
Simon Maddrell
“A Robin’s Agenda,” “Never mistake what is for what it looks like,” and “Narcissus pseudonarcissus”
and Y complexities in your own
species, so it’s obvious you think
you can tell our gender by the
colour of our breasts or know
that we are born all-brown.

Olga Dugan
“gentrification,” “toward home,” and “the finery of flowers”
leaving just a remnant behind
neighborhood changes fast
innovative foliage, bolstered lawns
porch, deck, people repaired and not
show it all happening at once

Jack D. Harvey
“The Perspective of Venice” and “The Dogmeat General”
priest manqué
Baron Corvo’s pimping presence
passes by,
on the lookout for the right boys.
Oh che bel divertimento!

Steven Deutsch
“A Turn Around Town,” “What the Body Remembers,” and “Fine Art”
that I have walked for years.
The streets are for the wary—
ice strewn here and there
as if they had tired
of the nagging shovels.
The air still
with the silence of February.

Deztiny Musa
“…As Old as Time,” “what do you call a friend who’s still alive but died,” and “not about birds, clearly”
objects of desire
and hate
Did they drown in their own beauty?
curse their amber eyes and
silk thighs
gasping for air

Michael McQuillan
“Clouds”
Widows, orphans, strangers bear the brunt of extreme and arbitrary force. Displaced tented families eke out day by day survival, searching bomb-razed hospitals and schools for children’s charred remains.

Mary Dean Lee
“Found,” “Where Are All the Small, Wild Things,” and “I have folded all my sorrows”
in the Rockies, boots on, to collect me. There
is a valley of snow between us. He says nothing
about seeing the parole officer. I’m inside a lodge
with a roaring fire, legion of kin, we’re playing
Texas no hold’em and Scrabble with occasional…

Russell Willis
“Necessary Evil,” “This Fooling with Words,” and “Gratitude”
Is only plausible if you
Mistakenly equate evil with pain.
Reject the premise, then
Evil is never necessary.
Pain, on the other hand, is a different story
For human life to even exist
There is the matter of the
Pain of childbirth

Beth Cash
“Snapping Turtle,” “Terrestrial Stage of the Red-Spotted Neut,” and “Our Anniversary Before Surgery”
on my blue mat,
splash away deer flies,
close my eyes in the baking sun.
The mat deflates, I am
half in the water, legs and head
cradled on the remaining air.

Kathleen Holliday
“Persephone’s Dream of Spring,” “Flotilla,” and “Forgive Us”
(and hellishly cold!)
the earth a frozen stone,
I dreamt of loam
and pomegranates,
and a warm, green shore,
and a boat to ferry me home.
Short Story

Brian Mosher
Severed

Jan Jolly
A Life Well Spent

Yehezkiel Faoma
Mountain People

Mario Duarte
The Saga Of The Old Umbrella
I am only halfway to the grocery store. What a day, what clima!

Karen Siem
Tea with the Prophet

Raymond Fortunato
My Black Dog Darkness
Essay

Russell Willis
A Legacy of Words
Because of his life’s work—and because his career spanned a remarkable era in mass communication, from the birth of television to the rise of the internet—we are fortunate to have an extraordinary archive of his spoken and written words. These will continue to inform, inspire, and challenge future generations.

Nancy Graham
Against Protagonism: Why We Need More Ensemble Films

Vish Watkins
Musings From A Misprint
In 1907, Israel Baline, a singing waiter in the Bowery, penned “Marie, From Sunny Italy,” but when the handbills accidentally attributed it to I. Berlin, Baline liked the name, thought it had a classy ring, and promptly adopted it, upgrading the “I” to Irving.
I myself have no aspirations for fame or fortune and no thoughts of upgrading my name.
Creative Nonfiction

Etya Krichmar
The Language of My Hands

Linda Briskin
Pulling Taffy
That long-ago child was the middle of three daughters: her older sister, the favored child, too old to be a companion, and the younger too young. She was ignored by her parents. In a matter-of-fact way, she expected indifference and accommodated neglect. Paradoxically she also faced the brunt of their rage, prompted, they said, by her audacity and impertinence. She dreamed about leaving home.

Marianne Dalton
An Adirondack Story

Toni Palombi