Poetry

“Black Black Crows,” “Broken Homes” and “Poker”

Stuart Forrest

Why does God send crows to mock my dawn?
They resurrect all that is wrong
with deeds standing on my shadow,
with dogs growling at my heels.
My mind, my heart, I cannot explain
a guitar left out in the rain,
or my path, my direction…

“The Eighth of July,” “Last Rites” and “York County History Lesson”

Valerie Little

I knew that on your birthday
you would awaken in arms of unversed devotion and I would wake up face down in
the cushion of bogs
a scythe of acidic sedges
and
saturating gales of Wuthering Heights.

“Three Questions,” “Exposed!” and “Flowers & Rebozos”

Cindy Rinne

The baby boy comet will need a new kidney one day.
Robot cat understands found objects become body parts.
Eyes as stars watch this womb of bountiful fruit.

His birth among biospheres—containers of blue, green,
and orange leaves falling like tears. Later, waves of salad
and feathers toss the young child. He recovers and stands

“Helter Skelter” and “Lost”

Penny Jackson

My camp counselor spoke of Charlie
as if he was sitting there
next to us at the bonfire,
the orange flames flickering across her face.
and transforming
a teenage girl,
into a gruesome jack-o-lantern.

“Did You Know,” “Peace” and “Apollo 17”

Tegan Blackwood

Did you know? Nature
sprang fully formed from the furrowed brow
of Man at the moment he wiped
the smog from the glass and saw
mirrored the long tilt-angled slide
follow, ineluctable, the set-piece denouement
of wild ranges on his barren scalp;

“The Chola and Llorona,” “Dope” and “Scooby Doo Backpack”

Christopher Rubio-Goldsmith

Doesn’t myth belong to everyone? I have two tios and they
are barely older than me and mi hermano. One is four years older,
the other six and when we lived together in my grandparents’ house
in Douglas Arizona they would take us for long walks, sometimes at
night and tell mi hermano and yo about la Llorona.

“Named,” “Luz” and “Body Memory”

Gary Boelhower

Ten minutes out of the harbor and already
Someone sights the singular spray that means
We are in their presence. We line the railing
Ready to take communion.

Two young fin whales swimming shallow
Like some cosmic dance, arch breathe dive
Spray spume shine all grace
And the gladness rises in me

“What the Buddha Teaches,” “Marking Time” and “Researching a New Text”

Rick Christman

The Buddha teaches
Cessation of desires as
The key to Nirvana.
Life is like a wheel
Spinning on many levels,
Toward Nirvana,
Or like an old, but
Fast moving merry-go-round.
Spinning, spinning.

“Leaving,” “Belief Beyond Seeing” and “Chipping Away”

Kay Cook

The sun is not shining at 3am when the phone rings
and I hear the doctor cut your cord to my dreams,
offering no suture, no receiving blanket.
The sun is working somewhere
dictating time with truth or dare while you are falling;
even the moon is hiding.

“Angels are out tonight,” “Brick wall scripture” and “City hymn”

Patrick T. Reardon

Tonight, the typewriter keys slam rhythm
to ease coarse electricity under the skin.
The Sister of the Sacred Heart pleads alms
and sweats under her habit
as angels stride thickly east and west on her sidewalk.
Angels fly complex patterns
over the drunk anesthesiologist and the beautiful child.

“For the Ophelias,” “The Greek Dance” and “A Birth of Blackbirds at Twilight”

LaDonna Friesen

Are you one who beats her heart
With fists of rosemarys plucked
from your battered chest now
crushed in fragrant shards by
the throbbing, moaning,
ruing refrain

“Ruby’s last dress,” “Dialectics After Dark” and “Morningside at the Desert Casino”

Dawn Terpstra

Ruby’s last dress
is the color of desert flowers
after a late spring monsoon,
purple pops on barrel cactus, pink of prickly pears,
pleated across a canvas of rock-damp sand.

“A Matter of Tea” and “Blackbird”

M. Betsy Smith

1. A Formal Affair
In Cambridge, English bone china.
A floral pot of black tea.
Delicate cups with saucers.
A bit of milk.
Fine linen.
Lace napkins.

“At the Drive-Thru,” “Vacations” and “Help Wanted”

Teresa McLamb Blackmon

I’ve watched a squirrel three days in a row,
Squirting around the empty trees as quick as
Water from a hose, jumping, climbing,
Searching for the spot that bears
His meal.

“Just Do It,” “Warning” and “Life Dunes”

Russell Willis

No matter what the it
it often starts small, unannounced
undetected or unappreciated
It starts to grow or change in
some way, pushed or pulled by us
or self-induced

“On Trial,” “Canzonet” and “Non Dolet”

Jack D. Harvey

In the bedlam
of bed-land,
happy as babies,
active as rabbits,
me sky-father
you earth-mother;

“trou au centre de la terre,” “Black Hole” and “French Lessons”

Dotty LeMieux

Inside Notre Dame is a black hole
where worshippers find a secret passageway
to grace
After the fiery birth, sodden mementos:
A cross,
A crown of thorns
Sculpted stone and paintings
The smell of charred faith

“A Rainy Day at Newman’s Grounds,” “Headed Home” and “Derby Days”

Luke Harvey

The raindrops dribble down the shopfront panes while back behind the counter the barista drips her own creation into earthenware cups. He’s always liked the tables here, the way they’re cut with thick pine tops and sturdy legs two inches thick, like they were made to last

“Little Miss Black Hole,” “Girls” and “Why Are All the Poets Sad?”

Grace Piotrowski

She hid all these years
aloof, afraid of the camera
knowing it would add ten pounds
to an already unmeasurable amount of mass
No wonder she kept hidden
in support groups with
bigfoot and the lochness

“Can Poetry Matter?,” “A Brown Study” and “Away from It All”

Michael Schiffman

Left the wine importer’s tasting,
denied a restorative cup of joe,
I passed out on a Manhattan subway platform.
The ambulance drivers lugged me
me up to the street, where I signed and was
allowed to go. Before wine the arid years

“Self Portrait with Georgia on My Mind,” “Growing up Townie” and “Believer”

Liz Abrams-Morley

And no, not the state, though the state
of the state is cause to fret,
no, O’Keeffe, I say, and we
are painting red poppies. We
are sliding crimson beyond the edges
of our canvases and we

“She Swims Like a Fish,” “Penance and Reconciliation” and “On the Fritz”

Marlee Abbott

A fish taught me to swim.
He wore a woven crown of kelp upon his head—
he was, he told me, the king of the sea.
He found me standing on the sandy shore
and invited me to join him in the waves.
This really happened.

“We Are All Jacks, Yucca Flats, 1962,” “Embracing Sisyphus” and “Snapping selfies on Lake Champlain”

David Phillips

The silence of the dry lake bed is broken by the slow
countdown of a megaphone. Flashes of light ignite the
world white to uncomprehending eyes. As the shock
front cools into visibility, an enormous fireball grows
and grows before flaming out like the head of some
leviathan matchstick.

“Absence Under the Eaves,” “Elfride’s Father” and “The Book”

Christa Lubatkin

folks rarely stopped by our flat
high under the eaves
maybe a bill collector
or a nosey child welfare woman
out of breath
bringing with her bound files
and a jiggle of fat under her chin