-
James Owens
Poem Ending with an Allusion to Issa A pink scumble of cloudin the eastern quarter, brightening as the sunignites the horizon, and frost on grass and roofsrepeats the colour, faintly. Winter has already turnedtoward another Spring, so there must be stirringsdeep in the soil, seeds thawing, insects ticking as hintsof the fertile warmth find them. The gleam fades to a pale day,and in the same world where the great poets have lived,I feel about average. James Owens‘s newest book is Family Portrait with Scythe (Bottom Dog Press, 2020). His poems and translations appear widely in literary journals, including recent or upcoming publications in Channel, Arc, Dalhousie Review, Queen’s Quarterly,…
-
JoAnna Scandiffio
My Book Club Another member died before we finishedone of the great novels No one had wanted to readMoby Dick for fear of getting seasick Anna Karenina was acceptablea love story Everybody had seen the moviewe knew the ending We could waltzthrough eight hundred pages sip cognac skip parts that didn’t touchthe lover’s hand As I recall I said Let’s go slowLet’s close read As if the trainwasn’t pulling into the station JoAnna Scandiffio is a graduate gemologist living in San Francisco. Her poems are like bird nests, made with fragments randomly connected to hold the moment. She is like the old medieval monks who copied…
-
Christopher Nelson
Before Everything we wentonto the night roofoff limitsthis was beforeeverythingwas camera-edand alarmedsmoked a jointshared a tepid beerboth of usstinking of summerand beingyoung talkedabout jumpinghow you’d waveto all the lonelypeople ontheir balconiesas you fellas I fly you correctedand I wasovercomewith sadnessand held you and youlaughed and saidI’m only fuckingwith you, butto be clear, I’mfucking Alexand pulled awayand in that momentI didalmost jumpbut thought the brightawnings of thestreetside shopsmight breakmy fall likein the comicsand your nippleswere hardfrom evening chilland I still lovedmy lifeas I doand as I willfor no reasonbut tenacitytender as a vine Christopher Nelson is the author of Blood Aria (University of Wisconsin Press, 2021) and five chapbooks, including…
-
Susan Gubernat
Atmospheric River Winter rainstorms flounce a pink camellia bushlike the bottom hem of a woman’s gown— a certain kind of woman at galas, on runways,wearing vintage someone else has fumigated and freshened, while the leathery womanon her haunches near the curb bends so low her forehead nearly touches the swollen earth.It looks like reverent prayer. It isn’t prayer. Her cardboard sign soaks and crumbles.Where last night she had laid her head down now the letters run, an atmospheric river.They say it rains on the just and unjust alike: Refuse that lie. The woman’s eyes followthem on the street: the scarved and booted under an umbrella’s canopy. Even whenthe winds…
-
Valerie Roach
The Bite Each time I pass by, I recall that August daywe biked up the gravel road — dust clouds swirling —scent of peach nectar rising from the farmstanddelicate as butterfly wings on the late morning heat. Between us we had just enough cash to buyone red-tinged globe, firm yet soft at once. Icradled its fuzzy heft in my palm, bit in. Juice randown my arm, pooled at my elbow, dripped on the road. You laughed when I handed you the peach. I thinkthat’s the instant I fell in love with you,just one sloppy bite and a laugh in a flashwe shared on a dust-covered road. But falling out…
-
Joshua Coben
Raft Darkness settles in the roomlike feathers falling on a lakestill rippled from a rising flock.Two dreamers float across the gloom, arms entwined to form a raft,mouths softening as if agapeat something dawning in their sleep,moored loosely so they’re free to drift. Holding each other, they hold a placein the wakers’ world, a tepid peace.Dreaming doubles them, as a swan in a pool’s reflection rides its twin,their bodies stilled by this embracewhile underneath the webbed feet spin. Spoils I want the flower bedof you and not the flower:soil that grips the rootand blackens rain; not the blowsy damein the blooming hat, but the dirtshe’s standing in: fermentingspoils heaped…
-
Jim Daniels
Dreaming the Flowers Awake You know how old friends show upin dreams wanting to shoot upor screw in the backseat like old times?Or smile smug goodbyes as they watchyou drop into free fall? Or suddenlymaterialize, only to evaporate into nervous rain? “Hello Out There,”the theme song for my old-fashionedvariety show. Forgive me the dancing girls—dreams, can live with them, can’t…I want to dream of dead friendsrising like first spring flowers through the uncertainty of frozen earth,but my own children are tramplingthose flowers. Trampling, giggling. Jim Daniels’ latest books include The Luck of the Fall, fiction; The Human Engine at Dawn, Gun/Shy, and Comment Card, poetry. His first book of…
-
Robin Turner
Even Now Scattered across grey pavement, a spill of spent petals, somehow still ghostly whole & vivid, whiteas snow. Even now, in summer, a soft June morning holds the confettied remnants of a promise. The heart shifts.A crow tilts its head. And somewhere a small girl in ribbons & tulle bends down to scoop up the bright blossoms, handfuls…
-
Clayton Clark
Introduced by Laure-Anne Bosselaar There is such a deeply intelligent and multi-layered humor in Clayton Clark’s poetry. She has a keen eye and fiercely focused attention to detail. I love her unique & compelling observations: subtle, big-hearted and metaphorically delightful. The three poems below reflect her talent for precision and visual clarity. Grief as Present Not sure how to thank you for all the flowers, I’ve received in your name. Not sure why you, as backdrop, are needed to make light brighter, make roses smell sweeter, bring tears to relieve stress. Does it make you giddy, Grief, to push us to the cliff’s edge then drag some lucky ones back with…
-
David Dodd Lee
Spoon I inhale the substance.The light from the windowsPools in the doubling… Everything’s in it—Birdbaths, hydrangeas bobbing.The morning glories Have climbed halfwayUp the trellis. I’m almost unstuck;In this house of mirrors There’s a boy visibleIn the clean whorl of steel.He’s disconnected again. David Dodd Lee is the author of thirteen books of poetry, including Animalities (Four Way Books, 2014), the forthcoming The Bay (Broadstone Books, Fall, 2025), and Dead Zones, the Dictionary Sonnets (Wolfson Press, Summer, 2025), as well as a volume of persona poems, The 574 Calling Area Has Been Hit by the Blast, which will appear in 2026 (Willow Springs Books). His poems have appeared in Southeast Review,…