Wednesday, October 3, 2018
Open for Poetry Submissions
We are open to poetry submissions now through January 31, 2019. Visit our Submittable page to submit. Fiction writers, we will be open for submissions again January 1 to January 31, 2019. We look forward to reading your work!
Sunday, August 5, 2018
From Volume 38: "Blackberry Season " by Joannie Stangeland
Blackberry Season
By Joannie Stangeland
When the house pours its yellow light
into the day’s long wake,
we become
swimmers treading water,
dusk an ocean
here in the back yard.
Slowly we float
to the sound of ice in a
glass of tea or gin,
guitars on a neighbor’s
radio,
dandelions unwrapping
like anemones,
urchins, a spiny seed for
every thought
planting again this
unasked-for harvest
drifting as the smell of
blackberries
settles, holds the last
of summer close
and deep enough to make
us heady.
Here with evening falling into our arms
we know we’ve stayed
inside too often,
felt strangers to our own
hands,
the fortunes we can’t
read on our palms,
our wishes charted to
some other porch
where cleaner windows
gleam, gold islands.
The wake behind the last boat thins
to plain water and salt.
Robins nest in the eaves,
and we founder on our
wooden chairs
in the swells of that
purple scent,
begin our stories again,
starting
Once upon a night with so many stars
Sunday, July 8, 2018
From Volume 38: "White Walls" by Julie de Oliveira
White Walls
By Julie de Oliveira
My mother looks beautiful
As she wipes down long
lengths of
Cold marble with glass
cleaner.
She smiles as she dusts
underneath
Picture frames of
sunburnt,
Blue-eyed, blond-haired
children
Building sandcastles a
thousand summers ago.
She knows this house so
well,
She knows exactly where
to cross
On its creaky waxed
wooden floors
As not to make a sound as
she steps,
The only sound is the
swish of her mop.
She scrubs the insides of
their oven
With her dry cracked
hands
On her feeble God-fearing
knees
As I do their dishes.
Making sure to speak
In our native tongue,
She tells me what she
would’ve done differently;
Peach walls, not
eggshell;
Suede, not Italian.
Cristo and the last
supper and
Arroz efeijão, not mac ’n’ cheese.
The constant in and out
of our family,
Neighbors, and people
we’ve never met
But welcome with open
hearts anyway
Because we understand the
lonely,
A cold bed, and a foreign
country.
Less space on white
walls; more family.
Sunday, June 3, 2018
From Volume 38: "Cleaning the Bathroom " by Jennifer L. Freed
Cleaning the Bathroom
By Jennifer L. Freed
His towel, hanging
rumpled on the bar,
holds the ghost of his
hands.
His Pears transparent
soap.
Two strands of silver
woven through his comb.
The hamper—full
of his clothes. Can you
carry them
down to the washer, hang
them
on the line?
And then
can you fold them smooth
against your chest
and let them go
to Goodwill?
In the shower, dandruff shampoo
he thought he’d try.
On the door, the empty
hook. When
will you wash your hair,
stop wearing his robe?
stop wearing his robe?
Sunday, May 6, 2018
From Volume 38: "Atlas of the Known World and Surrounding Regions" by Andrew Gent
Atlas of the Known World and Surrounding Regions
By Andrew Gent
The squirrels have built a palace
in the crook of a tree
high above my bedroom
window.
Hanging gardens, stately
antechambers, harems
and exotic bazaars,
all hidden within a clump
of leaves.
I see the dignitaries
come and go,
preening and twitching
like leaders of the great
industrialized nations of
the world.
In the neighbor’s yard,
two members of parliament
argue the finer points
of the Sumerian calendar
while the blue jay
calls them names.
calls them names.
Sunday, April 8, 2018
From Volume 38: "I always dream about money: or the mediocre happy poem" by Jacqueline Morrill
I always dream about money: or the mediocre happy poem
By Jacqueline Morrill
She answers the door almost naked
But for leopard print
undies
The asshole of an orange
cat stuffed under her right arm
His sleeping head cradled
against her bare breast
And a plate of meringue
cookies balanced in the other hand
“Hey babe!”
This is what our life looks like
What my mother has come
to call the “poor phase”
As if everything is
temporary
And we’re just waiting
for the next level.
It is the reason why my hair looks like straw and rat tail
Why our everyday costume
is more than slightly shabby.
Some nights, with our
bodies bracing against the cold—
Because I refuse to keep
the oil burning,
I pray we might find a
winning lottery ticket lost under the driver’s seat.
But we don’t buy lottery
tickets, no extra cash,
And we don’t play
scratchies because my dad is superstitious.
My sister enters
Publisher’s Clearing House every month and hasn’t won yet.
I am sad for myself
I am sad for this
generation of degenerate debt-collecting hipsters
With dreams of poetry and
poppies
Told we could be anything
we want
An overwrought population
of millennial potters
And bakers
And candlestick makers
Thanks to Mr. Rogers and
Big Bird
for our downtrodden
mantra
All you have to do is
dream and you can achieve.
But
My all poet friends are
potheads
Smoke dangling words like
grapes above their angry, hungry mouths
My working friends are
tired
Earning less than the
total of monthly bills
Living the life grad
school and dean’s list has gifted
My parents are unemployed
Car salesmen are a dime a
dozen
The cape house retirement
forgotten.
I am an unpatriotic
American,
Disgusted by jingoism
with hopes for a better next month
Raise your glasses,
here’s a toast to
Health insurance, job
security, life insurance
Rent, electric, cable,
phone, school loans, school loans
Gas, maybe groceries this
week, more school loans,
Car insurance, mortgage,
heat, life
Walking dead horny
homunculus spitting ink
Onto signs reading God
Bless the estimated 3650 homeless
Worcesterites hobnobbing
from Kelly Square to Webster Square
Peg-legged, pit-mouthed,
and sucking dry air from a God
We don’t
I can’t believe in
anymore.
But today, when I see her smile
A soft furry purring
thing at her side
The smell of red sauce
stewing in the kitchen
And the ring on her
fourth finger that matches my own
The ring that symbolizes
the freedom to touch in ways Russia could never understand
The freedom to love in ways Uganda kills for
The freedom to proclaim
unity in ways Arizona can never refuse
I don’t regret the $40
copay for intent to unionize document
Or the $75 marriage
license
Or the $20 bottle of cava
to celebrate
Or the $100 in tips saved
up for three days
For tapas barely covering
tiny square plates
Our swan-arm taste
testing cold meat
that melts on our tongues
to heal daily sores slow, slow.
Slowly.
Sunday, March 4, 2018
From Volume 38: "Watching the Film About Robert Bly" by James K. Zimmerman
Watching the Film About Robert Bly
By James K. Zimmerman
hair white as the snows
he remembers, sky
he writes about
nail-bitten hands pushing
rocks uphill, furrowed
still flutter like
sparrows
when the wheat is ripe
gray eyes full as a
morning
fog in Minnesota winter
voice at times the honk
of a goose in migration
laugh of a midnight loon
prideful lion’s roar
bellow of a moose in rut
on his serape
his father’s dust lingers
Basho whispers in his ear
the popcorn is very good
with butter and salt
and after, there is a
long line
at the urinal, drumming
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