Issue #65
Julien Griswold
Swimming Lessons
Julien Griswold (they/them) is a non-binary poet studying literary translation at Brown University. Their work has appeared in Philadelphia Teen Stories, LIVE POETRY SOCIETY OF NEW JERSEY, Imazine, and more. Connect with them online @cheerupjulien on Instagram.
Alex Carrigan
The Body as a Nemesis
How did my body betray me?
Was it when it decided
to give me multiple punches
to the gut so I could
revisit every meal I had?
Was it when it decided
I have to drop everything
to confront the red essence
that pours out of me,
tilting my head back to
see God and choke on
his wine?
Was it when it stiffened
and bent me in the morning
to tell me that I
may have lost the
back brace,
but I will never lose the
anxiety of my spine?
Or did it betray me when I
took the first breath?
As if to tell me
that a countdown has started,
and that it may speed up
when I don’t realize,
so I should get used to the ringing in my ears,
a warning of my coming malfunction.
I stare at a digital clock
hanging on my living room wall.
I see how the red dashes
bend and stiffen as they reshape
in sixty-second intervals.
I know I’ll revisit those dashes
when I lay on the coroner’s slab
and they’re painted across me
in a Y-shape,
as they ask themselves,
“When did his body betray him?”
It never did.
It was always open about its intentions.
After Camisha Jones
Moon Blend
I get a text message from
a friend who tells me that
there’s a Hunter’s Moon out tonight.
She sends me a blurry picture taken
from her car, the moon
hanging behind the red traffic lights.
I step out into my courtyard,
but all I see are treetops,
arrows that point to everything
in the obsidian night
except the moon:
There’s an airplane coming in for landing,
one point on Orion’s belt,
another plane departing,
a satellite shaped like a buckle,
that yellow balloon I let go of when I was four,
all easier to find that evening than the moon.
I sometimes feel like
the moon finds me before
I notice its presence,
that great orbital assassin
with the pale face
and missing an eye
after Georges’ miscalculation.
When I find the moon,
I look up to the rabbit
hunched over and grinding away
and ask for it to make me
a blend with its mortar and pestle.
Something I can rub
behind my ears,
across my sternum,
under my nose.
The tea leaves it grinds for me
taste like bergamot and lemon.
I can sit on my patio and
feel tickled as I stare out into the parking lot.
My eyes water from the steam,
and I can feel the tip of my tongue
become as numb as my feet are
in this autumn evening.
But I still can’t see the moon tonight,
even with the blend
I can’t find it
through the pine nettles.
The night is getting colder,
and I’m running out of tea.
After Anna Suarez
Alex Carrigan (he/him; @carriganak) is an editor, poet, and critic from Virginia. He is the author of May All Our Pain Be Champagne: A Collection of Real Housewives Twitter Poetry (Alien Buddha Press, 2022).
DB Jonas
AT THE CROSSROADS
This is the distant elsewhere
We imagine always up ahead,
The place we bear or drag behind us
Bumping like a sled.
This slow andante is a ticking clock
The measured price of getting older
The heft of a familiar rifle stock
Slung heavy on our shoulder.
We seek the place that diligence
Prepares and hope anticipates with fear,
Those intersections left behind long since,
The bypassed crossings hurrying near.
Out beyond each turning in the street
We seek an unencountered sky,
The swirling leaf, the iridescent fruit,
The gutter’s greasy drosophilic eye.
The crossroads is a thoroughfare,
Each crossing is a meadow
Where daylight penetrates the sullen air
Through palaces of shadow.
The past that’s here, the past that’s gone,
The song that crows with every dawn
Invites the sweet rebec and thumping timpani,
Repeats in every ear its baleful ¡Ay de mi!
We seem to sing the past in each
And every rhapsody or sonnet,
So, lost in this arresting motion,
Let’s just heap stones upon it.
THE UNINVITED
Louche in bluest gabardine, he occupies
the room’s far corner like a grand piano.
The trouser-leg’s precise cascade proclaims
the boundless inventories of his draper.
Behind the exclamatory silk of his narrow necktie,
behind the flashing cufflink wreathed
in the insouciant haze of a slack cigarette, behind
the burning worm that bivouacs in his brain,
he sniffs the viscous ballroom’s nuptial air,
turbid as a lobster tank, thick with fraternity and friends,
target-rich with wives and maidenhead, bride
and bridesmaids, wary husbands, fretful fathers.
Patriarch! Thrice paterfamilias! you have them all
on high alert. While all the girls demurely smile
and smooth their flaring skirts, our edgy in-laws
watch like hawks this schnorrer in the corner.
But draw me, Charlie, to your perfumed shirtfront,
admit me to your manly, nicotine reek. Sing me a song,
Old Pop, and waltz me just this once your wildest waltz,
or should you choose, your ghastly little Lindy Hop.
And let us speak tonight as man to man of loss and trust,
of the subtle charms of bigamy, of larceny and lust,
of lies and grace and giving, and of the sidelong glance,
the headlong dash, the endless flight that you call living.
DB Jonas is an orchardist living in the Sangre de Cristo mountains of northern New Mexico. Born in California in 1951, he was raised in Japan and Mexico. His work has recently appeared in Tar River, Whistling Shade, Neologism, Consilience Journal, The Ekphrastic Review, Innisfree Poetry Journal, The Decadent Review and others.
Bethany Jarmul
Please Let My Child Be Normal
My two-year-old son shoves things up his nose—pieces of cardboard, paper peeled from crayons, foam from inside a stuffed fox, rubber from the toy taxi’s wheels. The pediatrician says it’s part of development, world exploration. My mom friend says it’s a sensory issue, compulsion. His nose starts to smell like snot, decay. I use the light on my phone to look up his nose. In the right nostril, I find a tiny nest with three speckled eggs. In the left, a neon green bird the size of my pinky fingernail, poking out her head. The mother bird sings a song to me, an ode to the chicks her eggs will become, a hope for nests they too will build. I breathe a sigh of relief, bring pieces of string, popped balloons, newspaper strips, for my son to add to his nostril- enclosed collection.
Bethany Jarmul is a writer, editor, and artist. Her work has appeared in numerous literary magazines and been nominated for Best of the Net. She lives near Pittsburgh with her family. Connect with her at bethanyjarmul.com or on Twitter: @BethanyJarmul.
Donald Zirilli
Indoor Cat
I geometry stream
the inbetween, shadow
the corners cast. I mine
the gasp, deadly not livery,
knifely clasp
from basement to attic dark,
squaring the mind, meadowing
the lark. I eye the dream
in the trough, I mark
the moment off.
Rooster Like to Play the Chicken
Rooster like to play the chicken
on his shiny red electric bass,
like some fizzy Frankenstein
blowing bubbles in the mud.
Rooster like to play the chicken,
beating sleep like a dirty rug.
He’s the night’s attacking heart,
he pulls apart, thighs and wings
and puffed-up breast,
strung out on some electric fence,
a melody experienced.
Rooster like to play the chicken.
How he moans the barnyard home,
a drone of feathers and feathery bones.
Donald Zirilli, James Tate Prize finalist, Best of the Net nominee, Forward Prize nominee, Now Culture editor, and the Poetry Adjudicator of the NJ State Teen Arts Festival, has dropped poetry into River Styx and other wetlands. His chapbook is Heaven’s Not For You, Kelsay Books, 2018.
Hes Bradley
Chapel
you driving
us finally to
millstone
grit
you gazing
over the stile
a damp nape, rumpled adidas
us mounting
the coarse-grained rock
and leaning
on rowan, above
the glitch in the earth
I don’t notice
the split
beneath us
we go down
and brass
crocodiles, ash
seaweeds, rust
basils
just the gash left of iron
above
and a shallow pool
at our feet
plinking
the moss, indigo green
girdles
and spits
kuhnikteh
kuhnikteh
kuhnikteh
your voice
softer than the gods
that
drip
we walk three blue
whales
of low
echoing
Hes Bradley is a community gardener, researcher, and writer living in Warwickshire. They’re currently designing creative workshops with local community groups and working at the University of Buckingham. They’ve published academic work and poetry with Aesthetica and Yes Poetry.
Ricky Novaes de Oliveira
[hillside rain]
h i l l s i d e r a i n
t r i c k l e s what the clouds decided against with whisper once-lush grass grasps at sudden summer surge hillside rain trickles toward us will the path ahead roll like a stream as we descend you evaporate and I accept the rain to come |
Ricky Novaes de Oliveira lives and loves in Los Angeles. His poetry is found in Rigorous, UChicago Arts, and California’s Best Emerging Poets 2019: An Anthology (Z Publishing House). He is online @oliveirapoetry.