The first time I See them together I think maybe I’m seeing double, identical twin brothers under- dressed for sub- zero weather, killing time waiting for the 5:13 A.M. bus, drinking a six of the cheapest beer sold at corner 24 hour across the street, trading hits on massive roll your own doobie, then taking one last piss in bank parking lot. I want to ask them if they’re reporting to jail but I know it’s much worse than that, they’re going to work.
J. Ryberg
Cigarette Burns in the Sheets There’s part of me that really likes a good cheap motel room with a small patch of peeling wallpaper, a few cracks in the ceiling and one or two cigarette burns in the sheets and pillow cases, here and there, maybe a couple of shady characters pimping and dealing from a room around back. As long as there’s a liquor store, near-by, cable TV and hot water, then I’m good. An Old Courtyard A clock ticking in a dead man’s room, a feather stirred by a cool, damp breath of wind through the open French doors that lead to an old courtyard with cracked tiles, over-grown with what, no doubt, must have once been perfectly cared- for flowers, shrubs, trees, hedges, and even an old water garden pond, where a few frogs, koi and an ancient turtle can, miraculously, still be found, lurking, as must a pride of peacocks, somewhere on the grounds.
Livio Farallo
terminal couple hair black as a wine cellar holds me motionless all day; as a doddering sun with melted ear and melted eye can still debride lips of a kiss and scrape like a dermatologist. i am swindled once more of your heroin though i keep the plunger down like the taproot of a fir tree. i am grounded like a moa though the feathers in this head are my spirit’s imprisoned fingers squeezing through burlap. somewhere in this bravery is the iron grip to weigh against eggshell. somewhere, the bravery to wipe the silent bottoms of your shoes. somewhere are the wild cancers that will burn us up in one night. after gallows in the end i won’t know how deep are the graves in the cemetery or why they grin at all – why winter gives birth to an ice age and picks its chipped teeth. there is a value in warm rain nourishing a river: sound lightly dripping; sound of an axe raised through misty breath; sound of an exhausted fox; sound of a snake pit; sound of that sad scandinavia. i say, in an english voice, that little stem on your beret is a twisted chimney not letting out the smoke: i say this as memory seeps through walls muttering all over the floor. i work at tying this sack of human reasoning tight as a moneybag fills a hole in the ground: as blood does a split lip. in the end, a retrovirus mutates, becomes violated by something smaller. water is everywhere - that knuckles sing like braille on drowning fists cannot be for lack of breath and, though a sperm cell always carries a red rose, in the end, an invasive shower washes it all away.
Brenton Booth
A Poem for the Old Man Without a Name I’d get home late every night and all the lights were off in his building except his I’d look at his window as I walked up the fire stairs to get to my apartment his building was next to mine I was always tired from work I’d watch him sitting on the edge of his bed with a whiskey glass in his hand watching television looking like he didn’t have a worry in the world like every single second meant something special every night I came home from work he’d be there with the light on in the exact same position it was as if he were waiting for me to restore some hope to things after another completely wasted day though for the past week the blinds have been closed and light turned off today the blinds were open all the furniture was gone and tools sat in the spot he used to sit he is gone no one thinks of him anymore no one cares I care he was my light: I miss that light.
R.T. Castleberry
A LEISURELY DECLINE From a riverside porch, I watch rain roll down, spattering timbered banks, stone shoals. Breakfast is cold sausage and frontier biscuit. I can hear news tv through an open door, the phone in my back pocket I hesitate to answer. There are warnings through the day— of patriot storms, Jesus collapse. Dire works of providence seep into daily discourse, lessons for the Sabbath. I read online that angels block every gate, transmit their suffering to county rebel, conspirator, country preacher. Walking inside, latching the door, I close out the common benediction that rough nature is striking beauty. Like the calculation in emptied eyes of power, The tv view has changed. Between medication commercials comes invasion combat and commentary, then a hurricane report, with reporters undulating in the wind like coastal palm trees. Measures marked by cold decision, there is a justice to it. Ambition is climbing after trouble, privacy bargained, crucible documents changing hands in after-hours hallways. As I close the curtains, I see an ambulance speed the canal road, siren lost to the distance. Switching to music channels, indie pop falsettos and droning beats will carry the hours. Above me all morning, I watched the lights of descending airliners, imagining crews fighting to land in this crossing wind. Turning out my pockets, cell phone muted, I collapse to the sofa, settle in with Catton’s The Coming Fury, ironic intent applied.
Sharon Waller Knutson
Cyber Urban Cowboy He’s not John Travolta and I am not Debra Winger and we don’t fall in love riding a mechanical bull in a saloon as Mickey Gilly sings lookin’ for Love in all the wrong places. He’s not Tom Hanks and I am not Meg Ryan searching for soul mates in Seattle and New York City. Nor are we Robert Redford and Jane Fonda widowed and seeking companionship. He is just an Arizona cowboy poet and I am a Montana girl who publishes a poem about cows on the open Arizona range where I now live. He leaves a note in the comments section with his email address. I email him and get no response and I google his name looking for an obit or other tragic news, and all I see is a photo of a smiling cowboy in a black hat and shirt in his bio on Poets & Writers. I imagine him scribbling poems around a campfire as he herds cows up in the mountains, where there are no cell towers or Wi-Fi, and when he gets home he will find my emails piled up like presents under a tree and read them over supper of venison stew and cornbread biscuits.
Wayne F. Burke
Fear the nurses at the station in the cardio-rehab unit were telling ghost stories from their childhoods and I could think of nothing to add could not remember being scared of ghosts probably because there were much scarier things than ghosts: like the possibility of being beaten to death by a psychopath like catching a back-handed slap from my Uncle as I ran across the living room like growing up to be as dumb and look as ugly as some of the adults around me. Tuesday Night in Dullsville, USA some action down by the Mini-Mart but hard to tell what kind-- a punk in a pickup truck roars through-- street light changes red to green and back: birds dive bomb from trees and shadows spread across the hillside as the earth turns another degree and the sun's rays catch the topmost branches of the elm tree beside the Ace Motel on the corner of the intersection where cars move through, going somewhere-- unlike me. Trifecta I had triple bypass surgery and died on the table and was revived: did not return with an NDE to report, or even knowing of my demise-- found that out by reading the doctor's report on his desk while his back turned to me. One out of every thousand they said, before wheeling me to the operating room door where the doc stood with his team, all in hairnets and blue scrubs-- "any questions?" he asked. "Let's do it," I said. They ran the stretcher into the stadium, under the lights.
Ken Kakareka
i did I didn’t think that I would scrape a knee and then i did. I didn’t think that I would lose a tooth and then i did. I didn’t think that I would need braces and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get acne and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get cut from the soccer team and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get my face spit in and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get rejected from college and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get depressed and then i did. I didn’t think that I would see my parents split up and then i did. I didn’t think that I would almost lose an eye and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get varicose veins and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get nose and ear hairs, lonjas and a gut and then i did. I didn’t think that I would settle into a job and then i did. I didn’t think that I would have a kid with autism and then i did. I didn’t think that I would see my wife miscarry and then i did. I didn’t think that I would witness a school shooting and then i did. I didn’t think that I would see somebody die and then i did. I didn’t think that I would get a life-threatening illness and then i did. I didn’t think that I would die and then
John D. Robinson
JAMMIN Just like you, loss, has followed me all my life, loss of childhood, virginity, innocence, ambitions, dreams, friends and lovers, the loss of hope, for something better, loss of direction and belief and loss is natural and should be embraced, but we don’t embrace it, we hold it up for all to see or try to hide it away, the Buddhists say that ‘all life is suffering’ I think the Buddhists may have something here, loss is not something we get used to, we like to hold onto shit, like breath or love and at some point we have to let go, let go of it all, some Buddhists and other ways of life believe in reincarnation, well, fuck man, I’m always in for another jamming session.
Sushant Thapa
1. Catalogue of Life When all are instructions Life becomes a catalogue. When the journey is difficult The same walks become adventures. A darker side of a coin Still has a printed symbol on it. It is still on the other side. For the sake of Making a poem beautiful Adding decorations is A fools' paradise. Realities need no invitation. Negative and positive both Are the faces of composure. When we meet There shall be revelations Of how strangely close We tend to be. Friendship is a support. Unseen yet true feelings. 2. Cherishing the Faraway I cherish the faraway The flight and its height The immense measure of the horizon. What sets free is a passion. You never know if You were destined For the deeds. Art eases the pain It is there to soothe When you do not live In a suppress. Expression becomes The flowing river or The romanticized moon Still shining in the dark Alone among the multitudes Of the stars. I knew you When the strange air blew. No more a stranger. 3. Masked Specialist Way ahead of time A stone has its impressions Made to the mud. There is history buried In memories and painful wail. The fire of agony Ceases the woods of the mind. But a mind is a free nature. No taming screw Not an avalanche to the thought. A thought can still recover. I feel in my room That the world keeps knocking At my door. The world has a free entry But I cannot douse The ball of fiery emotion. I read for emotions. Only heightened perception Does not make me a specialist.