well, yes, that does look like my handwriting.
7. What’s the big deal, anyway?
8. What are you, a Communist?
9. What are you, a Republican?
10. It’s not like I robbed a bank or something.
11. The cat’s got my tongue.
12. May I have a glass of water?
13. The dog ate my homework.

*

W. D. Ehrhart is author of Thank You for Your Service: Collected Poems (McFarland). His most recent collection is At Smedley Butler’s Grave (Moonstone).