• Poems

    Billie Dee: “Pediatrics”

    Billie Dee

    Pediatrics

    Back in the day I’d pull double shifts at the County Hospital, then race home to my waiting lover,
    shower, dress, dance all night in that smokey little dive off Sunset Boulevard—limp home, nap,
    shower, dress, repeat. . .

    my last day
    in the Emergency Room

    tooth marks
    on an infant’s thigh
    wide as her father’s grin

     


    Billie Dee is the former Poet Laureate of the U.S. National Library Service. A retired health-care worker, she earned her doctorate from UC Irvine, did post-graduate training at UCSD and UCLA. A California native, she now lives in the Chihuahuan Desert with her family and a pack of strays. Billie publishes both online and off. www.billie-dee-haiku.blogspot.com

    This poem first appeared in haikuKatha (2023).

     

  • Poems

    Natasha Del Bianco: “Trudeau meets Trump at Mar-a-Lago”

    Natasha Del Bianco

    Trudeau meets Trump at Mar-a-Lago (circa 2024)

    Found poem from O Canada (lyrics: Calixa Lavallée, Adolphe-Basile Routhier, Robert Stanley Weir), The Star Spangled Banner (lyrics: Francis Scott Key), and This Land is Your Land (lyrics: Woody Guthrie)

    native land
    command thee rise,
    glorious

    the perilous fight
    the rockets
    the bombs bursting

    this land was made for me
    that ribbon of highway
    that endless skyway
    that golden valley

    a voice sounding—
    a big, high wall
    this land was made for me

     


    Natasha Del Bianco lives in Vancouver, British Columbia. She is a queer mother, a legal writer, a part-time poet, and a full-time dreamer. With deep gratitude and respect, I am honoured to be learning and unlearning on the ancestral and unceded lands of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwxwú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) & səlilwətaɬ (Tsleil-Waututh Nation).

  • Poems

    Howie Good: “2 Dead, 6 Wounded”

    Howie Good

    2 Dead, 6 Wounded

    Her name was Natalie. They called her Samantha. Natalie/Samantha was 15.
    There’s talk she was bullied.  She attended a private Christian academy,
    Abundant Life. 2 killed, 6 wounded in Wisconsin school shooting,
    the headlines said. Natalie/Samantha was dead but uncounted
    in the tally of victims, excluded from our sympathy,
    banished below. Even as I’m thinking these things
    I’m debating if these are things I should be thinking.
    Natalie/Samantha shot and killed a teacher and
    a student and then herself. She brought the gun from home.
    Investigators are looking for a possible motive.
    Christmas was only just about a week away.

    Howie Good is author of the poetry book, The Dark, available from Sacred Parasite, which will also publish his book, Akimbo, in 2025.

  • Poems

    Alaina Hammond: “Two Gentiles Discussing Hitler”

    Alaina Hammond

    Two Gentiles Discussing Hitler

    “To understand all is to forgive all,”
    he says, from the rocking chair he’s more than earned.

    In response, I internally roll my eyes—
    though outwardly, I’m polite.

    Because I’m a philosophy major.
    And I’m twenty.
    So, I know everything.

    But then I remember:
    when he was eighteen,
    a freshman at Harvard,
    he dropped out of college to fight Hitler.

    He was shot down over France.
    His life saved by German soldiers—
    not quite Nazis,
    just men on the wrong side of a divided line,
    still doing their duty for the burning enemy before them.

    Shipped back to America,
    he survived nearly a year of surgery.
    At the end, adorned with a Purple Heart,
    a weak apology for the dent in his forehead.

    Barely anything left of his ears
    Just a bit of cartilage remains,
    to hug the holes.

    “To understand all is to forgive all,”
    he repeats with soft authority.

    Hitler is the reason children gawk at him.
    If he needs to forgive Hitler—
    then who the fuck are you, at twenty,
    to spit on his forgiveness?

    I tell my uncle I hear his point,
    even as I disagree.

    He’s a lawyer and a soldier.
    A hero in practice and on paper
    he wouldn’t want me to lie.

    Alaina Hammond is a poet, playwright, fiction writer and visual artist. @alainaheidelberger on Instagram.

  • Poems

    Darrell Petska: “Minding Snakes’

    Darrell Petska

    Minding Snakes

    The snakes we keep
    wriggle and writhe
    as if they want to be free,

    and given a crack, a fissure
    they’ll find it, slithering
    into the wilds to hunt,

    drawing us after their
    devious scales we’ve named
    according to their personalities:

    Come, Invidious!
    Greeneyes, show yourself!
    Killer, best get on home!

    True to their names, they’ll
    bite perceived enemies, though
    they’re wont to circle back

    to our confining cages
    where they thrived
    on the vermin we fed them.


    Darrell Petska is a retired university engineering editor and three-time Pushcart Prize nominee. His poetry appears in Verse-Virtual, 3rd Wednesday Magazine, Midwest Zen, and widely elsewhere (conservancies.wordpress.com). Father of five and grandfather of seven, he lives near Madison, Wisconsin, with his wife of more than 50 years.

     

  • Poems

    Arvilla Fee: “Soldier Pieces”

    Arvilla Fee

    Soldier Pieces

    His hands shake

    as I pass him the bowl,

    his eyes darting

    from side-to-side.

    I speak gently to him,

    like a negotiator

    poised on a windowsill

    coaxing a man

    from the ledge.

    He relaxes for a moment,

    sucks in a deep breath,

    releases it,

    picks up his fork.

    His face looks the same—

    half shadows, half flame

    from the candles I’d lit;

    yet I know it isn’t.

    There are worry lines

    etched into his brow,

    framing the corners

    of his mouth,

    his once bright smile.

    There is a guardedness,

    one I must accept

    as I gather the pieces

    to help make him whole.

     


    Arvilla Fee lives in Dayton, Ohio with her husband, children, and two dogs. Her works have been widely published and appear most recently in Wilderness House Literary Review and others. Her books The Human Side and This is Life are available on Amazon. To learn more, visit http://www.soulpoetry7.com

     

  • Poems

    Jane Biegun: “Reparation”

    Jane Biegun

    Reparation

    A poem, in my eyes, is a public document of experience
    —meant to be shared …an invitation to think hard
    about the human condition
    …. —Tim Seibles, PoemoftheWeek.com, October 5, 2007

    I want to apologize for my mother’s Uncle Henry whom I overheard say “black plague” back in the mid-50s when I was nine or ten, escaping from Chicago heat to stay for the summer with Aunt Bern and him in their rural Wisconsin town, population still under 200. I thought he meant sickness, that plague that killed so many in Europe I read about in my textbook. Then a decade later his meaning came clear. So finally, here in this fast, spiraling new century … to George, Trayvon, Breonna, Sandra, Martin, always Martin, and every other soul whose name should be overheard by children everywhere, I grievously apologize for Uncle Henry’s violence—he the tall, skinny, gruff, white-haired farmer who held my small hand when I was four on special walks to the general store for vanilla cones, who ate runny eggs every morning and poured new honey on soft fresh bread, donned clean overalls for Sunday service and taught me how to crack hickory nuts on the anvil—he whose toothless grin and gentle twinkle I think I had loved.

     


    Jean Biegun’s poetry has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. Her second chapbook Edge Effects was published in 2024 (Kelsay Books). Work recently has been published in Third Wednesday, As It Ought To Be, Right Hand Pointing, Unbroken, and Thin Places and Sacred Spaces: A Poetry Anthology, Amethyst Press.

     

     

  • Poems

    Howie Good: “The Trolley Problem”

    Howie Good

    The Trolley Problem

    Three kids are playing on the trolley tracks,
    oblivious to the trolley bearing down on them.

    You can save the kids, but only by pushing
    a really, really fat man with a job and a family
    in front of the trolley to divert it from its path.

    The surprised look in his eyes is like the cry of a bird.

    You will understand when I show you.


    Howie Good is a professor emeritus at SUNY New Paltz whose newest poetry book, The Dark, is available from Sacred Parasite, which will also publish his forthcoming book, Akimbo, in 2025.

  • Poems

    Richard Fox: “Facebook Birthday Note from My Cousin, 2016”

    Richard Fox

    Facebook Birthday Note from My Cousin, 2016

    for Maureen O’Donnell Bunting, in memoriam: 1963 – 2023

    I’m sorry that I missed your Birthday,
    I have been signing off FB for 2-3 days,
    then checking in, & popping off again—
    so tired of the angst & depression
    this election is bringing.

    I hope you had a wonderful meal,
    a good wine, & fabulous dessert,
    & your loved one to share it with you.

    Love to you both.

    Someday, I will show you a picture
    of my best friend.

    You will understand when I show you.


    Richard Fox has been a regular contributor of poetry and visual art to online and print literary journals. Swagger & Remorse, his book of poetry, was published in 2007. A collage by Richard is on the main page of The Scarred Tree. A poet and visual artist, he holds a BFA in Photography from Temple University, Philadelphia. He lives in Salt Lake City, UT.

  • Poems

    Dan Schwerin: “Always”

    Dan Schwerin

    Always

    Always behind him with an ice cream
    as he drags the mower.
    In his dreams he hears her,
    and the hay waits another cutting.
    A bull bellows when the pastor
    comes to this light in August.


    Dan Schwerin’s poetry comes from life on a farm or making his rounds across thirty plus years as a pastor in Wisconsin, and now as the bishop of the Northern Illinois-Wisconsin Area of The United Methodist Church. His debut haiku collection, ORS, from red moon press, won the Haiku Foundation’s Touchstone Award in 2016. His collection of American sijo, lightly, is available at red moon press. You can find him on Twitter @SchwerinDan.

  • Poems

    Matthew Caretti: 3 poems

    Matthew Caretti

    Synesthesia

    So soon like children’s laughter perched
    atop the carcass of a beached whale
    or Christmas song harmonies sung
    in the swelter of South Sea islands.

    After all these swift years still
    uncertain if the sea is more sound
    and fury or the wrinkle I feel of a soft
    blue sheet tucked into the horizon.

    Hearing the waterfall I find a dry wall
    of lava rock, where the blowhole ruptures
    a seasalt tongue, angel terns glide
    into thunder and the sated dog’s bay

    becomes the moon. Suddenly no stench
    from the chuckety-chuck of the cannery
    nor the coral reef riffing at ebb tide
    as the slow arch of pastel rainbows.

    In this world on fire with figurative
    innuendo red is all that makes sense,
    a paroxysm of paradox ringing into
    each false equivalency on the news.


     

    Altar of Unrest

    God has left us with nothing.
    Where is my father? Dead
    Now fifteen years. More. Not
    Gone gentle. His questions
    Beget further questions.
    A garage full of boxes
    And paradoxes of love. All
    That his sons won inside.
    Tarnished trophies and a first
    Baseball mitt. Photos of forgotten
    Worlds we once visited—
    Station wagon stories with
    Cigarette burns, the smoke
    Thick with laughter and tears.
    Where is my father now? God
    Might know a thing or two about
    Love for a son. But this father
    Sacrificed himself on the altar of
    Unrest, resting only in what
    He could never know. No occasion
    Though for the insoluble loss
    Of time. Of wars at home
    And abroad. Another ration
    With smokes and rusted tins
    To heal the wounded
    Heart of a million lies. No
    Not this. Not this ever
    Again, the light of love lost
    In some distant jungle. Too far
    Away. I, …
    I don’t know the way. Where
    Is my father?

     


    War Poem


    For Victoria Amelina

    Dandelions bloom atop
    old graves, dander and
    duft wetted by dewdrop
    nights. Mars rising
    with martial spirits
    conjuring a volley
    of harsh words
    from Hardy’s old ghosts,
    a firing into distant
    channels quarried
    ever closer.

    Cyber tunnels
    the latest hack
    hacking heroes into
    ones and zeroes
    some returning home
    to lose all over again.
    Sitting on the street
    corner an alone self-
    medicated marine
    burned by burn pits
    anointed by those old ghosts.
    No AV presentation
    at the VA to save this
    band of brothers.

    The complexities of
    a military industrial-
    ized mistake warfare
    for fairness that might
    makes right. Injustices
    juxtaposed with
    conscientiously objecting
    to the latitudes of pain
    most often paid in poverty,
    yet some move instead
    on a gentler path.

    The gift of finitude
    delivered too soon
    to objectify any losses
    lost in the hot desert
    or winter taiga. Only
    an audacious few
    find themselves
    looking down a barrel
    from the wrong end.
    No flowers this time
    to stuff inside
    or planted graveside,
    but add to this title
    “anti-”

    She made poetry
    of missile defense
    systems of loss. Batteries
    of verse bringing back
    the dead. Or almost
    so. Again those old ghosts.
    Trembling stars not seen
    from the bunker. One
    shining ever brighter,
    burning away fear,
    yet more distant
    than 37 light years.

     


    Matthew Caretti lives and teaches high school English in Pago Pago, American Samoa. His collections include Harvesting Stones (2017, winner of the Snapshot Press eChapbook Award), Africa, Buddha (2022, Red Moon Press) and Ukulele Drift: Poems from a Small Island (2023, Red Moon Press). His prose and poems appear regularly in Tiny Moments, Frogpond, Modern Haiku, contemporary haibun online, Cattails and several other journals. He is the recipient of a 2024 Touchstone Award for Individual Haibun presented by The Haiku Foundation.

  • Poems

    John Ganshaw: Under the Tropical Sun

    John Ganshaw

    Under the Tropical Sun


    Under the Tropical Sun
    The streets of the dusty tourist town were full of banter
    locals gibbering back and forth. tourists lured by the
    scents of ginger, lemongrass, and garlic; added to the
    pork and chicken frying in the sinful yet delicious
    oil. Frangipani blossomed in the trees, the scent
    a reminder of heaven on earth. A cover for the
    evil hidden from view. A world of trafficking that
    no one speaks, young men owned by ex-pats
    priced for the bidding. High on ICE to turn a
    trick, beaten, and raped in the darkness of their
    tormented lives. No one cares and all hope is lost
    speak up and be sent to prison, to be killed, it was
    their wish. The voice of a martyr and all for what?
    to protect the innocent from what happened to you.
    tears of shame become the smile of tomorrow.
    see the pain on his face and the suffering on
    his arms. write the stories of what was seen, and wish
    for a day when all is not lost. To live in a world where
    those who suffer can be free from the nightmare of a
    living death.

     


    John Ganshaw retired from banking to follow his dream of owning a hotel in Cambodia. He saw a world that changed his lens forever. John shares his experiences through poetry, essays, and a memoir in progress. John’s work has appeared in Dreich, Runamok Books/Growerly, Post Roe Alternatives, Fleas on the Dog, OMQ, Free the Verse, eMerge, Unapologetic, Wingless Dreamer, and others.

  • Poems

    Alvaro Carrasquel Gomez: two senryū

    Alvaro Carrasquel Gomez

    two senryū

     

    Fallujah, 2003
    the laments of mourners
    for unearthed skeletons

     


     

    sixty years later
    he denounces
    the renowned priest

     


    Alvaro Carrasquel Gomez is a senryū poet, but he is also a short story writer of splatterpunk and extreme horror, and a cursed poet. From mid-2023, he has been passionately exploring senryū, haiku, haibun, and erotiku. His work has been published so far by Otoroshi Journal (as “Vampirlibido”), tsuri-dōrō—a small journal of haiku and senryu, Shadow Pond Journal, Cold Moon Journal, Failed Haiku, Poetry Pea, and Sakura Haiku Anthology. He lives in Santiago de los Caballeros de Mérida, Venezuela.

  • Poems

    Richard L. Matta: The Mine Field

    Richard L. Matta

    The Mine Field


    Inside my mind are countless flowers,
    a trowel and soil in the wheelbarrow.
    There’s a maze in front of me, a maze
    of holes reaching to the darkness of souls.
    A toddler was here, a farmer there.
    A sunflower meadow, a field of wheat
    burned and bulldozed. So many tactics
    to fend off forces, so many strategies
    to deplete innocents of subsistence.
    The pressure triggers, the tripwires
    sometimes even an alluring trove
    of leftovers, or perhaps a shiny toy.
    Experts say animals in Africa—
    large and small—cower at the sound
    of a human voice, that in its presence,
    even the roar of a lion or tiger doesn’t
    elicit the same fearful response.

     


    Richard L. Matta is originally from New York’s rustic Hudson Valley. His work appears in Glint, Slipstream, Hole in the Head Review, Healing Muse, and elsewhere. He poetry was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2023. He currently resides in San Diego, California.

  • Poems

    Kelley White: Insouciant

    Kelley White

    Insouciant

    the way you whipped
    the hose out from under
    the child’s feet, angered by something
    so small—a break in your stride
    as you watered your flowers—
    literally swept her
    off her feet, and she didn’t
    skip a beat, just sat watching:
    it was unimaginable that
    you’d apologize

     


    Pediatrician Kelley White has worked in inner city Philadelphia and rural New Hampshire. Her poems have appeared in Exquisite Corpse, Rattle and JAMA. Her most recent collection is NO. HOPE STREET (Kelsay Books). She received a 2008 Pennsylvania Council on the Arts grant.

  • Poems

    Kelley White: “altruism…”

    Kelley White

    altruism
    my belief that
    you actually want
    the clothes I don’t want
    on my back


    Pediatrician Kelley White has worked in inner city Philadelphia and rural New Hampshire. Her poems have appeared in Exquisite Corpse, Rattle and JAMA. Her most recent collection is NO. HOPE STREET (Kelsay Books). She received a 2008 Pennsylvania Council on the Arts grant.