• Beth Suter

    Last Will and Testament The valley floor subsides—my roots follow the sinking water table. I wish I could leave you morethan the soggy ashes of your birthplace, the birds all flown like grown children,silence as odd as almond blossoms and snow falling together today.I stood still for thirty years and the desert came to me,plums replaced by prickly pears— I leave you what’s left: sun on skin,the hug of gravity.   Beth Suter studied Environmental Science at U.C. Davis and has worked as a naturalist and teacher. A Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominee, her poems have appeared in Colorado Review, New American Writing, Barrow Street, DMQ Review,…

  • B.A. Van Sise

    Santo Domingo In the square, four dark men in straw hatsplay an old song that sways with the breeze,Sixty beats a minute, same as your heart,and just a bit farther the town gives wayto the land’s end, where salt water laps on sand.Perfect, all, but we’ve another plan instead:We’re glad we’re alive. Today, we stay in bed. The Man Watching Porn on the 7 Train has a had a long day, I’m sure: his boots caked withcement dust, his jeans dirty from their seventh straightday of wear, his shoulders aching from the pipeshe carries, his knees sore from where he kneels downto put them in. The Union has helped him…

  • Lynn Gilbert

    Oregon Trail Diary OCT. 10, 1843. This daywe veered off another wayfrom the main party On from the Snaketoward Powder River &the Blue Mts Susan & Annabeldear friendsmost likely lost for lifethrough the men’s quarrelas to the right route No other woman leftto help cookor ease me when…. Tuesday lastJonathan then little Sarahdied of the bloody flux &we buried them beneath the traildeep as we had time for safe fromdisturbancewe hope Not an hour to sparefor griefour utmost hastetoo slow—snow in the passessmell of snow in the wind Lynn Gilbert’s poems have appeared in The Banyan Review, Blue Unicorn, Concho River Review, Exquisite Corpse, Gnu, The Huron River Review, Kansas…

  • Lynne Thompson

      “I’m related to the earliest of times…and to the latest”* for Charlotte Mae b. May 2021  Because I’m wrinkles & funk away from her new skin and scent, I think first of Charlotte Mae every morning upon waking with awe and a kind of envy. I wonder what is she thinking? (if thinking is something a barely days’ old can do)—more likely she is  f e e l i n g  that breeze that has brought her to this particular peculiar where she’s already aging, aging being the only note I can whistle with any certitude. How soon will I have to tell her the only difference between her double…

  • Linda Neal

      Measuring Love Everything I love fitsbetweenme and what I fear:famines and fires,cities burningrumors, feasts before dark.Flags and floods andHoly Thursday. What I want,no abacus can calculate,no clerk in the citycan bring to me.Through the gratingin my bedroom wallI smell the lime tree dying,plates of cake rotting in the heat,the death of garlic.The burglars of the sunhave stolen ripe peachesfrom my father’s tree.The white promise of the moon remains,immutable, translucent overhead. Each bent and damaged detailof family matters. The list beginswith Grandma whistlingand a worn yardstick standingin the corner of her sewing room,the faded numbers calling my name;she’s measuring the hemon my first pencil skirt,green as jade. At the end…

  • Sarah Maclay

      The Singing Because the halo has descendedto your hips                  as light                                     on the horizonthe sky around your headcloses in in green—             moody muddy green— and your feet are the sizeof small fingers              somehow on the ground                                     where you stand—voluminous              billowing in a black as soft as clouds below the flower—…

  • Matthew Thorburn

      At Eighty My neighbor the painter doesn’t know me anymore. Recognizes his wife sometimes—a glimmer as she guides him to a chair, puts a piece of apple in his hand. He doesn’t say much, but when I hum an old song, “Tea for Two,” “My Romance,” he sings along. Where do the words live inside him? He still works some mornings, though his pictures grow smaller, lighter. A few faint strokes—pale green for leaves, petals yellow-orange—as if saying, Fine, enough, you know what this is.   Anything More She’s caught a little off-guard,I think, since her left shoulder’s backa bit as if she’s still turningtoward the camera, and a…

  • Kyra Spence

      Wynn-Dixie We pulled off 95 south in the hot night drizzleto sleep in a Wynn-Dixie parking lotbefore driving again there was one other car across the lotrusted and still, as if it would never drive again   the highway foamed where we left it,drivers kept spiriting themselvesdown the warped corridor   at three I was barely sleeping, the heat,the fizzing lights of the Wynn-Dixiespread through the wet air   at four I woke to a voice,a humming engine, a door slammed,—do you need anything? it asked   I woke again to more voices,doors, and engines—car after carstreaming into the lot,they parked, got out—adults, children, familiescalling to each other  …

  • Alison Luterman

    Offering Walking down my street at dawnanother broken bottle smashedin a neighbor’s driveway.Shards of clear glassscattered in starstrembling in first light, tossedfrom a moving caror flung downby the drinkerat his very own feet.I look down at the wreckage,up at a tree,pink petals pushingout of its bud tips,then double back homefor broom and dustpanand begin sweeping.It takes a long timeto pick the tiniest bitsout of the asphalt,carrying jagged fragmentsback and forth to the recycling.Who knows why but thismakes me stupidly happy all morning.   Alison Luterman has published four previous collections of poetry, most recently Desire Zoo (Tia Chucha Press) and In the Time of Great Fires (Catamaran Press.) Her poems…

  • Susan Roney-O’Brien

      Earwig Night creature, like the guy in the bar—leather jacket, black pointed boots,sloshed, body slouched againstthe grease-stained wall, but willing,oh my god, to follow me home,too drunk to know what he came forexcept to say, you know you’re meantto love me. When I laughed and locked him out,he sat on the stoop in the rainaway from the streetlight. Leavesfrom the only tree on the streetfound him. I said I’d call the cops,he crawled off covered in leaf litter. Earwigs here hang out under leaf mulchin the dark and rain. They clump togetherwhere the sump pump drains cellar waterinto the daffodil bed. My son dubbed them beer weaselsafter finding one…