By Victoria Hewitt In my final thoughts I hope my leg is thumping in ecstasy like our dogs in the throes of a belly rub. I hope I’m embracing the joy along with the pain because without the hurt all that joy would be taken for granted. I see your faces, the family I choose, … Continue reading In my final thoughts
Holiday Cityscapes and Other Poems
By Judith Cody Holiday Cityscapes Ringing of the Salvation Army bells on the snowy street corner, hunched as if bent body repels freezing wind for long hours at the copper kettle for the poor, the lonely bell sounds through the crowds of shoppers anxiously scurrying from door to door where a bit of warmth seeps … Continue reading Holiday Cityscapes and Other Poems
The Zoo and Other Poems
By Jake Price The Zoo A flamboyance of flamingos eat shrimp out of the hands of a zookeeper. While the birds are distracted, someone else collects eggs. - The next day around breakfast time, the flamingos get their weekly wing clipping so they can’t fly away. Pink yolks sizzle in a frying pan and get … Continue reading The Zoo and Other Poems
people say they hate books
By Neo Yee snow-white pages that crackle under fluorescent bulb words which threaten to escape their prison people say they hate books but they have never had a hard-backed tome flush against their side, leathery door to another world they have never read a book so many times that the tea-stained sheets are halfway gone, … Continue reading people say they hate books
And He Wondered
By Charles Wiegand White steam suddenly began billowing out from under the hood. He pulled over to the side of the road and parked the troubled car in the gravel. He sat there for a moment without moving, then turned off the engine and slowly got out of the car. He stood outside the car … Continue reading And He Wondered
A Safari Through My Closet
By Joan Mach Ladies and gentlemen, on your left you see the Joan Mach Clothing Wilderness. For your own safety, please keep your hands and heads inside the vehicle at all times. This wilderness was formed when the clothing rod in Joan’s spacious walk-in closet broke while she was on vacation. When she returned, the … Continue reading A Safari Through My Closet
Teach Us, O Nature
By Mike Turner The stars in the firmament Teach us to shine a light In the face of darkness The trees in the storm Teach us to bend to the wind But not break The sun rising in the east Teaches us that a new day always comes After darkest night And the shells upon … Continue reading Teach Us, O Nature
Borborygmi and Other Poems
By Ken Gosse Borborygmi [Dictionary.com’s Word of the Day for July 5th, 2022: “rumbling or gurgling sounds caused by the movement of gas in the intestines”] They’re called borborygmi (the word rhymes with pygmy); not merely a figmy of imaginigmy, and come from a natural cause. They’re powerful sources which our gut endorses as we … Continue reading Borborygmi and Other Poems
Chain-smoker in Blue Jeans
By Mason Yates For Korbin Ratner, the rural Illinois town Oakdale Ferry could not end its day unless the cotton candy sky melted blue and pink together, or his girlfriend, Tiffany Earman, drove him to the small mom and pop gas station uptown, where he worked overnight as a cashier. On this particular evening, both … Continue reading Chain-smoker in Blue Jeans
An Offering of Red
By Channie Greenberg
