May 19, 2013

Fired by Michael Holme


You smiled when she told you it was over. Ironically
she hated your silences, 
but this moved your new found tongue 
as she sat in your 1970 Triumph Herald; 
battery drained; engine still.

She could have stood. 
It was a weighty scooter to ride. 
On a third tiring push
petrol ignited.

It must have been your euphoria
at being rid of her,
because you talked all her way home.

For almost a year she’d had free petrol
and never bought you a beer. In seven days
she’d summed her loss. 
She rang with an olive branch.
You didn’t commit.



Michael Holme is a two times science graduate who took to writing in 2000. He has been published many times both online and in the Christian journal 'Time of singing.' He lives with his dog Lucy in Manchester, UK. He'd love a Lotus Europa.

May 17, 2013

Badminton by Sara Biggs Chaney


3 mos. Triple marker results—abnormally high protein.
6 mos. Ultrasound—possible markers of genetic disorder, unknown.  
Recommended fetal amniocentesis to determine child’s condition. Parents declined.


After the ultrasound,
we drive south.  

We are going to the marshes,
our rackets beside us.

The dirt road is empty.
Nettles scrape our thighs.

Wet ground clutches us.
We exchange no word.

Then you back up to serve,
not minding the brush,

sting under foot. 
You toss the birdie high and gentle--allow an easy return.

From my stolid post I raise an arm,
tap back my answer.

Once before we came here,
to the muddiest promontory,

you tucked me in your concave parts,
told me how well we fit.

Today,             I swell inside
your grandmother’s dress,
(lime nylon with a jacket to match.)

I trip through grasses-- ringed, babied,  
unsound.

From now on,             both of us will carry our own fear, fleshed
in a question unasked.
We toss, we catch, we cradle.
Our lives:  An old game
in new territory.



Sara Biggs Chaney lives, works, and walks her dog in Vermont. Her work is forthcoming in Stone Highway Review, Crack the Spine, Eunoia Review, and other places. You can catch up with her at sarabiggschaney.blogspot.com.

May 15, 2013

Reunion by William Cullen, Jr.


The dead linger with us
so we must bury them again
outside of ourselves
in ground we'll never draw near
until like a line of fine mist
casting no shadow
we merge with other mist
over earth almost fogotten
forming beads of fresh dew
on stones that bear our names.
 

 
William Cullen, Jr., is a veteran and works at a non-profit in Brooklyn, NY.  His poetry has appeared in Camroc Press Review, Gulf Stream, Pirene's Fountain, Red River Review, Right Hand Pointing, Spillway, Wild Goose Poetry Review and Word Riot.

May 13, 2013

From Lover-Boy in the Desert by John Grey


Cactus taller than a New York Knick,
wind wooly and dry,
alien antennae ears on rabbits,
lizards with skin of clotted beards...
feel like I’m on another planet,
and the mountains, so haunting,
especially at dusk,
where the red’s so pervasive,
I’d be wearing it
if I weren’t so gold already.

I’m sending you a postcard
because I’ve no access to email out here.
Besides, with email, I could be in the next room.
But a card purchased at a Texaco station
somewhere in the Arizona desert,
you really know where the word is coming from.
In this case, out of the hissing mouth
of a rattle snake.
But turn it over.
That’s where the brief,
“Wish you were here” awaits.
And don’t forget the X’s
and the magic word, “Love.”

Tomorrow, I’m booked into the Desert Motel.
They advertise as being wired.
Read the fine print on this card,
I’m wired already.



John Grey is an Australian born poet. Recently published in International Poetry Review, Chrysalis and the science fiction anthology, “Futuredaze” with work upcoming in Potomac Review, Sanskrit and Fox Cry Review.

May 10, 2013

Hit and Run by M.J. Iuppa


Some would study this rented room’s disarray & think:
priority, scanning the loose stacks of papers, the open
desk drawer stuffed with receipts & unpaid bills– secret
stash of miniature chocolate bars for just in case & notice,
on the lap of a swivel chair, the constant cherry top flash
of messages stored on a chunky white telephone. Every-
thing points North– like the last spin of the globe stopped
on a desert. They’d imagine the family in the photo, that one
friend who never forgot a birthday–  the tropical postcard
greeting: I am here. Wish you were too. No one knows how
he died exactly. He went for a walk on the mountain road
& never came back. Days later, they found half of him– legs
still dancing against a tree– some would say, he left out of spite.




M.J. Iuppa lives on a small farm near the shores of Lake Ontario.  Her most recent poems have appeared in Poetry East, The Chariton Review, Tar River Poetry, Blueline, The Prose Poem Project, and The Centrifugal Eye, among others.  Recent chapbook is As the Crows Flies (Foothills Publishing, 2008) and second full length collection, Within Reach, (Cherry Grove Collections, 2010); forthcoming prose chapbook Between Worlds (Foothills Publishing).  She is Writer-in-Residence and Director of the Visual and Performing Arts Minor program at St. John Fisher College, Rochester, NY.

May 8, 2013

Blur by Richard Schnap


He dreamed of a world
Engulfed in fog
Rendering all faceless

Each one following
The one who was closest
While another followed behind

And their voices faded
In the clouded air
So they knew no names

As they moved along
Through a vague landscape
With no beginning or end






Richard Schnap is a poet, songwriter and collagist living in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. His poems have most recently appeared locally, nationally and overseas in a variety of print and online publication.