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delicious new poetry
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
Mar 10, 2026
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
Mar 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
Mar 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'my dear vesuvius' — poetry by jp thorn
Mar 9, 2026
'my dear vesuvius' — poetry by jp thorn
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'In the doom tunnel' — poetry by Melissa Eleftherion
Mar 9, 2026
'In the doom tunnel' — poetry by Melissa Eleftherion
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'Love me as a wilderness' — Ruth Martinez
Mar 9, 2026
'Love me as a wilderness' — Ruth Martinez
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'lost in the  rapture of man' — poetry by Ian Berger
Mar 9, 2026
'lost in the rapture of man' — poetry by Ian Berger
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'Stop trying to write something beautiful' — poetry by Diana Whitney
Mar 9, 2026
'Stop trying to write something beautiful' — poetry by Diana Whitney
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'I am a devotee' — poetry by Patricia Grisafi
Mar 9, 2026
'I am a devotee' — poetry by Patricia Grisafi
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'come enflesh  our feast' — poetry by Haley Hodges
Mar 9, 2026
'come enflesh our feast' — poetry by Haley Hodges
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'noonday I dive' — poetry by Karen Earle
Mar 9, 2026
'noonday I dive' — poetry by Karen Earle
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'To eat dying stars' — poetry by Juliet Cook
Mar 9, 2026
'To eat dying stars' — poetry by Juliet Cook
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis  of ancient  and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis of ancient and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'How thy high horse hath fallen' — poetry by Madeline Blair
Jan 1, 2026
'How thy high horse hath fallen' — poetry by Madeline Blair
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'a paradise called  Loneliness' — poetry by Adam Jon Miller
Jan 1, 2026
'a paradise called  Loneliness' — poetry by Adam Jon Miller
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Tell me I taste like hunger' — poetry by Jennifer Molnar
Jan 1, 2026
'Tell me I taste like hunger' — poetry by Jennifer Molnar
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'I prayed to be released from my longing' — poetry by Michelle Reale
Jan 1, 2026
'I prayed to be released from my longing' — poetry by Michelle Reale
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Resurrection dance, a prelude' — poetry by V.C. Myers
Jan 1, 2026
'Resurrection dance, a prelude' — poetry by V.C. Myers
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'It is noon and the sun is ill' — poetry by Raquel Dionísio Abrantes
Jan 1, 2026
'It is noon and the sun is ill' — poetry by Raquel Dionísio Abrantes
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'every moon rolling fat through the night' — poetry by Zann Carter
Jan 1, 2026
'every moon rolling fat through the night' — poetry by Zann Carter
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
jan1.jpeg
Jan 1, 2026
'I have been monstrously good' — erasures by Lauren Davis
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'The light slices the mouth' — poetry by Aakriti Kuntal
Jan 1, 2026
'The light slices the mouth' — poetry by Aakriti Kuntal
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'quiet grandfathers  in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
Dec 19, 2025
'quiet grandfathers in dark tuxedos' — poetry by Scott Ferry
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
Dec 19, 2025
'made a deal / with Azrael' — poetry by Triniti Wade
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
Dec 19, 2025
'The birth of a body that never unraveled' — an excerpt by Hillary Leftwich
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
Dec 19, 2025
'Time's metronome blank' — poetry by Rehan Qayoom
Dec 19, 2025
Dec 19, 2025

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'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys

November 28, 2025

The come-on

petals
of the lipstick-red hibiscus pucker up—

their round
ruffled necklines
shimmering and trembling
for
the kiss.

They wait—
erect
pistil and stamen, pollen
dead center—

hieroglyphs
of tropical syntax

meaning
sex.

Cento sources: Whitman Chambers, Amy Lowell, Richard Blanco, Hiromi Ito, Talia Pinzari, Edward Rowland Sill, Thylias Moss, Stephen Dunn, D. H. Lawrence, E. Preston Dargan, Sam Hamill, Rachel Contreni Flynn, Gerald Jonas, Mark McMorris, Carl Dennis, Michael Ryan


Little astonishments


that arch and stretch
dangling upside-down
all the way along
a slender stem—


look at the tiny way
the tear
delicate and white
drops like rain
from within.

Who will comfort them with kisses
the innocent
bleeding hearts—

with their heads
bowed by
the weight of love

and the long sorrow of the color red?

Cento Sources: W. S. Di Piero, Lindsey D. Alexander, Ross Gay, W. S. Merwin, Linda Pastan, Alice B. Fogel, Richard Crashaw, Vachel Lindsay, Christina Rossetti, Primus St. John, Katherine Mansfield, Eosder Mosquera, Carmen Gimenez, Suzanne Noguere, Langston Hughes, Pat Schneider, Naomi Shihab Nye


Caught among the withered weeds

wild carrots
flirt
in the wind
heads bobbing like
knitted doilies
round
as saucers or moons.

A hundred, and a thousand more
small and glowing
flowers
make up
the
lacey
bloom—

reminding me
of crystals hanging in the brightened air
breath condensed

or a dream of the burgeoning of galaxies.

Cento Sources: Sara Bard Field, George Koller, Marion Strobel, Clark Ashton Smith, Mai Der Vang, Stephen Yenser, Tom Sleigh, Kiki Petrosino, Richard Cranshaw, Michael Dickman, Christopher Buckley, Dora Malech, David Kresh, P. Inman, Dan Chiasson, Taneum Bambrick, Jeffrey Harrison, Richard Kenney, David Wagoner


All at once

a black net of branches
flares
with
incandescent felt tips

buzzed volts
of flower bloom
strong
enough to torch us.

When April’s here
forsythia’s
neon bright
cascade

promises
the return
of light from darkness

the glazed edge
alive

from the inside out.


Cento sources: Ed Roberson, Evelyn Scott, Adrie Rose, Michael Dickman, Sina Queyras, Li-Young Lee, Amy Lowell, Barbara Ackerman, Linda Hull, Jessie Redmon Fauset, Billy Collins, Alexie Shaun, Christine Stewart-Nunez, Thom Donovan, Frank Bidart, Debora Greger, Kay Ryan, Natasha Saje, Natasha Trethewey


Like brushstrokes


thick and clustered,
chrysanthemums
half closed, prepare to emerge.

Like a box of kitchen matches
shaken
into
a circle

little knife-stabs of gold
ignite
in a pulsing, riotous gasp of color—

distracting us
from
the black and white
of geometric light
to come.

Cento sources: John Vian, Imru Al-Qays, C. F. MacIntyre, Michael Mejia, John Herschel, Carl Sandburg, Lisa Tibbets, Hadara Bar-Nadav, Amy Lowell, June Jordan, Helene Johnson, Alessandra Lynch, Fatimah Asghar, David Trinidad, Peter Gizzi, Lee Ann Brown


Patrice Boyer Claeys is the author of five poetry collections, most recently Earth Cafeteria, a photo-verse collaboration with Gail Goepfert. Her work appears in Tupelo Quarterly, NELLE, Scapegoat Review, Passion Fruit Review and North Dakota Quarterly, among others. Nominated for Pushcart and Best of the Net, she can be found at patriceboyerclaeys.com. 

In Poetry 2025 Tags Patrice Boyer Claeys
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'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil

November 28, 2025
 

fable


Ellen Kombiyil is a visual artist, poet, and educator from the Bronx. Her latest poetry collection, Love as Invasive Species (Cornerstone 2024) is a tête-bêche exploring matrilineal inheritances. Her visual art has been displayed at Emerge Gallery and is published in Action Spectacle, Bear Review, DIAGRAM, Quarterly West, Radar, TAB, and The Indianapolis Review and she has new poems appearing in Sixth Finch, Breakwater Review (as a finalist for the Peseroff Poetry Contest), Cherry Tree, NELLE, Raleigh Review, Second Factory, and Tahoma Literary Review. She is a 2022 and 2025 recipient of a BRIO Award (Bronx Recognizes Its Own) from the Bronx Council on the Arts, and a 2025 winner of the Geri Digiorno Multi-Genre Prize. A graduate of the University of Chicago and Hunter’s MFA program, is an adjunct assistant professor at Hunter College. Find her at www.ellenkombiyil.com.

 

In Poetry 2025 Tags Ellen Kombiyil
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'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary

November 28, 2025

Kinds of Kindness

Cleave me the least finger, then leave oil
for the skillet. Defrost my haunch for your

next vignette while our liver’s still
iron rich. Hunger brings its own kind

of kindling. We release these single
tears into stilled whirlpools to be given

glimpses : a sacred face, flash of what’s
familiar made strange. To know oneself

only when driven fast enough to punish
or repent. For a second time, I’d dive

into the empty deep end. From there,
the humming rush of what’s running.

What it means to be severed, tasted
and made to be clean.


Department of Midnight

Proximate to those most
sonorous, dark matter’s redaction

of anomalous folding
bones. A locked room’s moot,

mute warning : false gods dissolve
once cuffed & collared.

Tangent as
sidestep. Anonymous graffito

as aleatory lore.


Chris McCreary's latest book of poems, awry, was published by White Stag in 2024. He lives in South Philadelphia and on IG at @chris___mccreary.

In Poetry 2025 Tags Chris McCreary
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'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy

November 28, 2025

Phantasmagoria

I am always being pulled into long, dangerous grasses.
The scene is silvery, circular. Long shadows

of buildings in moonlight. Long are the ditches
and basement windows. I submit to this long-winded

cinema. So black and white it’s blue. Circuitous route, so long
I’m on these stairs again, but briefly. Or is it longer?

If I’m seen, I’ll be forced to long for men
I’ve never met. Their eyes dart like those not long for this world,

drugged and slow. The long wait before strangers meet.
We never touch. Long before the rain comes

I’ve seen this patch of weeds nightlong.
Long-lived drought of dry summer.

Long night of not wanting. No desire
but the body by morning is swollen with longing.


Fromward/Premonition

The ferry left on time. Felt the engine grind in my feet and the seat surged dragging the ocean through its belly to get away from land. My suitcase stood up straight for an hour down below.

Seven passengers. Two were kissing. Her finger held a heavy diamond. His hat covered his eyes. I didn’t tell her how she would end up alone. The sails of passing boats rocked in our wake.

Clouds were distinct from one another. The sun was somewhere. Over the island gloved by a gray hand.


Dream/She is Me

One night, she circled the house
driving tearful, knowing
she would get home faster had she
walked. She cannot be other
than me in the dream. A washed
out character staying diseased
at a motel. A summer girl camping.
The cavities of pumice rooted
out under the back deck
swallow girls in floodwater.
Alarming, it’s the flash flooding–
limbs girled in limbs–
treed as if debris swept
away. Today’s missing
won’t be found. Stay under mud.
Recede with chimes of laughter.
Gone. Chin-ups of spindly-legged
victims. A thousand years of rain
fell in a day. And the next day
forgotten as the town complains
against the whiteness of the new sidewalk.
Gone, brick that slurped snail-slicked
garbage juice. Downed it like water
washes stuck throat bones. Evil fish.


Jessica Purdy holds an MFA from Emerson College. She is the author of STARLAND and Sleep in a Strange House (Nixes Mate, 2017 and 2018), The Adorable Knife (Grey Book Press, 2023), and You’re Never the Same (Seven Kitchens Press, 2023). Her poems and micro-fiction have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Best New Poets, Best of the Net, and Best Micro-Fiction. Her poetry, flash fiction, and reviews appear in About Place, On the Seawall, Radar, The Night Heron Barks, SoFloPoJo, Litro, Heavy Feather Review, and elsewhere. She lives in Exeter, New Hampshire.

In Poetry 2025 Tags Jessica Purdy
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'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall

November 28, 2025

A Litany for Love

1.

Love is clouds dropping long bombs of rain.
Deliver me.


2.

Love is summer.
A rattlesnake unscrolls
from the orange tree,
tongues the grass.
The blessed smell
of split blades.
Deliver me.


3.

In every season, a lover’s slip-up.
A winter-God’s tongue presses against
the sides of my heart: I’ve never loved you.
Each cell crackles into prayer.
Deliver me.


4.

April: the mirror holds my fog-blurred face.
May: my face becomes a silken flower.
Now my heart’s a cloud, raining through the body.
Must be June. In the glade, summer
lets loose its boiling whistle.
Deliver me.


5.

Is praise too much in these times?
We spend hours tangled in mind’s endless webbing—
not enough in the body’s chambers and chimneys.
Love is an earlobe dipped in a cold ocean.
Is the sun through prayer hands.
Two lovers brush each other’s paradoxical skin.
Deliver me.


6.

Love craves to see beauty everywhere:
but this to the senses
is a dance of surfaces.
Each pheromone curls up the nose
into the mind’s bright delirium.
But beneath beauty’s skin,
what hungers? What feeds on our need
to be consumed?
Deliver me.


7.

Love is a surgeon slicing a body
into rivers, revealing soft pipework.
Are we supposed to love this wormrot,
this material stench? What happens
when we stare into whirlpools
of bile?
Perhaps love demands we see all,
and the heart sweats out a vision
of an angel, wings tucked, sliding down an artery.
Deliver me.


8.

But there is poetry
pregnant as gardens,
the tireless occupation of bees,
art and music,
desire and hope and—
Fuck!
I left the oven on!
Deliver me.


9.

Shuffle along, a tall vicar says
herding us through a wooden door
into a glade where I fall
into a grave of open books.
Wherever love buries itself in language,
Deliver me.


10.

Sometimes, all I wish to do is tie myself
in love’s ribbons. How it celebrates
in the shiver of every leaf, quivers before lips
meet, distorts the body
into rapture’s harsh silence.
Deliver me.


11.

Love’s fierce choosing
is a kind of praise, isn’t it?
Hold me tight. I wish to sing:
Deliver me.


12.

Love is what spools from throat to mouth,
gold-thick like a waxing moon,
gifting nighttime honey.
Deliver me.


13.

Bone by bone my body becomes a desert.
Deliver me.


14.

The sun blasts its trumpet.
Ash falls over my slowly closing lips and eyes.
The quiet gospel of daily bread.
Love is an omelette that tastes like ash.
My body: its gift. My heart: its welcoming.
Love is the dirge. Love is the trumpet.

O God, o dear God,
from all that is love,
Deliver me.


Nathan Hassall believes in poetry's transformational potential. He weaves dreams, altered states, numinous experiences, and the natural world into his work. Hassall's poems have appeared in Moria, Ghost City Review, Anti-Heroin Chic, The Inflectionist Review, and more. He is the 2023-2025 Poet Laureate of Malibu, California, and is the Host of The Poetry Vessel Podcast, available on his YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@nathanhassallpoetry

In Poetry 2025 Tags Nathan Hassall
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'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke

November 28, 2025


That Year Was Missing Several Months

by Jeanne Morel


Lunch, no roses stumbled up, the sun hot. Hot
sun. The river reverses. “that’s OK—

Keep you busy.” Pillows, dust, French doors
balconies & fat particles of rain.

A stranger summons me at intermission
or did I step out into the lobby to call him?

Rainy season wading muddy water, though
that night a car and air conditioning.

Not a stranger really, for I’d known him
thirty years.

That night the play, the Russian Center
a string of jasmine blossoms dangled

below a portrait of him and the King.
“Their best quality is also their worst,”

the Maryknoll nun always said, of everyone—
breakfast by the empty swimming pool

coffee a sweet bun and a hard-boiled egg.


She thought twice about the semi-quaver

by Jeanne Morel


It was a bold double the bar
tender had brought her—

Swirling the olives in a gin Martini
           a bright pink swizzle-stick

for the third time,
              she thought twice about the semi-quaver

the ghost notes
noted note
ghost ghosts
note: a ghost note

so, the old lover shows up
            during dreams the Day of the Dead

             so—? What—?

the ghosts they come
during the ghost month
no?


Image Rehearsal Therapy

by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke

Alone on the off-ramp, the meter up ahead. I park alongside the park. Grey weathered bench.  Grizzly Bay. Easy rewards? Slippery stairs to the shore. Slippery semiconductors. Longshoreman. Low tide. Me again. Remember the hotel room with a broken kitchenette. Remember Thursdays. The background noise of war. A racket in the station. A theory of pauses. Ping-ponging. Running out of soap. Second thoughts on your first apartment.


Jeanne Morel is the author of the chapbooks, "I See My Way to Some Partial Results" (Ravenna Press), "Jackpot" (Bottlecap Press), and "That Crossing Is Not Automatic" (Tarpaulin Sky Press). Her poem, “Loss & Other Forms of Death,” was selected by Leila Chatti for the 2021 Fugue Poetry Prize. She holds an MFA from Pacific University and has been nominated for a Pushcart in both poetry and fiction. She lives in Seattle. 

Anthony Warnke’s poetry has appeared in Cimarron Review, North American Review, Salt Hill, Sentence, Sixth Finch, and Sugar House Review, among other journals. His chapbook "Super Worth It" was released by Newfound Press. He earned his MFA in Creative Writing at the University of Washington, Seattle. He teaches writing at Green River College and lives in Kent, Washington. 

 

In Poetry 2025 Tags Jeanne Morel, Anthony Warnke, collaborative poetry
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'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz

November 28, 2025

WEAR A MASK

They only had one victory, and that was over a rabbit.

It was up to me – the double person – to appease the

restless ancestors, ensure the blueberries ripen, bury

freedom in the mountains for those who come after.

My stork-face is to mirror your beauty, my beakish

chin to hide your crooked teeth, my eyeholes are a

slit in which you can insert a coin to pass through

grinding eddies of sky into the voluminous abyss.

My mask summons butterflies who’ll bring rain.

The fractal patterns on my wings sing a song only

a mathematician who waits patiently as a polar

bear for sturdy ice to form could possibly hear.

Egg woman, masked front and back, protects us

from biometric recognition. Horned and rabbit

fur-wrapped, her chant releases pulsating microbes

from the earth. She says the dead are on our side.


JOIN A CELL

ular organism
in orgasm a

hollow bodied
cello of joy

origami crane
aquiver after
pollination

alternate firm
ament sleepers
welcome


Author’s Note: This work takes its titles from Tim Blunk’s 1987 poem, “for comrades who ask, ‘what is to be done?’ during this particular historical conjuncture, a (partial) list of practical things to do.”


D.J. Huppatz lives and writes in Narrm/Melbourne, Australia. Recent work in Ballast, Exacting Clam, Fugitives and Futurists, Variant Literature, and Gone Lawn. He is the author of two poetry books, Happy Avatar (Puncher and Wattmann, 2015) and Astroturfing for Spring (Puncher and Wattmann, 2021). He also writes about design and architecture.

In Poetry 2025 Tags D.J. Huppatz
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'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett

November 28, 2025

Taking Up Space (and Other Feminine Pleasures Indulged While Studying the Zuihitsu)

A line forms next to a vulva the size of three large dinner plates.

I’m waiting with my sons at Chapter One, a coffee shop in Plattsburgh, examining ropes of pink fabric woven & twisted into “Petals,” & Googling the artist, who says she gets inspiration from living in a woman’s body in this world.

]::[


I’ve been undone & patched up.

Even the face I remove at night leers back from the washrag, Rachel writes in a letter to Naomi, A woman’s portrait left out in the rain.

Can you say bleeding in a poem & be taken seriously?

So what.

]::[


Consider this partial list of reasons to dismiss the patriarchy -->

Too many armpit stains.

Too much racket.

DC blocking a scene where Batman performs oral sex on Catwoman because heroes don’t do that.

That Irene must contend with having to keep her shirt on --> I began to speak in my head as the naked one, // & the other went clothed into the world.

]::[

I am the shell & the soft belly. Fuselage & wanderlust. Canopy & brambles.

Above: Leaves of sugar maple & American beech.


Below: Spruce needles & mushroom caps, the x’s & o’s of the forest floor soft on the toes of the red-spotted newt.


When you said beautifully wrought
, Kimiko tells BOMB, I thought you said beautifully raw.

]::[

The day of the birth you hold the baby first, then the emptiness.

‘Complete incompleteness’ might serve as a haven for women artists, Freesia muses when talking about the zuihitsu. Such subversions may interrupt power, upset façade & invite truth-telling.

I write, Dear E – Setbacks. Let’s postpone. She responds with praise for the power of the pause.

When I write, Dear J – We don’t know our story ‘til we say it out loud, she replies, Amen, Sister.

]::[

Like a large scarf, I drape over myself to create an alter and altar. Light a candle: purple for power & wisdom, charged beneath the new moon for a fresh start.

I cover myself like a field of daisies.

Cover myself like a second skin.

My hands fit my hands like gloves. My feet already broken in by my feet.

]::[

I master the sonnet so I can break free of it (or let it tie me up when that’s what I crave).

Radical when a woman uses contraptions of the canon for her own pleasure.

]::[

All those times I clambered into the pocket of my grandmother’s apron, childhood’s best hideout is still the woods.

The woods. I continue to strap its double OOs to my sneakers, roller skate to the tree line.

Like each foot has always known how to cut loose.

]::[

My lawyer tells my ex’s lawyer & his lawyer tells him: Your request to ban her from writing about the marriage is denied.

“Feeling akin to liberation,” says Tina on the zuihitsu.

]::[


Pleasure, a good swing of the ax.

Pleasure, lying in June grass, which survives winter & rises so quickly no one can keep up.

Pleasure, I’m caught at night on the wildlife cam doing wildlife things.

]::[

Eight truths & one lie about the clitoris -->

She is the thing with feathers.

She honeymoons in Rochester.

She plays Maureen in a local production of RENT.

She is a plaintiff in a class-action suit.

She beats Bobby Flay.

She knows the etymology of embouchure.

She is late for her train.

She eats frozen green grapes to lose weight.

She floats in the pool on a raft shaped like a pizza slice.

]::[

Underlined in my copy of The Narrow Road to the Interior --> That it was cultivated by a woman feels significant —as a writing space for women.

& this --> Long erratic pieces into which I can thrash around.

]::[

In the music video for this reclamation, a marching band takes the field. All plumes and spats.

A drumline in every chest.

The stories of triumphant women blare like trumpets.

]::[

Pleasure, a tongue between my toes.

Pleasure, buying the red dress.

Pleasure, I wear it while dawdling in the woods, unbothered / by the cliché.

]::[

Kimiko says she trusts the qualities of the zuihitsu: subjective, intuitive, spontaneous.


Qualities I trust
-->

The way we accordion through healing—half wheezing, half music.

The way a silk scarf over a lampshade romances the whole room.

The way we embody wild dogs. Even our eyes yellow & shine.

]::[


I light “dragon’s blood” incense for purification & protection. Misread the word scent on the label: The true self lingers long after burning.

]::[

Pleasure, a meeting on the trail. Myself and myself. One heading out. One returning.

Pleasure, taking the mic, taking the floor, adding gas to the fire.

Pleasure, I asked the world for more, then took matters into my own hands.

]::[

Some of the men at Albany open mics don’t want to hear my poems about misogyny.

Wait ‘til they hear women write entire books about it!

Direct as arrows. Direct as a finger in your face. Direct as a brick through glass.

]::[

I watch as my neighbor turns her kitchen light on, gloves up, fills a sink with steamy water & feels for the knives. Like her, I’m getting down to business, rummaging around, trying to write hard things, like the letter I wish my mother had written me.

I spread the cremains of grief on the garden & watch vegetables grow, harvest enough tomatoes & Anaheims to share. They go out to the neighborhood like an anthem. Joan Jett’s “Bad Reputation” so loud it echoes down the block.

]::[

What appeases me, or what the Internet calls “a dopamine menu” -->


Frozen jalapeños in the rosé

A sandwich someone else makes

Search history that includes “punk wardrobe for women in their fifties”

Foreplay lasting ‘til each freckle on my thighs has had a mouth on it

Trusting another body with my body

]::[


A pleasure to start over.

]::[

In a workshop on the zuihitsu, Eugenia instructs, Our goal is not to create a narrative but a portrait.

Self-portrait with survival instincts

Self-portrait with houseplants

Self-portrait with fupa

With awkward silence

With unsettled weather pattern

With Super Lemon Haze & Purple Kush

With pillow talk

With a Boston cream donut the size of my head

With menstruation.

With wandering uteri.

Wandering, as in joyride.

Uterus, as in an animal within an animal, says the Wikipedia entry on female hysteria.

Hysteria, as in a woman’s disease marked by sexually forward behavior & a tendency to cause trouble for others.

Self-portrait with my old 10-speed & wind in my hair.

]::[

Astrophysicists compare Galileo’s telescope to a cucumber & Webb to a tennis court. This is a metaphor for human progress.

I grip a stalk of asparagus & a blank page, dismantle one galaxy, birth another. I’ll say it:

GODLIKE.


My voice booms so loud it reddens the high ceiling of daybreak.

And evenings, the feathers of sunset boa around me.


author’s NOTES

This piece owes a debt to Kimiko Hahn, Tina Chang and Eugenia Leigh, whom I know only through their poetry and scholarship. Their work has intensified my affection and appreciation for the zuihitsu, a centuries-old feminist form originating in Japan with The Pillow Book by Sei Shōnagon. I was introduced to the zuihitsu in my regular poetry workshop through Madwomen in the Attic out of Carlow University in Pittsburgh and hope I’ve been able to honor its lineage and tradition. 

This poem mentions/quotes the following: Patricia Downs and “Petals” (the artist and their fiber art on display at Chapter One coffee shop in Plattsburgh, New York), Rachel Mennies’ The Naomi Letters (“December 14, 2016,” page 56), an article from The Hollywood Reporter titled “Batman, Catwoman Oral Sex Scene Blocked from Series: ‘Heroes Don’t Do That,’” Irene McKinney’s “Covering Up” (from Vivid Companion), a BOMB magazine interview with Kimiko Hahn, Freesia McKee’s Ploughshares essay on The Narrow Road to the Interior, Hybrida: A Zuihitsu by Tina Chang, The Narrow Road to the Interior by Kimiko Hahn, the YouTube recording of an Authors Publish workshop featuring Eugenia Leigh, the Wikipedia entry for female hysteria, and articles about telescopes from Science magazine and NASA.

Carolee Bennett is a writer and artist living in Upstate New York, where – after a local, annual poetry competition – she has fun saying she has been the “almost” poet laureate of Smitty’s Tavern. She has an MFA in poetry and works full-time as a writer in social media marketing.

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‘in the glitter-open black' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier

October 31, 2025

Born Peacock-Wingéd in a Smokeless Fire, He Said


Remember when you were nineteen and so
whiskey-drunk one night that you lost
consciousness while screwing your
long glitter-pink almond nails into clay-
brick earth? Remember, now, the wet
dirt and cut grass on your face
in the dark, welcome as you attempted
fusion? Because you knew that release
meant you would fall off the face of your
home, plummet hapless into sky? Remember
how it felt in your body: memory
inexplicable étoilée etiolated dive gathering
velocity through icy dust, fireballs floating
past your supine form, stripped of its weight
in life? Stygian pitch painful incipient
itch like calcified wisdom breaking
through skin on your back now you are flying
in the glitter-open black. Smile. There
it is. Remember, darling, you can still let go.


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

(content note: suicidal ideation)

One one level, this poem uses the metaphor of clinging to the earth and the possibility of letting go and falling off into the sky, to explore the spiritual and intellectual temptation of following a Dark Angel and his whispers to adopt new ideas, new morality, to break away from the life the speaker has spent decades building with constant struggle, sacrifice, self-restraint, empathy. Instead of embracing the often thankless work of keeping her heart open, the speaker feels tempted by the idea to leave it all behind and embrace hedonism and self-prioritization and the satisfaction of her personal desires — a moral paradigm that she thinks might very well culminate in being literally possessed by darker forces. TLDR: it's Thomasin, being asked if she'd like to live deliciously. On another level, however, the poem can be read as the temptation to more literally, physically let go of the world — to go flying off the face of the earth by committing suicide. The temptation to surrender to a more metaphorical kind of possession, to give up and let oneself be overtaken by the dark forces in this world that can make remaining present here feel difficult. The dark forces are continuously whispering reminders that she can choose to give up any time, that this possibility will never really leave her.


Fox Henry Frazier is a poet, essayist, and fiction writer from upstate New York. Her third full-length poetry collection, Break Blow Burn, is forthcoming from White Stag Publishing in 2026. Her debut novel, Francesca, is forthcoming in 2027.

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'poet as tarantula, poem as waste' — poetry by Ewen Glass

October 31, 2025

Poet as Tarantula

Silken syllables of protein from what is ingested,
trauma in other words, other words in other words,
little spilled in spinning.

Born from undersides, a certain kind of discretion,
until there it is, wind juddered and fine; wing-spans,
attention-spans,

be-shortened by buzz and other glittered things.
Dodging everyday thermals, they wisely fly past
poet as tarantula,

poem as waste.


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

What would possess you to be a poet?


Ewen Glass is a screenwriter and poet from Northern Ireland who lives with two dogs, a tortoise and a body of self-doubt; his poetry has appeared in the likes of Okay Donkey, Maudlin House, HAD, Poetry Scotland and One Art Poetry. Bluesky/X/IG: @ewenglass

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'my god wearing a body' — poetry by Tom Nutting

October 31, 2025

Devotional

after Cyparissus


I loved the way he looked
and never flinched.
Only came closer,
ate from my hand.

And never flinched –
softly as velvet.
Ate from my hand,
shook droplets of life.

Softly as velvet,
the wound opened.
Shook droplets of life –
still, I touched.

The wound opened,
my god wearing a body.
Still, I touched –
I learnt violence.

My god wearing a body,
begged to cry forever:
I learnt violence.
I refuse to become a man.

Begged to cry forever:
called it becoming.
I refuse to become a man –
instead, rooted down
where no blade can follow.
Only ceaseless sap-flow,
tears moved by lyric
killing of a gift.


Sympoiesis

He thought it began in the dark: wood, room.
A glance, touch, withdrawal – brief weight of heat.

But he was already inside me.

Not love exactly,
but the rhythm that comes
before love takes
as rootlets move towards music.

He looked outward:
silver chain, mouth pressed to bark,
the body passed between shadows –

even then, we were
exchanging ourselves:
salt, sweat & microbial syntax –
gestures without names.

He said trade.
More like a loss.

I was sovereign,
loved the light on my skin.
But then this folding
into forest.
Not forced,
not quite asked for.
A pulse
offered up.

Nothing taken
without giving
in return.

My body began to learn
him slowly, as lichen
comes to know
its layers
interbeing.

Now he lingers
in my breath,
perspiration behind my knees,
dust residue on my brow.

Do I stay still
in his mouth
before language returns?

I search for borders
in the canopy
but find no shyness now
– sky and leaves indistinct.

We are still making –
enfolding the possibility
of touch changing
us irrevocably.


Drag me out, destroy me

after Florence Welch

I

I learned your name in the way of trees
learning wind – by breaking, over & over
until strong, or at least a belief in strength.

You spoke & the air turned to shimmer;
each word a shard I could draw blood with
in the absence of your feeling. I built you

in the dark that slow way: trembling piece
by piece – vessel, salt, breath. You looked
at me & believed me your passive reflection.

Desire came so easily; if only a body could
open, too, like prayer through destruction. 

II

Shame arrived quick – soft
wing of a dying bird. A sin,
you called it, wanting easy
unmaking of the night we’d
already burned clean through. 

Each mirror fogged, refusing
our image at your command.
Still, I kept turning your voice
rich in my mouth, savouring 

even as it soured: love became
don’t tell. I would never; could
barely breathe for my wanting.

III

Some morning came eventually, dully
merciless, as white sheets ash-smeared
by the scorching of your body – incense
I buried myself in, writhing heart, before
I took it all to the garden & let the rain
decide what stayed. I came to learn how

it was never just you – it was the wanting
itself that hollowed me out. Now, the soil
thrums where I knelt: something shifting
like forgiveness or forgetting? No, small
animal of lust, returning to me. Please.


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

‘Devotional’ came to me when I considered possession; I wrote the poem some time ago whilst I was foraging for queerness in classical myth, its pantoum echoing the recursive ache between boy, deer, & god. ‘Sympoeisis’ borrows Haraway’s making-with as part of my larger hymn to entanglement & the slow recognition that no body moves alone. Lastly, the theme (inevitably?) summoned Florence; her lyric 'Drag me out, destroy me' seized a feral old memory of a particularly ruinous possession, which I invoked, then wrested into form. 


Tom Nutting (he/they) is a writer and psychiatrist from Bristol, UK. He writes on queer ecologies, activism, and mental illness. He is currently reading for a masters in creative writing at Oxford where he was shortlisted for the Starkie prize. He won the Lisa Thomas prize and his writing has appeared in Magma, The Stinging Fly, fourteen poems, ORB, Blue Bottle Journal, BJPsych, The Hopper, and elsewhere. As an NHS doctor, he supports people with severe mental illness, is conducting research into nature-based care, and also volunteers with Medical Justice.

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'Hours rot away in regalia' — poetry by Stephanie Chang

October 31, 2025


Self-Portrait as a Scarecrow


Dawn the brighter mouth. Blue-brown
crucifix in patchwork. Here, faces

flower by the thousands, populate the
coppered washed days, the nothing-night,

each pistil parallel to its purpose. I stare
the evening soft, coax the oil out of

midnight’s lamp. Hours rot away
in regalia. The loud dark comes quickly:

Crows christen themselves in my sight
unafraid. Little thieves rustle underfoot.

Now and then my harvest gleams gold
with laughter. Now and always, I am

helpless, holding a lantern
like a breath. How this town

mocks the memory of another town
the way spit sticks to the air, searching

for a moment of permanence: sound
to the soles of your feet. A freshly bobbed

apple between a lover’s teeth, taking home
first prize at the county fair. For once,

for me? I picture, still, the cider you spilled
on the woodman’s axe, the pumpkin bloomed

just wrong, moon through rain reeking
of bad wine, every leaf undressed by wind

wet with white sheets, every spirit
unambiguous. There, something with wings

watching us from the hayloft. Colors
most cruel at our world’s end—turn

them upside-down. Tangled. I wish
my body into warp and want and

morning, mourning, morning.


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

I've always loved autumn the most of all the seasons; it's when I feel my every step watched by forces lurking beyond the field, in the forests and hills that paraded around my fondest childhood memories. A scarecrow is a staple in the landscape of fall, possessed by the gazes of others who enter its purview liminally, before they leave and the scarecrow once again possesses nothing but an eye on time. I wrote this poem listening to the Over the Garden Wall soundtrack, thinking of cinnamon and apple cider and the pumpkins carved in all my years' Halloweens and Samhains. Possession can be thought of as an intrusive act. Here, it's greedy and wanting, walloping. To be possessed by something is to know it so unbearably it becomes you. What is a scarecrow's deepest want? How does it necessarily differ from mine? A scarecrow sees all but can do nothing. Of course its want must be monstrous.


Stephanie Chang (she/they) is a Brooklyn-based writer, art historian, and witch. A 2025 Lambda Literary Fellow, her work appears or is forthcoming in The Rumpus, Adroit Journal, Kenyon Review, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, and Sixth Finch, among others. She has a chapbook forthcoming from Palette Poetry in early 2026.

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'down down down the hall of mirrors' — poetry by Ronnie K. Stephens

October 31, 2025


THE MUSEUM OF BROKEN THINGS

after Rachel McKibbens

step through the turnstile and bear witness / bear witness to the unbearable / the unbearable begins with a field of strawberries / a field of strawberries emptying their red red hearts / their red red hearts empty onto the hillside / the hillside and the strawberries and the boy break open / the boy breaks open mouthed and flying / open mouthed and flying the boy kisses rusted steel soft / rusted steel soft and savage toothed / savage toothed gears rattle a cigarette boat still / a cigarette boat still as a grave in the backyard / a grave in the backyard for the tip of the knife / the tip of the knife and the ankle fracture / the ankle fractures against the pavement / the pavement leads to a water warped picture bible / picture bibles for all the kids on the day of baptism / on the day of baptism a limp wristed wave / a limp wristed wave and the cold slap of a truck door / a truck door slaps shut and the gear shift punches down / down down down the hall of mirrors / the hall of mirrors laughs / itself to sleep


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

I chose this poem for Possession because it was, for me, an exercise in seeing how I both possess and am possessed by anxieties directly tied to formative memories from my childhood. A memory palace of sorts, but more funhouse than reality, each memory reflected indefinitely, distorted.


Ronnie K. Stephens holds a Bachelor of Arts in Classical Studies, a Master of Arts in Creative Writing, a Master of Fine Arts in Fiction, and a PhD in English. His research centers the role of poetry in subverting antiethnic and anti-LGBTQ legislation affecting public education. He is the author of three books: Universe in the Key of Matryoshka, They Rewrote Themselves Legendary, and The Kaleidoscope Sisters.

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'Grew appendages, clawed towards light' — poetry by Lucie Brooks

October 31, 2025


Transubstantiation


One morning, I woke with a mouth full of stones instead of teeth. Then my skin turned pale pink, from soft and warm to cool and hard. My mouth slicked over and disappeared. Then my eyes. My body shrank. Smaller and smaller until only a polished piece of rose quartz was left atop the sheets. Later, someone – I couldn’t say who, on account of losing my eyes – found me and slipped me into her pocket. My smooth surface warmed against her thigh as we traveled around town, from the flower shop to the hospital, and every time she grew anxious, she found me again, thumb worrying my smooth side, both of us whispering it’s okay. Elsewhere, magma pushed towards the Earth’s crust. Minerals collected in the heat. A piece of rose quartz formed. Then it turned soft, stretched. Grew appendages, clawed towards light. Became girl. Covered in dirt and looking for answers.


author’s note on this possession-themed poem:

Many of my poems play with the concept of transformation, or becoming, which can just be another way of saying possessed. In Transubstantiation, you have the mirror possessions - the girl and the rose quartz, and the kind of force that keeps you clawing towards the light.

Lucie Brooks is a poet and professor. She is a board member of Sarabande Books, an award-winning, independent literary publishing house founded in Louisville, Kentucky. She is the 2022 Kentucky Poetry Society Chaffin/Kash poetry prize winner and a 2024 Grand Prix poetry prize finalist. Her work can be found in print and online, including in Swing, Salvation South, Catapult, and the LEON Review.

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'do not be afraid' — poetry by Maia Decker

October 31, 2025

Speaking to My Mother at Twenty


I know you are nervous because you have been dreaming—
visions of the buck your lover shot and hung, of your father
burning the baby blue dresser the day you left home.
You follow the smoke west, but by the time you arrive,
ghosts live in every house. The dead play loud music
and you cannot sleep, so you find a lover who dreams.
Your new friends want happiness. They sleep three to a bed.
They want to dance. It is 1999 and the world promises
to end very soon. A woman stops you in the street and says
all the unborn babies spoke to her. They said do not be afraid.
Four thousand miles east, the dresser keeps burning.
You swim in the creek and think blue blue blue.
You stumble out the door, hand on your beating heart.
Know that when you tell your lover I am coming, he kneels.
He says do not be afraid. He says baby, let’s go west.


Author’s note on this POSSESSION-themed poem:

For me, poetry is a way to transmute consciousness across time and space, to be possessed by circumstances typically not our own. This piece is for my mother in her younger years; I imagine that it will somehow reach her, traveling via language from now to then.  


Maia Decker is a writer and teacher from Montana. She graduated in 2024 from Yale University with her BA in English and concentration in Fiction. She is interested in material histories of the West, dreams, and writing as a way to make sense of our obligations to others, dead and alive. 

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