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delicious new poetry
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
'the doors of the night open' — poetry by Juan Armando Rojas (translated by Paula J. Lambert)
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
'we can be forlorn women' — poetry by Stevie Belchak
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Nov 29, 2025
'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Nov 29, 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Nov 29, 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Nov 29, 2025
Nov 29, 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Nov 28, 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Nov 28, 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Nov 28, 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Nov 28, 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nov 28, 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Nov 28, 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
Nov 28, 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Nov 28, 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Nov 28, 2025
Nov 28, 2025
‘in the glitter-open black' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 31, 2025
‘in the glitter-open black' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'poet as tarantula,  poem as waste' — poetry by  Ewen Glass
Oct 31, 2025
'poet as tarantula, poem as waste' — poetry by Ewen Glass
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'my god wearing a body' — poetry by Tom Nutting
Oct 31, 2025
'my god wearing a body' — poetry by Tom Nutting
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'Hours rot away in regalia' — poetry by Stephanie Chang
Oct 31, 2025
'Hours rot away in regalia' — poetry by Stephanie Chang
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'down down down the hall of mirrors' — poetry by Ronnie K. Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
'down down down the hall of mirrors' — poetry by Ronnie K. Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'Grew appendages, clawed towards light' — poetry by Lucie Brooks
Oct 31, 2025
'Grew appendages, clawed towards light' — poetry by Lucie Brooks
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'do not be afraid' — poetry by Maia Decker
Oct 31, 2025
'do not be afraid' — poetry by Maia Decker
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'The darkened bedroom' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Oct 31, 2025
'The darkened bedroom' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
'I am the body that I am under' — poetry by Jennifer MacBain-Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
'I am the body that I am under' — poetry by Jennifer MacBain-Stephens
Oct 31, 2025
Oct 31, 2025
goddess energy.jpg
Oct 26, 2025
'Hotter than gluttony' — poetry by Anne-Adele Wight
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 26, 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Oct 26, 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'black viper dangling a golden fruit' — poetry by Nova Glyn
Oct 26, 2025
'black viper dangling a golden fruit' — poetry by Nova Glyn
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'It would be unfair to touch you' — poetry by grace (ge) gilbert
Oct 26, 2025
'It would be unfair to touch you' — poetry by grace (ge) gilbert
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'Praying in retrograde' — poetry by Courtney Leigh
Oct 26, 2025
'Praying in retrograde' — poetry by Courtney Leigh
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'To not want is death' — poetry by Letitia Trent
Oct 26, 2025
'To not want is death' — poetry by Letitia Trent
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025
'Our wildness the eternal now' — poetry by Hannah Levy
Oct 26, 2025
'Our wildness the eternal now' — poetry by Hannah Levy
Oct 26, 2025
Oct 26, 2025

Photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'the tidal pull of night' — poetry by Jane Lewty

September 22, 2025

HYMN


1. Blame the ventral tegmental area, I’m going to coalesce
2. A pervasive sense of disquiet spreading. Like that Magritte-sky feeling I get
3. One day I will tell you about fury


1. No lyrid meteor shower, but tomorrow something will happen
2. A glitch in the deadpan awe of coherence, perhaps? Unbound energies tend
3. Fricatives elide, which means that often


1. We’ve cause to linger; be glacial in the tidal pull of night as if
2. to summon forth ghosts. Wounds can only be healed in reiteration if they’re there:
3. Every still life-esque is fury. Perhaps


1. all ceremony aspirationally bleeds into the future
2. Honored as wounds in the first place. Like lace under-evening-wear, maybe
3. you’d like to keep me affixed for longer?


STILL LIFE, AT 4PM

I started something:
the chronology of a day, mine
a fracturing sky, held
by smoke, spring, birds-eye,
rain tiny & florid. Outside is hard.
Hiding is perhaps easier
amid candles & room-angles
Or screens & their search. So, then
what is the difference between your existence
and that of a saint?

Well, that I never had – never –
such a feeling, tripping over joy.
Look at this work: the stare
goes nowhere into the world
but here – soft-cornered squares
in squares, squared wire with temper-
ing. Faint vapor of faces upped & hurled, lit
by flares. Since we’re not young, I need to
say I got what I wanted. Nothing warped,
no pain soft-rolled,
numbed & sleep-
talked into. The colors, they say bring me something
I can live with
. We sit in the stretch amid storms,
convulsive ones. The surprise light is not heavy,
the petal-ing of orange only
where it ought to have been,
the loner-squalor of white
somehow fluoroscoped
& common to the bodies. Look outside: the sidewalks
are drying. With this set of placements:
mine, mined, my day, mine own
my hindself & new self
it is still hard to see oneself seen as.


Jane Lewty is the author of two full-length poetry collections: Bravura Cool (1913 Press) and In One Form To Find Another (CUP Poetry Center). She teaches art history and creative writing in Baltimore. 

These poems are forthcoming in Vespers (Kuhl House Poets, 2026).

In Poetry 2025 Tags Jane Lewty
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Via here.

'Guernica and grief in the image' — poetry by Sal Randolph

September 12, 2025

In the Image


Guernica and grief in the image, grief of mothers in the image, grief of fathers and children in the image, places where we once ate sweets in the market in the image, concrete in the image, wounds and death in the image, and again, is love wrong, I mean, morally wrong? There is revolution in the image, but I’ve lost the revolution the way the war was lost, and lost, and lost again. There is rising up and being beaten in the image. There is broken in the image, and strength in the image. And I wonder where I am in the image, if I am that leaf that was once on the tree when the tree stood, or if I am the bewildered bird looping the sky looking for home and there will never be home not for me not for you not for anyone in the image, there will simply never be home. I am not at home in the image, and I am not at home when I put the image down. And I know you want the image to stop being, I know you want the image never to have been, and I know, also, that you are glad hearted to be in the new image, in the forest of hands and the shouting up and the side by side and the walking and the writing and the speaking and the signing, and where, you are wondering, is that person I thought I knew, the one I thought would be here.


The Old Love


Let me love who I love, let me awaken, no, I mean let me wake up, let me wake up in the ordinary way, in the light from the window in the noise of the street in the noisy parakeet’s screaming, in the unknown of the stuttering day, in the unfolding coffee, in the screen, in the portal, in the thin knowledge of what is happening elsewhere, in Bernadette’s sink with the white clothes where I am getting clean, ordinary clean, whether I’m young in this story or not, whether I’ve cut my hair down so far it’s the shortest wherever I go, if I could drive myself a little mad with raw desire and experiment, if I could just love, only that, or, that again, the way a man stood in a crowded room and said we could never love anyone new, that it was always the old love coming around again, which means, I think, that it was never actually love in the first place, but then why did it begin with O, why did it end in silence, and I wonder about Louise alone in her house next door, retreating to the upper rooms, but anyway, let me forgive it all and let me put down the heavy things by the door and come inside at the end of the day.


Sal Randolph is an artist and writer who lives in New York and works between language and action. She is the author of The Uses of Art, a memoir of encounters with works of art. Her poems have been featured in BOMB, jubilat, La Vague, Oxidant Engine, Pamenar, Sound American, Vestiges, and elsewhere; her art work has appeared internationally at museums and in exhibitions including the Glasgow International, Ljubljana Biennial, Manifesta 4, and the São Paulo Biennial. Sal Randolph is a Zen priest and co-founder of dispersed holdings, a publishing project.

Her weekly is Free Words (salrandolph.substack.com).

In Poetry 2025 Tags Sal Randolph
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Via here.

'in this in-between time' — poetry by Mira Mason-Reader

September 12, 2025

On finding my grandmother

It’s always that time between night
and morning anymore. When no one thinks
about bellies or how to make friends at work.
I find myself here, inspecting how a peek of
my waist might appear if I lifted my arms (just so).

But today is not a day to be perceived. Today is
a day to commune with my grandmother
in this in-between time, to find her in
every shade of purple.


On finding you in the moonlight

As if everything shifted one degree to the left, off kilter;
like being pushed on a merry-go-round with one eye open,
watching the sky shake and then blur. How tentative this
space is, like the awe-filled acknowledgement
of conceding my crush out loud.

How softly the moon considers the shape of you–
touching you, neck down to belly, measuring your length
in dandelion stems, in candy wrappers.

Listening to you breathe next to me,
I’ll stay as long as you want.


Mira Mason-Reader is a writer and dancer living in Oregon. A graduate of the MA in Creative Writing program from University College Cork, her work is forthcoming in the New York Quarterly and has appeared in Shō Poetry Journal, Grand Little Things, Cordella Press, ELKE, The Walrus Literary Magazine, and Voices and Visions Journal, among others.

In Poetry 2025 Tags Mira Mason-Reader
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yellow flowers

Via here.

‘the howling dark and bright’ — poetry by ire’ne lara silva

September 12, 2025

I see the poem when I dream

—after the painting by Octavio Quintanilla

in my

waking life my hands feel white fur soft and warm how do i say its musk is the scent of turquoise with an edge of burnt copper all of my memories rinsed in acid was it fury or was it tenderness all the burning

i hear

tiny huizache blooms falling in a sideways blizzard of xylophones have i ever tasted anything that wasn’t music on my tongue that wasn’t arpeggios or broken chords spiraling inside my body

what is

a body this shifting thing this impermanent thing this dark shining thing this dying living thing that dances when it breathes this fire thing that thunders even when it’s still that runs when it should tremble

is the

body more real when it pushes against another body or is it more real when beginning and ending lose all meaning i drove once through a cloud at dawn drove on a white caliche road and the world was pink and without dimension

my eyes

tasted spun sugar and if it had been even remotely possible i would have driven forever but the road came to an end i think it came to an end i think my hands touched time and black bone and all the howling

and then

i hear the coyotes the day howling of coyotes and the night howling of coyotes and the coyotes are calling me calling me to return to them and the howling is a lullabye and i coil my body and close my eyes

and i

dream and then i see the complete shape the skeleton the flesh the muscle the fur the fire the running i see the whole animal alive and free and hunting when i dream i see my entire self when i dream i see the entire poem


grief, revisited

they say grief is a shadow a black hollow a
deep well a silence without dimensions a
grunting limping thing an ache that fades
and fades and fades
they lie or i was built
wrong i know no fading thing i know i am i
live this bright howling thing electric arc’ing
lightning in every color everywhere all at
once
years have passed and it surprises
me still ambushes me punches me in the gut
a sudden memory an unexpected song the
intense yearning to share new things
how
casual other people are with their love or is
it that they are careless with their grief
tossing it over the first cliff they come to say
to it no i will not shelter you
it is not seemly
to weep and weep i will not let this loss or
any loss make me a child inconsolable and
alone i will pack this loss away in a heavy
box lock it seal it it will never see the light of
day no sound will escape it
i am animal in
my grief the passing of time means nothing
always something wailing always something
whimpering always the beast laying on its
side scratching at the earth
i know no other
way love and grief are in equal measure
each other’s kindling anyone would say it is
too much to ask to be loved this way too
much to say
if you love me love me this way
and if you lose me grieve me this way
but
what are we if not fragile vessels of flesh
just barely able to contain all the howling all
the howling dark and bright


ire’ne lara silva, 2023 Texas State Poet Laureate, is the author of five poetry collections, furia, Blood Sugar Canto, CUICACALLI/House of Song, FirstPoems, and the eaters of flowers, two chapbooks, Enduring Azucares and Hibiscus Tacos, a comic book, VENDAVAL, and a short story collection, flesh to bone, which won the Premio Aztlán. ire’ne is the recipient of a 2025 Storyknife Writers Residency, the 2021 Texas Institute of Letters Shrake Award for Best Short Nonfiction, a 2021 Tasajillo Writers Grant, a 2017 NALAC Fund for the Arts Grant, the final Alfredo Cisneros del Moral Award, and was the Fiction Finalist for AROHO’s 2013 Gift of Freedom Award. Her second short story collection, the light of your body, will be published by Arte Publico Press in Spring 2026. http://www.irenelarasilva.wordpress.com

In Poetry 2025 Tags Ire’ne Lara Silva
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Editor's Note: We are resurrected & august poetry

August 25, 2025

editor’s note

O, what a summer it has been. A summer of resurrection. After three years, Luna Luna is back, right at this threshold season between the gushing fruits of summer and the menacing night.

I couldn’t start publishing again without being open about why and what and how, though: Over the past few years of goneness, I sincerely tinkered with the thought of bringing Luna Luna back from the underworld—but the truth was, I just wasn’t ready.

Life is tidal. Was tidal. Will be tidal again. Beautiful things (my wedding in Sicily, travels, my new book) and terrible things (the COVID landscape, I broke my back, family illness, chronic illness, a fire in our building) converged, and they all, as a bloodletting, asked things of me.

It was also just me. Burnout, malaise, a need for presence. Life.

I think literary editors ought to be able to discuss the challenges of running a literary magazine, because it’s not just reading and formatting poems. It’s a devotion. And the call comes from inside the house.

For all of us writers, it is an ongoing struggle to integrate creativity into the cacophonies of living. For me, this was certainly true, and it meant taking several years to reflect on what worked and what didn’t.

And so, as you see here, I have pared the site down and reshaped it—molded it into something new. Poetry is our key focus—a throughline from our earliest days over a decade ago.

Each month, you will see 11 poets published. Eventually, we’ll publish author interviews and poetry book reviews. But for now: One hymn. A single rose.

More so, it seems that every so often we are hit with new clamors of Poetry is dead! Snobs call for the Old Gods, critics slam the lyrical and abstract, and puffed-up institutions push the same sorts of voices.

All of this as the threat of human extinction looms, amidst a backdrop of fascism, genocide, starvation, ableism, AI theft, and soul-deadening algorithms.

And yet, we know. Good poetry glows from the margins, in the background. It takes long-exposure photographs. It reminds us of humanity. It documents and gives language to the unutterable. It is how we pray to the saints, how we dirty up our bodies, how we return to the earth. It is ecstatic and eternal, and it is alive. No think piece or institution or cynic is bigger or louder than the enduring and connective thread of language. Especially poetry. It fills the gap between what is and our yearnings.

Like many literary journals, we are here to balance the scales. We want to pour lusciousness into amphoras of blood. We want to resist the fragmentations of self by showing up whole in our beauty and transgressions. We are feasting.

Thank you for being here.

—Lisa Marie Basile


August 2025 poetry

'our gaze aqueous' — poems by Gioele Galea (translated by Abigail Ardelle Zammit)

'in dreams it’s your hands I see' — poetry by Kirun Kapur

'pulled from dark stars' — poetry by Devan Murphy

'disappear into the honeysuckle’s undying' — poetry by Marcus Myers

'a kind of devotion' — poetry by Elizabeth Sulis Kim

'light in my teeth' — poetry by Lisa Marie Oliver

'I felt like I was disappearing' — poetry by Amirah Al Wassif

'we dream up black horses' — poetry by Alyssandra Tobin

'an amalgam double-ravenous' — a poem by Mallie Holcomb

'something about becoming' — poetry by Isabelle Correa

'all these lives swell up' — poetry by Marie Nunez


Lisa Marie Basile is an author, poet, and editor based in Jersey City, NJ and NYC. She is the author of a few books of poetry, including SAINT OF (White Stag Publishing, 2025), Nympholespy (Inside the Castle, 2019, which was a finalist in the 2017 Tarpaulin Sky Book Awards selected by Bhanu Kapil), Apocryphal (Noctuary Press, 2014), and Andalucia (The Poetry Society of New York, 2012). She’s also written non-fiction, including Light Magic for Dark Times. She holds an MFA from The New School in NYC and is the founding editor of Luna Luna Magazine.

Her essays, interviews, poetry, and other works can be found in The New York Times, Catapult, Narratively, Tinderbox Poetry, Lover’s Eye Press, Tin House, Best American Poetry, Sporklet (edited by Richard Siken), Best Small Fictions (selected by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Robert Olen Butler), and Best American Experimental Writing 2020 (selected by Carmen Maria Machado and Joyelle McSweeney).

Read SAINT OF.

Sign up for TENDER HAUNT, a four-week, generative poetry workshop. 

In Editor's Note Tags Editor's note, Lisa Marie Basile, editor's note
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'all these lives swell up' — poetry by Marie Nunez

August 25, 2025

Crush/Wound

To set fire to veins is to scorch all fruits off the earth. A succulent desert is born. I eat ice cream every night, thinking, this is how you love in the middle of a dry season. Instead, the sugarmilk dissolves into water, into weight, and suddenly, we are no longer girl but ghostwoman. She wears her own topography, carves and decorates and hides all that she is. In an ancient mother tongue, this would mean supernatural grace. In this world, it only means, caution,

danger ahead.


Without


Absence is heavy when the landline rings at midnight and there, in the hollow silence, vibrates rage on the voice machine. Absence amplifies in the beginning of summer when all your friends celebrate in cataclysmic fashion in their signature youthful rebellion. Absence plateaus into a more permanent sadness come autumn. Absence is the one. Absence is the best friend turned heartbreak turned death because no one taught you the importance of time and momentum until adulthood. Absence is learning everything on your own. 


Absence is–


In The Midst of Healing


I.

I need to shut up before I disappear once again. At the center of myself will always be ghost. Sweetness says to slow down more often. My tongue doesn’t know how to speak these mindful languages, so she invents poetic emergencies to keep her busy. 


II.

Aloneness is allowing myself to be okay. To be more than that. This mood so exotic, I try to liken it to the history of my mothers. The first, always praying. The second, always wandering. The third, now working beyond the man. All these lives swell up. This manyed something gets to be too heavy sometimes. 


III.

The assemblage of my disorders is not to count all the ways I fail to love. But to continue to face the sun with enthusiasm and let that light feed my heart. To flirt between golden & not because yes, even this darkness contributes to my overall essence.


Marie Nunez has an MFA in Writing from VCFA. She has had work published in Kitchen Table Quarterly, Half Mystic Journal, and Ghost City Press. Her debut poetry book, I Bloom in the Dark, will be out December 2025 through Querencia Press. 

In Poetry 2025 Tags Marie Nunez
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By Lisa Marie Basile (via Museo di Roma - Palazzo Braschi)

'something about becoming' — poetry by Isabelle Correa

August 25, 2025

AT 17


I wonder about the masculine
urge to prepare for the inevitable
apocalypse by buying steel bats
and acres of horses, the desire
for inevitability itself,
the engine behind legacy.
By a lake from my childhood
I slipped a boy into my mouth
in the grass in the afternoon
like a dream, like America shot
in the veins at the beginning
of the end. This is history
in my body killing it for fun.
What have we learned so far
from skinny dipping and spinning
doughnuts in the dunes? Church
can be anywhere. My heart belongs
to everyone but me. Mother is a myth
I made myself believe in on nights
I couldn’t fall asleep. Father is future-
less concrete. Last week I bled
in my uniform and left chemistry
early before she got to the elements.
Now I’ll never know the elements.
Oh well. I like to sit in the heavy heat
of the car after everyone else
heads inside. Maybe then
I will teach myself something useful.
Something about becoming.


LEARNING TO EAT MEN LIKE AIR
—title from “Lady Lazarus” by Sylvia Plath

Three girls in our first apartment.
18 last spring. Believers in the sin
of the flesh. We could recite the book

of Romans while drawing
infinities with our hips. We could tie
a cherry stem with our tongues

into a cross. Freshly liberated, we were
learning the basics: how to separate
lights and darks, how to carry keys

like claws when walking at night,
how to take someone
in our mouths as if we did not

exist. We had boyfriends
like splinters in our hands.
In the dark, a hushed we can’t

but we did, and we didn’t break
or burn. Sucking skin,
we spat them out.


Isabelle Correa is a poet from Washington state living in Mexico City. She studied creative writing at Western Washington University, is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and is the author of the chapbook Sex is From Mars But I Love You From Venus. She is a winner of the 2024 Jack McCarthy Book Prize with Write Bloody Publishing for her debut full-length collection, Good Girl and Other Yearnings. Her work has appeared in Hobart, Pank, The Rebis, and more. Find her on Instagram: @isabellecorreawrites and on Substack: A Poem Is A Place.

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'an amalgam double-ravenous' — a poem by Mallie Holcomb

August 25, 2025

bulimia (n.)

from ancient greek boulīmia,
literally “ox-hunger” as an affliction–

from boȗs, “cow”

and Līmos, “starvation;
the goddess of famine.”

an amalgam double-ravenous;
sunken sallow and holy,
hollow-loined, void-bellied
but bovine, waddling still
colossal alone in the
sacred wasteland and taken
by a hunger not human,
but both animal and divine.


Mallie Holcomb holds a B.A. in English from University of North Carolina Asheville. Her poetry has appeared in Ghost City Review, The Bitchin’ Kitsch, and The Emerson Review. Lately she has been working in nonprofits, practicing yoga, and testing the veracity of “we publish both established and emerging poets.”

In Poetry 2025 Tags Mallie Holcomb
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Edwin Austin Abbey 

'we dream up black horses' — poetry by Alyssandra Tobin

August 11, 2025

Alyssandra Tobin is the author of PUT EYES ON ME NOT LIKE A CURSE, a chapbook published by Quarterly West in 2022. Her poetry appears in Poetry Northwest, Poet Lore, New Ohio Review, Grist, Fugue, and elsewhere. 

In Poetry 2025 Tags Alyssandra Tobin
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Photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'I felt like I was disappearing' — poetry by Amirah Al Wassif

August 11, 2025

When My Arm Flew Into the Air

When my arm flew into the air,
I calmed myself by believing I must be dreaming.
Any moment now, I would wake to the sound
of the gecko that’s been living in my room
for the past four months.

I haven’t killed it.
I don’t want to.

I didn’t feel like I was flying.
I felt like I was disappearing.

You know that strange training—
when you teach your body to die,
and bit by bit,
you start to feel each part fade?

I smelled the okra stew
our ninety-year-old neighbor was cooking.
I saw a large yellow butterfly
telling a joke in Salvador Dalí’s ear.

He was trapped inside a painting
hanging across from the neighbors’ window.
I saw him laugh.

And I thought:
He really was mad.
Or maybe I’m the mad one.

It’s not easy to watch your arm
lift off into the air.
Not easy to ask:
Did you really detach from my body?
and hear it answer
in a voice beyond logic—
the voice of a muffled child,
as if his parents had rushed the burial,
believed he was gone too soon,
sealed the coffin,
and drove away.

When my arm flew up,
I thought:
This is delirium.
Maybe I’m dying.

Maybe I’m about to write a new poem—
one that will be rejected
by many editors
but adored by one person,
who will carve it into the bark
of a massive fig tree.

And after he walks home,
the fig tree will stir from its long sleep
and finish writing the rest of the poem.

I don’t know exactly what happened.
But I do know this:

Whatever part of you flies off
becomes braver
than it ever was
before.


Yesterday, I Met My Jinn Double

Yesterday, I met my jinn double.
Her fingers were shaped like forks.
She smiled at me three times—
with an upside-down mouth.

The roughness of her skin reminded me
of the last time I touched a leaf with my bare hand.

A long time ago,
back when trees could still be touched,
back when trees belonged to the earth.
Back when grape clusters were earrings—
and ropes to escape.

I knelt before her and whispered:
“How many times have they killed you?”
And I heard the echo:
“How many times have they killed me?”

I’m not her.
I don’t want to be her.
I’m free.
I flutter from flower to flower,
tasting mulberries,
playing with clay.

She points to the moon,
trying to pull it down with a rope.
I got scared.
I wet myself.

I’m not a child—
but fear makes everyone do that.
The baby next door does it.
So did my grandfather—
and he was a bank manager.

No one is bigger than fear.

She comes closer.
Her feet were shaped like hooks.
I step back.
Then again.
And again—
until I disappear.

Or wake up
from the dream.


Amirah Al Wassif is an award-winning poet with several publications to her name. Her poetry collection, For Those Who Don’t Know Chocolate was published in February 2019 by Poetic Justice Books & Arts, followed by her illustrated children’s book, The Cocoa Boy and Other Stories in February 2020. Bedazzled Ink Publishing Company published her most recent poetry book, How to Bury a Curious Girl in 2022. Her forthcoming poetry collection, The Rules of Blind Obedience will be released in December 2024.

Amirah’s poems have appeared in various print and online publications, including South Florida Poetry, Birmingham Arts Journal, Hawaii Review, The Meniscus, Chiron Review, The Hunger, Writers Resist, Right Now, Reckoning, New Welsh Review, Event Magazine, and many others.

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Photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'light in my teeth' — poetry by Lisa Marie Oliver

August 11, 2025

Aubade with Light In My Teeth

Daybreak. Broken fever.
Drip of the eggshell sink. Light
in my teeth. Quavering smoke-brain,
mute steps. Panel of bright fronds,
pink orbs presses window panes.
Last night, the mimosa tree fell.
I did not hear it. How not to gorge.
How not to fear. I’m not afraid
he said before he died. Almost
last words. I did not understand
the way he was brought down
minus any thunder. How to respire.
How to describe a silk tree’s last
gasps. How to shrine the afterwards,
unquiet altar of branches traced
with morning. Cool brow.
Bark-husk. Honey. Resin.


12 questions
after Bhanu Kapil

On a mountain trail at the ocean we visit an alder with split trunks intertwined, call it ours.

*

Every day, I feed crows and hummingbirds. A seagull perches on my neighbor’s roof, watching hungrily. 200 miles from home. 144 hours as the bird flies.

*

In this metaphor I’m all three variations of birds.

*

After my lover dies, I visit the tree. I offer feathers, skin, hair, shells.

*

A pale whelk on the sand: apex, suture, whorl, rib, striations, outer lip, aperture, spire.

*

Memory is a heavy hooked beak.

*

I walk fully clothed into the ocean. Seagulls squat on wet sand, mired with rain. For one brief moment, I remember nothing.

*

Despite expectations and desire, there is nothing silent beneath a wave.

*

After he dies, I pull out my hair. It takes many days to break my teeth. Feed them to the seagulls. Throw each arm into the sea. These knees. My cleaved feet. Bury them under marram grass until all that remains is a useless engorged heart.

*

Rain all night. Fog shore. No partition between wave and sky.

*

A balcony with a view of basalt sea stack. He is too sick to leave the bed. I eat quietly to not wake him. I’ve never tasted anything so perfectly sweet.

*

Whenever I consume a huckleberry.


Lisa Marie Oliver is the author of "Birthroot" (Glass Lyre Press). Recent poems have appeared in Harbor Review, Tupelo Quarterly, Rust and Moth, and elsewhere. She lives in Portland, Oregon with her son. For more: lisamarieoliver.com

In august 2025, Poetry 2025 Tags Lisa Marie Oliver
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'a kind of devotion' — poetry by Elizabeth Sulis Kim

August 11, 2025

The bird


I saw the bird
heard
its high pitched trill
when I thought of a bird it’s what I saw
autumn
its cold-warm glow
the wind burnt my wet hair
or that’s how it seemed then
four years after the cat died
or rather,
was put out of her misery
in a room where nothing grew
it was late in the evening
hunger
no appetite we tasted the
bile at the
back of our
throats
death was uneventful
but the bird
flittered under my arm when I thought of it
disappeared into the thicket
in that shaded corner of town
months before I walked the crescent
glancing into the old houses
catching wafts of rose-tinted air
the Near East in the north
it always comes back again.
those petals were dew glazed and sweet
the bird came later when the flowers were gone
wet fir trees stirred
everything else garden mulch
and stone


The Heron
 

whenever I think of 
the heron
I think of 
the girl who traced the 
playground 
that now feels like a graveyard
hovered around its seams
weightless 
elated 
she stood on one leg
forgot to pray
or rather
thought her fasting 
a kind of devotion 
at the altar overlooking 
the precipice 
I wanted to be possessed by the 
same demoness 
or was she a haunting 
or a feeling 
or a spirit fuelled by light and air 
a body
borrowed:
something to overcome 
another mind-fuck myth: 
mind and body cannot be separated 
beyond the starving girl 
the heron stands on one leg
waiting for some thing
or other


Elizabeth Sulis Kim is an Edinburgh-based writer. Her writing has appeared in The Guardian, BBC Culture, Ambit, the LA Review of Books, the New Orleans Review, TANK, Stylist, Refinery29, Electric Literature, and Oh Comely, among others. She is the founding editor of Cunning Folk Magazine and edited Spiritus Mundi: Writings Borne from the Occult. 

In Poetry 2025, august 2025 Tags Elizabeth Sulis Kim
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photo by Lisa Marie Basile

'disappear into the honeysuckle’s undying' — poetry by Marcus Myers

August 4, 2025

Love Song (6)

When she turned away my shame spoke its face
Tanned from a can  wearing its awful straw hat
And rusted sideburns like curved knives
And in cocky seersucker suspenders sweaty 
Spiting in my inner ear you’re not you’re too
And it fingers while mouthing the Mark Twain
Through its cigar-chomped mustache 
A tooth-rotted
And tobacco-stained vernacular in the excavation
Of the mud-preserved vessel
I can’t unhear its jawbone’s gold fillings when it says
You’re a stupid mother 
A dumber father of your futures
When she left my shame acted
It found me in my private quarters
Barged on in and pulled a cleaver from a leather sleeve
Hidden beneath my jacket slung left of my heart
It got what it demanded 
A pound of our flesh 
The returns on our returns


Can We Stop Calling it Blue Bile 

 

If we haven’t spoken 
In many years, the air
Between the trees
Thick as greenbrier. 
If these blue marks are cuts.
If my boots are full.
If I’ve already stained the thigh 
Of each pant leg.
If our fretboard holds
A fan of fingerprints.
If also the cap’s brim.
If cuffs and shirt pocket.
When footprints trail off
From the square. Disappear
Into the honeysuckle’s undying
And reappear along the stream 
To the river and delta.
Then let’s call it a map
Of the blue trail.
The tune we made and how
We might teach them
To play it again. Instead
To play it green or orange.
The songbook anybody
Can take from the sky.


Marcus Myers lives in Kansas City, Missouri, where he teaches, advises advanced students, and serves as co-founding and managing editor of Bear Review. In 2022, the Poet Laureate of Missouri published one of his poems, alongside those by MO poets Mary Jo Bang, Hadara Bar-Nadav, Aliki Barnstone, John Gallaher, Jenny Molberg and others, as a tiny book to hand to “readers who say they don’t read poetry”. Author of the chapbook Cloud Sanctum (Bottlecap Press 2022), his poems have appeared in or are forthcoming from The Common, Contemporary Verse 2, The Florida Review, Fourteen Hills, The Los Angeles Review, Mid-American Review, Pleiades, Poetry South, RHINO, Salt Hill, Southeast Review, and other such journals. 

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'pulled from dark stars' — poetry by Devan Murphy

August 4, 2025

ANGER AGENT (SCORPIO SUN)


Pulled from dark stars. Armored
luck, hot with breath.

My first planet is a heartbeat; my second
is dimmer and of the dead.

My attachment to the world is a knife floating
above my forehead and it’s how I make my way.

Dramatic taproot! I am my own rider and this knife
points only at my mouth; you couldn’t catch it.

However we originate, no matter the sky,
we are all fierce until we are not:

in dreams I shimmer
and am small.


ABSORBER (PISCES MOON)


Dreamed up by melting orbs. Scaly
assurance, shy and weepy with regret.

I take to my ice giant to forget. I am last in a loop—
a band no tine could puncture or divvy.

My attachment to the world is a crepe-paper
lantern over the sea: it cannot allure forever.

I am covered by the universe and I give
unto the universe. This concert of light pricks the eyes.

I melt. The lantern won’t resurface. You’ll see—after more
centuries, I will go beyond the farthest beyond.

Alone, I build fortresses
from fins, scales.


Devan Murphy is the author of the chapbook I'm Not I'm Not I'm Not a Baby (Ethel 2024), a collection of prose poems and essays and abstract comics about God and loneliness. Her writing and illustrations have appeared or are forthcoming in Electric Literature, The Cincinnati Review, -ette, The Iowa Review, Gigantic Sequins, and elsewhere. You can find her online at devmurphy.club or on Instagram @gytrashh. She resides in Pittsburgh with her cat, Buddy, where she writes wikiHow articles and personality quizzes for a living.

In Poetry 2025 Tags Devan Murphy, poetry, astrology poetry
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'In dreams it’s your hands I see' — poetry by Kirun Kapur

August 3, 2025


Raga of the Reports
(for my father)

When it snapped, the thread of time, that chime—
god’s veena string—a line of melody I called life, 

it ended. The moon creaked off its hinge, wind blew in 
the little coffins of my ears, 

my mouth opened, I found a field—
pathless, unpeopled, fireflies: off-on, off-off. 


*

In dreams it’s your hands I see—peeling pith from an orange, midair telling a story, stirring sugar into tea, gesturing the makhta, lifting a splinter from my good-girl feet. 

It’s your voice—the only one to say my name the way god says it. 

I say my name in rooms, chairs full, the air conditioned, lights livid as if for surgery. I sound like I’m importing myself. 

When I open my mouth, I see the quince is in its glory. When I open my
mouth I hope to find

that line of sound—my name, chime of you and me, of time,

a coral blossom. In the mind. In the mouth.
In the yard, a whole bush shaking with sparrows. 


*

When the doctor couldn’t look at me. When she read out the report I’d already read—
the quince was glorious. I smelled the perfumed air. I felt the little mind. My mind 

became a coffin, then a field. Do you have questions, asked the doctor in the moon? 
I closed my eyes and listened to you call my name. My god. In the chime that used to be my life. 


*

God said, let there be light. God said, let the flowers and the little coffins bloom. God said, time and fathers—all there is. You must open your mouth 

and speak the world. You must import yourself to the field called life.

I repeat my name. My date of birth. 

I went to bed a person. Woke up a patient that first time, 
your hand on my forehead declaring 

I had cold-body-fever, rubbing Ram Tel, god’s oil, over my scraped palms. 

I went to bed a person and woke up sweating on a train. 
Never eat the dessert, you used to say. The fields 

of rice streaked by. I dozed and woke to find a charpai 

full of turbaned men playing cards outside the window. I wondered. I woke again. Would you be at the station? At my bedside with a book? 

Your hands. I see them— 

I went to bed and a song went by
and now another man putting his hand on mine saying my name the wrong way, saying 

Dexamethasone, Isatuximab, Lenalidomide, I’m saying 

soon there will be lilacs. The quince has passed. I cut the last prickly branches. I wait for the lilac to choke me with perfume. 

*

Once you brought me to a holy man. He told me not to put my nose too close to his roses. I could inhale small bugs. But you said every tiny thing makes a song. The holy know 

the syllables. The songs of all the little living things. Thick silky roses hung over dry pavers in the mid-June heat. Gulab. Gulabi. The monsoon 

hadn’t come, yet there was this pink lushness. I think of it now 
pressing my face to my own not-yet lilacs. Who knows what’s inside

when you open your mouth. Your mind. When you will wake up 
a dry field of study. 

What kind of syllables are the doctor’s? Divine 
enough to fill the little coffins? Lush 

enough for all the little living things? 

*

When god spoke in her ear, filled her night with fireflies. When she was 
pronounced out of herself and into the field of care—

A dream of roses. A dream of hands on her forehead. Her god-name spinning her into the world.

*

Saraswati plays the veena. The whole world vibrates with sound. Oh, the sound of your name in the mouth of the ones who love you. Oh, the little melody 

of love. Of fear. Of fever. Of flowers about to bloom.  Listen, listen—
strings of the veena 

calling  

*

It’s too hot when the lilacs finally bloom. Smell so intense it feels 
like sound. 

*

In waiting rooms, I give my name, my date of birth. In moon rooms,
on lunar dates. In scanners, the lights blink on and off.  I listen to the hum—

*

The goddess plays the veena. Flowers bloom and bloom. 
Fingers picking out the melody. Fingers laying down the drone. 

The holy wrote: the human throat 
is a sareer veena—moan and hum 

of the universe inside you. The rhyme of time. Open your mouth 
to find the lilac after the quince, the song-flower of your mind. 

*

On the day I first put the chemicals in my veins— 

On the first day I use a medicine that will ruin my body to save my life,
learning to tune myself to that string of syllables

19 children are shot in a school.

This poem should stop. All the blood should stop in every vein. 

What’s the use?

The broken veena string, the smashed chime— 

all the gods and goddesses 
should be stricken from the page. 

We open our mouths—

horror error sorrow terror— 

We open and close our mouths—

The syllable sobs 
of life keep pouring into the light—

Name. Date of Birth. 

The child blinking into the field. The field 
filled with little coffins. 

How will we bear the song?
How can any other story go on?

We open our mouths 
and lay the flowers on the graves.

Off-on-off-off. Even today—

Stop, I say. Stop.

The notes have changed. The raga continues to play,

the nurse repeats the syllables of my life. A new music—

report after report. Name after name 

nothing stops

How can a song contain it?
How can a vein? 

It should not. 
I open my mouth 

and here’s the nurse with the needle
saying my name.

Here’s a father with an inconsolable bouquet.
Here’s a god-tune in my ear. Saying,

listen, listen—

you were always just a little variation 
of one little refrain 

listen, listen—

the monsoon after the white-hot June.


Kirun Kapur is a poet, editor, teacher and translator. She is the author of three books of poetry, Visiting Indira Gandhi’s Palmist (Elixir Press, 2015) which won the Arts & Letters Rumi Prize and the Antivenom Poetry Award; Women in the Waiting Room (Black Lawrence Press, 2020), a finalist for the National Poetry Series; and the chapbook All the Rivers in Paradise (UChicago Arts, 2022). Her work has appeared in Ploughshares , AGNI, Poetry International, Prairie Schooner and many other journals. She serves as editor at the Beloit Poetry Journal and teaches at Amherst College, where she is director of the Creative Writing Program.

In august 2025, Poetry 2025 Tags Kirun Kapur
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