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delicious new poetry
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
Mar 28, 2026
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
Mar 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
Mar 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
Mar 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
Mar 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
Mar 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
Mar 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
Mar 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
Mar 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
Mar 27, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
Mar 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
Mar 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
Mar 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
'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
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Sonnets by Kristin Garth

April 13, 2018

A southern snowflake in blizzard descends.
The winter you’re born beach town’s snowed in. 
An alabaster tourist never blends.
You’re not like your parents. You don’t pretend.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Poems, Poet, Sonnets, Kristin Garth
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gold

Selections from Omotara James: 2 Poems by C. Bain

April 6, 2018

BY C. BAIN
SELECTIONS BY OMOTARA JAMES

What is it that survives trauma? Or rather, outlasts it? Bain’s evocative poems offer elusive tenderness for those who traverse this liminal space. Through haunting portraits, the poet daringly reimagines the dailiness of these tortured mythological figures. Their relatable frailties leave us to ponder our own lusts. Though vastly different, the protagonists of both poems are generously afforded an agency unavailable in the original myths. What they do with it is another matter. Through the perspective of the speakers, Bain acknowledges transfiguration as restoration. These poems bridge the distance between hamartia and humanity. No sins left unsung, Bain leaves us to marvel at the creeping nature of human compassion as it ebbs…

 

(Persephone’s Husband Is Not Important And He Says)

She’s sitting on the bed
with her long legs folded under her.
Her eyes sliding away from me
as they like to do, like I’m a figure in smoke
like there’s a river of information
that only she sees. I want to ask her why
but I don’t. When the man took her
(the witnesses said chased, dragged)
trapped her under the earth
then she did what she did. It’s strange
when you think about it
that fruits are seeds and we
eat them, sugar fertile and harping
at the tongue. It bothers me
that that is what she took
not the utility of bread, but tart, crystalline
the skin red and transparent inside its covering
of outer, rougher skin. And now
she isn’t mine. I was never yours. It isn’t
ownership
, she says, because since she’s come back
she reads my thoughts
and sleeps six inches above the bed,
moaning. I know this happened because
she does not believe I love her. Now I ask permission
to kiss her, air hissing past
my seedling teeth. I ask her why
she comes back and she puts her hell-hand,
her death hand, gilded immortal
against my cheek. I come back
because you need me. You would die
without the rain
. Sucks at my tongue
until it bleeds sugar, a seed. Her nipple,
the crest of her ribs, the cells
of my body and the devices in the cells
and the space in between them. Whatever
life is. Electrical,
animate. Please.
Please give it back.
 

After the Curse Was Lifted, Midas

fell & wept, the grass
emerald blades bent
at his kissing mouth.
It lasted weeks
tender humility
his trembling hands tracing
rumpled bedsheets, ribs of living oxen
enough gratitude for any god.
He avoided his treasure-room
had the metal stripped off the cornices
cherished the wood’s raw bones.

But in some small span of human time
the truth; he wanted that power again
even if he’d starve, heartstiller, shitgleamer,
weeping alchemy out every pore.
He dreamt of it and woke and cursed.
And when his daughter disobeyed him
tell me he didn’t remember her small visage
frozen into metal. Tell me he didn’t wonder
if there had been some secret work around –
a gloved slave to feed him

and the question of women
if he could take them sudden enough to force
dilation before the metal took hold,
or if he’d have been forever
at a closed, golden gate.

He blamed the god
for giving him a wish that went too far.
Isn’t it god’s task to save you
from yourself? Wouldn’t a kind deity
have found some way to truly provide,
not this lawyer’s trick
food turned rock in the mouth

but no, here’s Midas
is thirst grown back.
His daughter alive.
His coffers howling.


c. bain

C. Bain is a gender liminal writer, performer, and teaching artist, based in Brooklyn. He is a former member and coach of multiple national-level poetry slam teams. His work appears in anthologies and journals including PANK, theRumpus.net, A Face to Meet the Faces, and the Everyman’s Library book Villanelles. He has shared stages with Jim Carroll, Patricia Smith, Dorothy Allison, and Saul Williams. His plays have been produced in summer festivals at the Tank and at the Kraine in New York City. His full-length poetry collection, Debridement, was a finalist for the 2016 Publishing Triangle Awards. He is a book reviewer at Muzzle Magazine. He works extensively with movement, embodiment, trauma and sexuality.  But he'd rather just dance with you. Visit.

B&W (1).jpg

Omotara James is a poet and essayist.  Her poetry chapbook, Daughter Tongue, was selected by African Poetry Book Fund, in collaboration with Akashic Books, for the 2018 New Generation African Poets Box Set. Her debut full length collection, Mama Wata, is forthcoming in the Fall of 2018 from Siren Songs, of CCM press. She has been award fellowships from Cave Canem and Lambda Literary. Currently, she is an MFA candidate in poetry at NYU. For further information, please visit her website: www.omotarajames.com

In Poetry & Prose Tags poetry, Omotara James, Daughter Tongue, C. Bain, Brooklyn, New York, Curation
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Poetry by ryn weil

April 4, 2018

We do not colonize
We pillage and remove.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags ryn weil, Poet, Poetry, Poems
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Poetry by Julia Laxer

March 23, 2018

                    Sea anemones grow every year.  She remembers.  She’s not the hunter
                        but knows provocation.  I sing to the bees and make honeycakes.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Poet, Poems, Julia Laxer
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2 Poetry Collections That Will Change Your World

March 22, 2018

Joanna C. Valente is a ghost who lives in Brooklyn, New York, and is the author of Sirs & Madams (Aldrich Press, 2014), The Gods Are Dead (Deadly Chaps Press, 2015), Marys of the Sea (The Operating System, 2017), Xenos (Agape Editions, 2016), and Sexting Ghosts (Unknown Press, 2018). They are the editor of A Shadow Map: An Anthology by Survivors of Sexual Assault (CCM, 2017), and received a MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College. Joanna is also the founder of Yes, Poetry, a managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine and CCM, as well as an instructor at Brooklyn Poets. Some of their writing has appeared in Brooklyn Magazine, BUST, Them, Prelude, Apogee, Spork, The Feminist Wire, and elsewhere. 

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In Poetry & Prose Tags natalie eilbert, books, poetry, Emily Corwin
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via SvD

via SvD

A Poet I’ve Never Heard Of: Karin Boye

February 26, 2018

The fourth poet in this series is Karin Boye, a Swedish poet born in Gothenburg in 1900. Her first collection of poems, entitled Clouds came out on 1922. In 1931 founded the poetry magazine Spektrum with Erik Mesterton and Josef Riwkin, translating many of T.S. Eliot’s poems.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Poets, Poems, Tiffany Sciacca, Karin Boye
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anmol-550730.jpg

Poetry by Raquel Vasquez Gilliland

February 12, 2018

Ages ago, this town was all wood.
You had to get to know each tree as a
madrina. You knew this birch that creaks
with wind guides you west; this willow with
bark soft as hair would sing songs from
before the arrival of sky. And everyone
could hear the spirits.

Read More
In Poetry & Prose Tags Raquel Vasquez Gilliland, Poetry, Poet
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Alice Teeple

Alice Teeple

Dear Jesse, by Andi Talarico

February 9, 2018

BY ANDI TALARICO

Dear Jesse,
Happy 29th birthday in prison.

 

Dear Jesse,
I write this to you on your 29th birthday, which you’ll spend in prison.

 

Dear Jesse,
Happy Birthday, little brother, in prison.

 

Dear Jesse,
I meant half-brother. It matters.

 

Dear Jesse-
I don’t know how to write this letter. I don’t know how to do it.

 

Dear Jesse-
I’m sorry.

 

Dear Jesse,
I hate you.

 

Dear Jesse,
Her life mattered too.

 

Dear Jesse,
She was 23. She was 23 and you gunned her down over $60 worth of shit heroin. You did that.

 

Dear Jesse,
I hate you.

I hate you for making this family the wrong kind of poor. A snarl of statistics on rural poverty, a tragedy so common, so small, you’re not even a footnote in the 10 page New Yorker article on the opioid epidemic. I read it on the train to work. I read a clinical article on the pharmaceutical industry on the train to work in New York City. In my ears, airpods scanned the highs and lows of Chet Baker. The most distant mirror.

I read about your world at arm’s length. I thought of you saying-

“Fuck you, Andrea, and your perfect fucking life.”

“Give me 20 bucks, Andrea. I know you got it.”

“You’re not better than me.”

I’m not.

I am.

I’m not.

 

Dear Jesse,
I watch your arrest on the news. They show a picture of the dead girl on the bottom right corner of the screen. The reporter asks you what you have to say for yourself. You snarl,

“Get out of my face.”

I am.

I’m not.

I am.

 

Dear Jesse,
I know you’re no broken branch on a perfect family tree. Not even a tree, really, a snarl of a thorny bush, really, a tangle of blighted limbs, really. To call anything that happens here cyclical is to bestow too much order upon it. Really.

 

Dear Jesse,
We have different fathers. Yours was not a great man. Let’s say that. Let’s remember that when his chemicals crested or cratered, the wrong pill, say, the wrong smoke, the wrong spike, the wrong sniff, it usually ended badly for our mother. You’re too young to remember her broken arm. You’re too young to remember when he still drank. I watched him pour a beer over her head during an argument. I watched her hurl a glass ashtray at his face and almost blind him.

 

Dear Jesse,
I remember.

 

Dear Jesse,
I was seven when you were born, barely not a baby myself. I learned how to love a new human through you, your bright brown eyes reflecting everything you saw around you, new and holy through you. You, on my hip. You, taking the bottle in my hand. You, a small version of me. You, making a big sister of me. You. You named me DeeDee. I named you Young King. I wanted to give the world to you. You.

 

Dear Jesse,
Our mother joked that she named you for Jesse James. She always liked the bad boys best.

 

Dear Jesse,
Your father was one of the worst.

 

Dear Jesse,
I know it was right after he died that you spent your first bout in Juvie. What were you, twelve? Thirteen?

 

Dear Jesse,
I know that you chose violence over grief, or violence through grief, or violence as grief, or that maybe violence is a grief, or that maybe grief is a violence in that it can murder the person bearing the weight of it.

 

Jesse,
It is not lost on me that your drug of choice is a pain-killer.

 

Dear Jesse,
I love you.

 

Dear Jesse,
I hate you.

 

Jesse,
That poor woman. I grieve for her life.

 

Jesse,
You poor child. I grieve for yours as well.

 

Jesse,
The letter I send will say just this,

 

“Dear Jesse,
Try to have a happy birthday. You know I’m here if you need books. Love you, little brother.”



Andi Talarico is a Brooklyn-based writer and reader. She’s the curator and host of At the Inkwell NYC, an international reading series whose New York branch meets at KGB Bar. She's taught poetry in classrooms as a rostered artist, and acted as coach and judge for Poetry Out Loud. In 2003, Paperkite Press published her chapbook, Spinning with the Tornado, and Swandive Publishing included her in the 2014 anthology, Everyday Escape Poems. She also penned a literary arts column for Electric City magazine for several years. When she’s not working with stationery company Baron Fig, she can be found reading tarot cards, supporting independent bookstores, and searching for the best oyster Happy Hour in NYC.

In Social Issues, Personal Essay, Poetry & Prose Tags fam, family, prison, letters
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Poetry by Amy Saul-Zerby

February 5, 2018

Amy Saul-Zerby is the author of Deep Camouflage (Civil Coping Mechanisms) and Paper Flowers Imaginary Birds (Be About It Press). Her poems have appeared in Painted Bride Quarterly, Spy Kids Review, Mad House, and Bedfellows Magazine. She is editor in chief of Voicemail Poems and a contributing writer at Fields Magazine and The Rumpus.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags amy saul-zerby, poetry
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lucy westenra

3 Poems by Cathleen Allyn Conway

January 31, 2018

BY CATHLEEN ALLYN CONWAY

Author's note: These are all found works, some using modified versions of traditional poetic forms. Their sources are Toby Whithouse's Doctor Who episode VAMPIRES OF VENICE, Stephen King's SALEM'S LOT, the stage adaptation of LET THE RIGHT ONE IN, miscellaneous Sylvia Plath poems, and DRACULA by Bram Stoker. They are part of a longer work, Bloofer, a collection of found poems on the female vampire that forms the creative component of my PhD thesis.
 

THE VAMPIRE WHO SAID HE WAS YOU

He bites. A mouth just bloodied.
The blood flood is the flood of love.

A love gift utterly unasked for.
Death opened, like a black tree, blackly.

The box is only temporary, the
black bunched in there like a bat.

I bleed or sleep all the blackening morning,
separated from my house by headstones and corpses.

I am red meat, red hair; marble facades.
The corpse at the gate petrifies as I rise.
 


THE VILLAGERS NEVER LIKED YOU

I wake to a mausoleum.
This is the room I could never breathe in.

Black bat airs wrap me, raggy shawls,
blue garments unloosing small owls.

Eternity bores me; my soul dies for it.
I eat men like air. I never wanted it.

 

LUCY’S SWEET PURITY

I could see in the white flesh a dint
then Arthur struck with all his might:
contorting and cut, The Thing writhed,
a blood-curdling screech from red lips.

Arthur never faltered, deeper driving
His stake into the body, twisting and wild,
crimson foam smearing white,
blood from the pierce welling, welling.

The teeth ceased to champ,
the writhing became less.
On his forehead sprang
drops of sweat, broken gasps
came his breath, and a light
broke his face, glad and strange.

 


Cathleen Allyn Conway is a PhD creative writing research student at Goldsmiths College, University of London. She is the co-editor of Plath Profiles, the only academic journal dedicated to the work of Sylvia Plath, and the founder and co-editor of women’s protest poetry magazine Thank You For Swallowing. She has previously worked as a journalist on UK trades and national newspapers, and as an English teacher in inner London. Her poetry has appeared in print, online and in anthologies. Her pamphlet Static Cling was published by Dancing Girl Press in 2012. Originally from Chicago, she lives in south London with her partner and son. You may follow her intermittent feminist ranting and retweets at @mllekitty.

In Poetry & Prose Tags vampire, feminism, female vampire, plath, dracula, bram stoker, Plath Profiles, London, vampirism, goth, goth AF, poetry
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Excerpts from "Dress Code Aquarium" by Benjamin Niespodziany

January 25, 2018

The doctor wasn't supposed to
but she prescribed herself
to try new things.
"Something new once a week,

repeat, repeat."

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Poetry, Poet, Prose, Poems, Benjamin Niespodziany, Chapbook
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via ArtSpecialDay

via ArtSpecialDay

A Poet I’ve Never Heard Of: Alda Merini

January 23, 2018

Alda Merini put a lot of poetry and other writings into this world, but it is hard to find a lot of it translated! Below you will find both poems and aphorisms, or as Merini called them "spells of the night."

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In Poetry & Prose, Video Reading Series Tags Alda Merini, Poet, Poetry, Poem, Poems, Poets, Tiffany Sciacca
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3 Poetry Books You Will Love Reading

January 18, 2018

Joanna C. Valente is a human who lives in Brooklyn, New York, and is the author of Sirs & Madams (Aldrich Press, 2014), The Gods Are Dead (Deadly Chaps Press, 2015), Marys of the Sea (The Operating System, 2017), Xenos (Agape Editions, 2016), and Sexting Ghosts (Unknown Press, 2018). They are the editor of A Shadow Map: An Anthology by Survivors of Sexual Assault (CCM, 2017). Joanna received a MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College, and is also the founder of Yes, Poetry, a managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine and CCM, as well as an instructor at Brooklyn Poets. Some of their writing has appeared in Brooklyn Magazine, Prelude, Apogee, Spork, The Feminist Wire, BUST, and elsewhere. 

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In Poetry & Prose Tags philip jenks, Maris McLamoureary, Gabriel Ojeda-Sague, books
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via swissinfo.ch

via swissinfo.ch

A Poet I’ve Never Heard Of: Alfonsina Storni

January 18, 2018

And when you have put
Into it the soul
That through the bedrooms
Became entangled
Then, good man,
Ask that I be white
Ask that I be like snow
Ask that I be chaste

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Alfonsina Storni, Poetry, Poets, Poems, Tiffany Sciacca
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Michael Ramstead

Michael Ramstead

Community, Murder & Feminism on the Podcast My Favorite Murder

January 15, 2018

I have discovered a pretty well known podcast called My Favorite Murder. Two women, Georgia Hardstark and Karen Kilgariff, host the show. It’s considered a comedy podcast. Most people wonder: Where’s the humor in murder? Most would also argue that there is none. However, the humor comes from somewhere else. It’s part of this idea that in order to understand something better we have to get close it. In order to understand why people like Dennis Rader kill we have to pay attention and get closer. So, the humor then, it comes from a place of trying to conquer fear and come to a point of understanding.

Read More
In Personal Essay, Poetry & Prose, Social Issues Tags My Favorite Murder, True Crime, Feminism, Podcast
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'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Catherine Bai
Poetry 2025
'I do whatever the light tells me to' — poetry by Catherine Bai
Catherine Bai
Poetry 2025
Catherine Bai
Poetry 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Kale Hensley
Poetry 2025
‘to kill bodice and give sacrament’ — poetry By Kale Hensley
Kale Hensley
Poetry 2025
Kale Hensley
Poetry 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Natalie Mariko
Poetry 2025
'Venetian draped in goatskin' — poetry by Natalie Mariko
Natalie Mariko
Poetry 2025
Natalie Mariko
Poetry 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Patrice Boyer Claeys
Poetry 2025
'the long sorrow of the color red' — centos by Patrice Boyer Claeys
Patrice Boyer Claeys
Poetry 2025
Patrice Boyer Claeys
Poetry 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Ellen Kombiyil
Poetry 2025
'Flowers are the offspring of longing' — poetry by Ellen Kombiyil
Ellen Kombiyil
Poetry 2025
Ellen Kombiyil
Poetry 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Chris McCreary
Poetry 2025
'punish or repent' — poetry by Chris McCreary
Chris McCreary
Poetry 2025
Chris McCreary
Poetry 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Jessica Purdy
Poetry 2025
'long, dangerous grasses' — poetry by Jessica Purdy
Jessica Purdy
Poetry 2025
Jessica Purdy
Poetry 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nathan Hassall
Poetry 2025
'gifting nighttime honey' — poetry by Nathan Hassall
Nathan Hassall
Poetry 2025
Nathan Hassall
Poetry 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Jeanne Morel, Anthony Warnke, collaborative poetry
Poetry 2025
'A theory of pauses' — poetry by Jeanne Morel and Anthony Warnke
Jeanne Morel, Anthony Warnke, collaborative poetry
Poetry 2025
Jeanne Morel, Anthony Warnke, collaborative poetry
Poetry 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
D.J. Huppatz
Poetry 2025
'into the voluminous abyss' — poetry by D.J. Huppatz
D.J. Huppatz
Poetry 2025
D.J. Huppatz
Poetry 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Carolee Bennett
Poetry 2025
'an animal within an animal' — a poem by Carolee Bennett
Carolee Bennett
Poetry 2025
Carolee Bennett
Poetry 2025
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Anne-Adele Wight
Poetry 2025
'Hotter than gluttony' — poetry by Anne-Adele Wight
Anne-Adele Wight
Poetry 2025
Anne-Adele Wight
Poetry 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
fox henry frazier
Poetry 2025
'As though from Babel' — poetry by Fox Henry Frazier
fox henry frazier
Poetry 2025
fox henry frazier
Poetry 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Aaliyah Anderson
Poetry 2025
'See my wants' — poetry by Aaliyah Anderson
Aaliyah Anderson
Poetry 2025
Aaliyah Anderson
Poetry 2025

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