Eric Jenkins Sleepless in March 2020 That first night when the coughing from the baby monitor woke us, all we could do was hold one another, listen, and use our shirts to dry our cheeks. Eric Jenkins writes, teaches, and enjoys getting lost in the woods of central Indiana with his wife and two daughters. […]
Read MoreNatalie Wolf
Eric Jenkins “Pull Back, Push Forward”
Eric Jenkins Pull Back, Push Forward We call it a swing set, this seat that, at first, needs a push from someone to reach new heights above the clouds, which starts together but ends with a lonely leap into the mulch. Eric Jenkins writes, teaches, and enjoys getting lost in the woods of central Indiana […]
Read MoreKimberly Vargas Agnese “A Chicana”
Kimberly Vargas Agnese A Chicana A Chicana is both brown and white: a field of one hundred yellow flowers. A Chicana poet from Fresno, California and a finalist for the 2022 Andres Montoya Poetry Prize, Kimberly Vargas Agnese has written for “Rappahannock Review,” “SHIFT Magazine,” “Anacua Literary Arts Journal,” and “Rue Scribe,” among others. […]
Read MoreThu Anh Nguyen “Augur”
Thu Anh Nguyen Augur I’ve never trusted a groundhog, or a forecast because I just wait for the ladybugs to appear out of nowhere, one at a time, and then in a bloom, teaching me about taking refuge, the slow inching towards warmth. Thu Anh Nguyen is a poet whose Vietnamese name actually translates to […]
Read MoreGenoa Wilson “Not About the Weather”
Genoa Wilson Not About the Weather As daisies reach their foolhardy heads and gravel ticks the soles of my shoes I am trying to forget the language of snow Genoa Wilson teaches movement and writes poetry in central New York.
Read MoreSteve Klepetar “All Night I Watched You Burn”
Steve Klepetar All Night I Watched You Burn Your eyes turned turquoise, skin rippled in scarlet waves, but when dawn came, spreading over the sky like silk and glass I saw a body made of trees and light, a river shouting its name to the sea. Steve Klepetar can name the nine Muses and the […]
Read MoreJ.W. Goll “John Barleycorn”
J.W. Goll John Barleycorn Cheap bourbon half empty on the counter, a warm icebox with Budweiser and Coke, a dozen empty wine bottles used as candle holders and vases, seven dollars on the table, a lumpy, colorless couch, my best fifteen minutes, over and over in this furnace that is America’s heart, none of which […]
Read MoreJ.W. Goll “The Old West”
J.W. Goll The Old West The gunslinger motel, no match for the blowing snow, offers three fuzzy channels, photos of Roy Rogers and Trigger, a noisy heater on its last leg, and a sense of loss, nameless in such places, a deja vu just out of reach, so I stick with Bay Watch and titillation […]
Read More