Christopher Phelps
Axiomancy | And If Their Depth Isn't So Much a Cavern of Horrors and Delights
Axiomancy
Some sort of fanciful word that came to me as I walked in the woods with my companion. My house-dweller and I, out for a spell. Out we dwelled for an afternoon well under treeline in the middle of late spring, the sun coming through and moving off, a breeze cool enough to sense was cold-adjacent, dry as hope for the meager accumulation of snow. Whatever snow there is to melt is fresh water for the tender growth to spin the wheel again. We talked only briefly, both in our heads, at rare intervals aloud. Listening with our steps, watching with glimpses of the way ahead. I feel like becoming a small-b buddhist if I’m not already — I think but do not say. I meander about, orbiting the mood that arises and moves along. (Not away, and neither like a latch I feel a need to touch.) This page we share, the leap we live. The gathered time in decades, the years beginning to count themselves, about the number one can see in a glance. Ten coins on a table, ten remaining seeds in the feeder, all fingers present and in working order. The found, sparsile stars, released as they are. As for our glimpse of things of value, here in the open air without a tag or sell-by date, I wonder if I could call it divination. In lieu of tossed lots or the look of birds; instead of know-me runes cut into aspen bark. Facing value as a being, not a flight, not a stepped-on step. Axios: value. Unknowable, however known, however much a walk from stump to stone. (Most of the walk around them, thinking of Weil’s notion of metaxu: every separation is a link.) Nobody’s, anybody’s, or some body’s arch or stipulated faith, value as a homemade kind of strength. A clutch of leaves, caught in idiosyncratic time. A stretch that doesn’t break into bits only to claw them back. No atoms, however intricate, that can tell you what they mean. A lingering respect for the mystery of life and the certainty of error. No mosaic but the music of two lives tandem-lived, overlapping everywhere — a spill from a cup and a hand to hold it up — one hand from each of two human stations, becoming no correct amount of familiar. Is there a recognition less about the head? Not a posted sign, less a phrase. A word I wasn’t searching for, fell. You-are-here, without the syllables; intact, lacking a map in front of us. Minus the fear of having missed something important along the way (where the arrows meet the words). Back up the long ramp of Bear Wallow, the last leg of the triangle of trails that were our travels that day, we walked with the breath we had. We dug a little deeper than we knew. At one point, stopping for water and breeze, one of us finished a sentence the other just unearthed:
These steps, they’re like — this steep had many children.
And If Their Depth Isn’t So Much a Cavern of Horrors and Delights
In response to a Facebook group’s meme that read, “My kink is people who explore their depth,
instead of just polishing the surface.”
That’s alright. If it’s an encampment or an archipelago
or even a series of trenches, all out of order, like any litter of towns
that bring some relief from the landscape, that’s alright.
I can’t look at the mirror long. There’s so much burnished glare
hidden in doctored sight. Bright and flagging hopes
singing different songs at the same time,
and sound doesn’t very well overlap
unless there are waves that stand still, while others pass,
enough of these waves waving in their bivouac to make
a playground jump rope. Now that my knees are middle-aged,
I wish I’d joined those girls who I thought made me fear
my own clumsiness. They didn’t. I did, comparing them
to gym class, where any fun or joy in discovery
was against the rules. The posted and unposted rules
in their aura of do it right or you’ll suffer, once the whistle,
twice the ensuing snickers. Everyone knows these snickers
come from nerves of new and nervous creatures,
whose skin is originally thin. Where thickness is learned
from invented contests that must be won since
we no longer have prey to hunt. Since
we’ve been our own prey for some time now.
I take a moment to wonder how long. Since written records
could keep track of debt? Since someone in a cave
or a hut was there to record what someone else did
or said? At least. Nobody could say for certain
why invention’s mother was calling kids and father,
maybe from all the way across the caldera
(where the grass is green and the land is flat,
so animals get at that). These anemic beings
we’ve become, full of spurts and muscle
spasms, where once the sweet birds sang.
Sweet birds we rarely ate, because they’re small.
And something small enough (for example, a single pock)
perhaps escapes our notice. Since we have been groomed
to be prowlers of the present, all the while presentable.
It’s kind of gross, what we’ve learned to overlook.
Is it alright? Are we? Now that time is full of craters
we say we didn’t make. We say were here, well before
we lost our fur and shaved the rest, then stopped,
for a while, pretending we’re not halfway to nowhere
without a middle, and halfway back
from someone who never was
so stocked and stoked with purpose. Never was
so beautiful in the gloam and in the morning
when two stars become one wish for the night
to have been alright. To have been just a time
for the orchestra to grind through the tune.
For our sipped and slowing breath to catch us up.
Christopher Phelps lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he teaches math and interrelated mysteries. Queer and neurodivergent, autistic and aphantasiac, these twainbows underwrite his creative steadfascination. The author of a poetry chapbook, Tremblem, together with the full-length collections, Cosmosis and Word Problems, he has poems in journals including Beloit Poetry Journal, Boston Review, Broken Lens, The Kenyon Review, The Nation, Poetry Magazine, and Zoeglossia. Newer and brand-new manuscripts, Salve Age and Nearvous, respectively, are questing for publication. Find more at christopher-phelps.com.
Janet Reich Elsbach
Note to Self: Most Tree Roots Spread Two to Three Times the Radius of the Canopy (and can extend five times or more in dry conditions)
Note to Self: Most Tree Roots Spread Two to Three Times the Radius of the Canopy (and can extend five times or more in dry conditions)
Put a mark here to show the man
and another for the woman.
This X indicates the ancient maple tree,
crazy maze of the crown above, roots spiraling under foot.
Erase the X. Show the tree.
Show the taproot, root cap, region of elongation.
Show every tiny extension pulling
inward, reaching up.
Show what’s visible against
the sky, and what’s beneath.
The day is warm and clear,
so strangely warm for winter and why not
take a walk, he said.
Frame it that way.
A box can serve to place the house
across the sloping meadow
(arrow here to indicate the couple’s movement to the south).
Inside the house the baby sleeps;
these concentric circles
around and around the basket,
those are for the grandma, the sisters,
watching him sleep.
This grassy distance here, (box to tree),
brown and dry,
is the widest expanse between
his tiny, fragile heart and hers
since the thought of him
bloomed in her mind
and the fact of him
took shape, among her bones,
and he slid out to face the full December moon
shining through the window above their bed.
Use silver for that light.
Indicate the grass with little lines,
a few—there’s no accounting
for every blade.
We will need a key; leave space for that.
How fast she could get back across the meadow
is a question mostly her breasts feel full of.
Move the mark
of the man into the treeline,
then adjust the woman.
Deep in the night she’ll find herself sitting up before she knows
she is awake, the only one awake
to hear the hungry, discordant racket of the coyotes
ricocheting up from the river against their hill.
That drunken cackling raises something primitive in her.
It’s so hard to gauge the distance.
One inch equals a mile.
Greys and browns for the fur, yellow for the eyes,
as you must know,
having seen them in the light.
Deep inside the bark, despite the cold,
a network of alveoli
is still ferrying cargo between the soil and the sky
(blue for that; the day is really fine).
This thrumming should be audible.
Draw lines to show it, there in the understory.
Reverberations from the tree
or her heart, or her blood or the milk.
It isn’t enough,
he seems to be saying
as the fullness and the ache
of the milk thunder into place.
I thought the baby would make it different
--these words hang in between them now, so
use a vivid color for that—
But this isn’t enough.
It isn’t what I thought it would be.
Did you put a compass by the key?
The baby is still north
of where they stand.
Show that.
Janet Reich Elsbach writes about how things going on in the average life collide with making dinner on her blog, a Raisin & a Porpoise. Her book, Extra Helping: Recipes for Caring, Connecting, and Building Community One Dish at a Time [Roost 2018] addresses the most fundamental building block of mutual aid: nourishing the people near us. She teaches writing and art to adults with disabilities, spends a lot of time with dogs, and likes to play with words.
Colleen Harris
It Begins This Way
It Begins This Way
I
It begins this way: cousin
and cousin, Titan and Olympian.
Zeus—who also goes by Richard—
is a plunderer, a capturer of women,
a jungle of lust as eagle, bull, ant, swan,
tangled in his own tawdry desires,
needing and feeding on beauty, seeding
himself. Prometheus—who is also Chad—
by crafty counsel gives men fire to keep warm,
gives men clouds to keep warned
of the god-king’s impending rain,
convinces Zeus-Richard to take
the greasy dross of bones and fat
and forms men’s taste for the good meat,
gives them Clymene’s crockpot recipes
for pot roast and beef stifado.
The god who comes upon women
as a cloud, as a shower of gold coins,
as the whispered pledge of a new Brahmin satchel,
as the one who makes the strippers wince
because he squeezes too hard
and follows them out to the dimly lit lot
decides it should be a woman to level his cousin.
Pandora—who is always Pandora—becomes.
The ingredients for hell are hot hate,
a man, a man, and a girl new-born of earth.
II
After a new girl has opened all the gifts,
the party winds down to lyres strumming
Semisonic’s Closing Time,
half-drunk gods take Tupperware
of ambrosia home, except Dionysus—
Dio takes the leftover wine, only the reds.
The streamers droop. One gift remains.
A girl grows bored. A girl grows bold
and holds the forbidden jar in her hands.
It is heavy with content, or portent.
It could be filled with solid perfume,
or the silent regard of a parliament of owls.
Richard enjoys his frat house jokes,
it could be spring-loaded snakes.
The prize inside might be seeds stolen
from Hera’s far-west haunt, the Hespirides.
A sharp twist of bangled wrists,
and the chaos of the world boils out.
Richard laughs until he retches.
Her seat tilts and the world grows black.
She runs outside, her curled hair blows back.
III
A woman worries what lies beneath lids,
but a girl knows little of how hunger
draws the skeleton to skin’s surface
like curious koi from their pond,
how sickness churns upstream
in the marrow, how in death
the heart is not a heart
but a panicked rabbit leaping
into the teeth of frenzied hounds.
The girl has blood on her hands
even as she snaps the jar closed.
Washing the clotting red from her fingers:
girl becomes woman.
The music changes—war is the ring
of steel on steel, old age is a thready piccolo,
melody half-lost in the wind.
Honey, open the jar again,
re-gift it to yourself. Here, hope:
sedate and slow to kindle to full speed,
sleeping on its paws at the bottom.
It is a needful pet that takes tending.
Hold it to your cheek, hum your Yaya’s tune.
Teach your daughters to dance—
it will take the air in their lungs
to keep it breathing.
Leave your tears with the toys
of your girlhood.
Open the door to the mystery,
no need to wipe your feet of famine
or bow to the rest of us, women like you.
We know. Drink your fermented cup.
We all open the jar. Remember,
not every evil was inside—someone had to fill it.
Colleen S. Harris holds an MFA in Writing from Spalding University and works as a university library dean in Texas. Author of six full-length poetry collections and four chapbooks, her most recent collections include The Discipline of Drowning (Winner of the 2025 Broken Tribe Press Poetry Book Award, forthcoming 2026), Babylon Songs (First Bite Press, forthcoming 2026), The Light Becomes Us (Main Street Rag, 2025), Toothache in the Bone (boats against the current, 2025), and The Girl and the Gifts (Bottlecap, 2025). Her poems appear in Berkeley Poetry Review, The Louisville Review, and more than 80 others. Follow her writing at https://colleensharris.com
CL Bledsoe
The Yips | Thunderstorm | Delilah
The Yips
after a line by Fitzgerald
It takes two to make an accident.
One to hold the map, the other
to work the radio. Someone napping
in the back seat and dreaming
of the World Series. I made a detour
for my good intentions. It was you
and me, the ants, a tree with our initials
carved in at the only rest stop with clean
toilets on the East Coast. Sobering up
at the gas station. Funyuns and Beef jerky.
Buying scratch offs and forgetting quarters.
I stole the keys. Drove us back to your
place. Night blindness and pedestrians.
It meant so much to get it right.
Inside, it was all Hoarders on A&E.
Lingerie the mice had gotten into.
You made me stand outside the door while
you tried to find the couch. You don’t
understand. I have to get home
tonight. You have no ambition beyond
the flowers dying on your coffee table.
Thunderstorm
Back in the days when I was a thunderstorm,
there was brief lightning after every
utterance. I fell and fell, water carpeting
my apartment, making all the boards curl.
Nothing could last without turning
into ruin. I felt no sun burning
through the haze. No warmth except
in my rain. Children blinked to see
me. The old just shook their heads
from their porches. Who would take the time
to run through my onslaught in the hopes
of finding warmth inside? It’s only water
in there, the odd fish I’ve carried with me
since childhood. I waited for overcast
days when I could lie in bed and stay
out of the air. The wind was my only friend.
I dreamed of someday drying out, finding
someone else to fall on.
Delilah
She was the best of us, secret
as an egg. One leg in her pants
and the other in the stars. Like all
of us, she only laughed at the absurdity
of existence or cats playing piano.
Like all of us, she just wanted to help.
But they don’t make potato salad
like they used to anymore. A hair
driven through a tree by heavy winds.
Somewhere that used to be fun done
up in church slacks. I miss talking
about the weather and really meaning
it, the correct portion of vermouth.
It’s only going to get better if you
give it enough time. That’s what
they all say, she used to say. Right
before changing the channel.
Raised on a rice and catfish farm in eastern Arkansas, CL Bledsoe is the author of more than thirty books, including the poetry collections Riceland, The Bottle Episode, and his newest, Having a Baby to Save a Marriage, as well as his latest novels If You Love Me, You’ll Kill Eric Pelkey and The Devil and Ricky Dan. Bledsoe lives in northern Virginia with his kid.
David Eileen
Paracme | Internecine
Paracme
Internecine
David Eileen lives in the mountains of western Virginia. Their writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Diagram, Painted Bride Quarterly, and Best of the Net, among others, with more shared at www.david-eileen.com.
Jordan Cobb
In Our First Lives | Land's End
In Our First Lives
My sister is telling me her plans to plant
a willow tree in the yard in the new house in Kentucky—
a state I thought we had both escaped—so, to distract myself,
I point out the gap in the chainlink,
the dog rushing towards it.
Watch her call its name.
The dog is the ex-husband's,
like the baby, the tax returns, the divorce.
The legal fees & split seams of her dignity.
But the fence & the beyond, the dragonfly above
the late September creek,
none have been touched by him.
She’s out past the cemetery,
the barbershop, just over the county line
from our parents in the yellow house
with their Sunday dinners & walks down Main Street,
complaining about the new builds near the Methodist church
making traffic worse.
Nearly October, so she packs us
into the old Subaru for a ride up 65. Says there’s a farm
with a pumpkin patch ripe for picking & a barn
with an attic of antiques foraged from quieter places.
We play I-Spy, spotting butterflies as we drive.
Haven’t seen this many in years,
not since the forests out in Arkansas, the days of fairy walks
& nights of witches hunts, long before the affair
led us here. & in the middle of it, the dim light
of newborn scents, the creaking rocking chair.
Caught below the bluegrass haze
& time gets split like hairs. I want to tell her I can see her god
hanging low in the stratosphere, his tongue thick
as he licks the condensation from the water tower
until the interstate is clean.
Later, when we’re in the backyard again,
finishing up power washing the brick, we spot the bats
that live behind her shutters flying back into the black.
My sister turns to me,
asking what she should do about them—
all that darkness & wrinkled wings.
But I don’t have an answer to what she’s looking for—
how to make this place a home.
Land’s End
Poppies, spotted from the trail; hummingbirds & man made stairs.
Breeze in from the west tonight, no salt to scent the edges. Super blue moon
two days past & the sky, half open or empty.
Call it golden, this hour, this bridge, alive in its glory,
& across the bay, the lighthouse, the steady pulse of warning.
A short list of unnatural heartbeats I have known in my lifetime:
companies in a court of law;
the cells that lived inside my body before I willed them out;
the last prayer I tried that April night–
cut my tongue so deep, I can't say when I stopped the bleeding.
Can’t find the rusted knife out here. The vodka, the twin bed. The nightmares.
No ghosts left to hide in their barren tableaus.
Before, there was a time I came to cliffs like this– hurled insults onto the overpass, overhead,
but here, it’s passing conversations along the evening mist, barks from the unleashed dog,
flies & old horse shit.
It doesn’t hurt in the old way anymore,
but I remember the pain the same.
I think I am in love again.
I think I am afraid again.
Sleep & death in the same breath.
What is a soul
but the secrets I was willing to tell?
& if I never cross the bridge to the lighthouse,
or learn the names of the trees growing around me,
or the anger still living inside me?
Below, rolling fog. The coast guard, the last ship left, beating against the waves
at the mouth of the cove. & I, cliffside, hands cupped to my lips
calling out for an answer, like screaming into snow.
Jordan Cobb (she/her) is a queer American poet. Based in NYC, she completed her MSc in Creative Writing at the University of Edinburgh. Her work has appeared in The Shore, jmww, The Storms Journal, Rise Up Review, Jet Fuel Review, Camas Magazine, Outskirts Literary Journal, Cherry Tree, & Fugue Journal.
Rachel Beachy
This Is Not About Electricity | Eight Women | End of Day
This Is Not About Electricity
the Power has gone out. I mean, it’s turned dark.
Everywhere I look: pitch black. What else is there
to do? I keep wandering into rooms and flipping
the light switches even though nothing happens.
I don’t know when it will come back. I don’t know
if I’ll be there to see it. But if you are, if one day
the house is suddenly flooded with light, you will
know someone once believed it could. You will know
we never stopped trying.
Eight Women
There is a woman who walks around the neighborhood
singing aloud to the soundtrack of her own life. Another
who sits silently on the front porch, the echoes of girlhood
at her back. Still another who pulls weeds in the backyard
and rubs dirt on whatever hurts have been planted over the
years. There is a woman in the kitchen who calls her mother
for the family recipe only to find out nobody wrote it down.
The woman who greets him at the door and another who
pretends she didn’t hear him come in. The woman at night,
quiet but for the train of her thoughts, still but for the racing
of her pulse. Who dreams of leaving if only her bones weren’t
so heavy. And the one in the morning, who slips into her
children’s bedroom light as a bird, even though they roll their
eyes at her, even though they used to wake her in the dark
and she did not once turn away.
End of Day
When the children sleep, we sit around talking
about the water bill, the Johnsons, the gap in your teeth
when you were young, which we just were
though we did not consider ourselves young
at the time and you did not have a gap in your teeth
then. Trust me – I stared at your mouth more
than you did the summer before you got braces
which was the same summer I got breasts in another state
but somehow, I can feel even those pieces of ourselves
in conversation, this history we did not share but have
in the years since closed with our little life, little deaths
at our own two hands, which you hold while I tell you
I would have kissed you even then and the faucet
goes on dripping in the next room.
Rachel Beachy is the author of Tiny Universe. Her poetry has also appeared or is forthcoming in HAD, Her View From Home, Does It Have Pockets, Mulberry Literary, ONE ART, Rust & Moth, Sky Island Journal, Thread, and others. She was nominated for the Best of the Net Anthology 2025 and shortlisted for the Central Avenue Poetry Prize 2026. She lives in Kentucky with her husband and children. You can find her on Instagram @rachelbeachywrites.
Liz DeGregorio
Magic | Ophidiophobia
Magic
She tells you she danced to a Portishead song,
the one everyone knows,
in a strip club in Alaska, bragging that no one knew
she was still in high school at the time.
She trudges through the snow with you,
one unseasonably wet night in the Pacific Northwest,
two pairs of soaked tights,
trying to see the queer punk band in town.
Later, after a bad movie and a decent meal,
she tries on dresses in the hotel room.
Black silk lace cotton
(where to look?)
It's been decades, and try as you might,
her motives are still opaque:
just when you think you've got her figured out,
she turns away, and
you're alone in the deep, quiet dark of that hotel room.
Ophidiophobia
“Myths are explored, phobias cured, and mysteries revealed at this must-see Museum of the Southwest.” – The Official Website for Albuquerque, New Mexico, Tourism
I did no research before accepting a date’s offer to take me to the
Rattlesnake Museum & Gift Shop
in Albuquerque;
I pictured it like a small-scale version of the
American Museum of Natural History
in New York City:
Stuffed snakes arranged artfully in
life-sized dioramas…
perhaps some dangling from the ceiling,
looking poised and confident,
fun and carefree.
I was wrong because why would a museum
full of
stuffed
dead
snakes
exist?
The building was dark, damp for this desert city.
There were interconnected rooms full of not just
rattlers, but every other kind of snake who had leered at me
in my nightmares,
who had been present in that one episode of MacGyver,
where the most Renaissance of Men
had to overcome his own ophidiophobia
and save the day.
My date and I wandered from cage to cage.
He was no MacGyver.
I was not in or of my body as I looked into the
snakes’ eyes.
I grew numb:
creeping nearer to each glass tank,
examining the rope-like serpents;
their hisses drove into my ears,
wrapped around my brain.
Some snakes, they’d rise up,
their scales crawling up
the glass of their cages,
A nightmare come to life –
I didn’t trust the cages.
I didn’t trust the snakes.
I didn’t trust my date.
The snakes would lean back, then
THUMP,
their bodies hitting the clear glass.
I knew they wanted out,
they wanted to
eat me, devour me, consume me whole…
We went to a tea shop afterwards,
perhaps a kind of aftercare,
if you are the kind of person who views
a date to a building full of snakes
with a phobic woman as a sexual act,
and I do, I am that kind of person.
But he wouldn’t let me pick out my own tea,
and it was then that I rose up
the glass of my own cage,
rose up,
pushed out
and left the shop,
My skin sloughing off to release me -
My tongue flickering as I tasted the clean desert air.
Liz DeGregorio (she/her) is a poet, writer and editor whose work has appeared in Electric Lit, The Rumpus, Catapult Magazine, Bowery Gothic, Lucky Jefferson, ANMLY, SCARS Magazine, BUST, Ghouls Magazine, OyeDrum Magazine, Blink Ink, Dread Central and other publications. She's also performed at the award-winning storytelling series Stranger Stories.
Susan Grimm
Butterick | Laborious
Butterick
The best thing about curfew is breaking the law. The day
a dim envelope as you jump in the car. The girls who sleep
in a bra or always wear hose. Nowhere to go, that’s the trouble.
Rolling down the hill by taking off the brake. Stop
with the slams and whispers. The peter pan collars all face
the same way. Simplicity patterns bloomed from our machines.
Or Butterick. Seamless as our beauty because we misguided
the thread or it broke or snarled. Everything pinned, sharp
as teeth, and the paper see-through. The same chair and the same
door and the night outside over the long green lawns. All around
hard work and duty like lifelines or hymns without words. Parked
as if we were a car in a very safe place, the engine shuddering.
We were busy piercing our ears, deconstructing our underclothes.
You stepped over sleeping bags into the dawn, your engineered
(wedding) curls wrapped like a loaf of bread. On the edge
of the lawn, before the blackberries, the secret path to the ravine.
Shale. Rock broken like pie crust. Layers slipping like a tower
of plates. Topple, stipple, grapple, grab. Dressed all in white
with daisies. Really. The house left empty of all but dust.
Laborious
Driving to Hoboken in winter (talk about a word that’s difficult to rhyme). It wasn’t an omen
that it snowed. It wasn’t an omen when we saw the burning truck which had slid off
the road. Billboard. Difficult journey. Two birds gesturing like a pair of gloves. The shape
of K was being cut out of our lives. Her mattress and small tables and weighty piles
of clothes on their hangers stacked in the white van that caused B so many problems
in a parking lot with the police post-9-11. Snow shifted onto the ground like a yuletide
bakeshop scene. Fog. If I’d known the names of the trees. Robert Frost lets them ghost
as a wood, an obstacle to clear choice. I like his repetition of I. And I--/ I took the one
less traveled by but wonder about that either/or when he could have stepped down,
slipped between, ridden the rest of the way bareback. Sometimes you need an axe.
Susan Grimm has been published in Sugar House Review, The Cincinnati Review, South Dakota Review, and Field. She has had two chapbooks published. In 2004, BkMk Press published Lake Erie Blue, a full-length collection. In 2022, she received her third Ohio Arts Council Individual Artist Grant.
Jillian Stacia
Call to the Void | "Dinah Won't You Blow Your Horn?"
Call to the Void
I’m the type of person who can’t stand on the edge of a cliff
and not think about jumping. Screw the view. I’m imagining
the slap of wind, the splatter of brain on the cavern below.
The masseuse says to relax, but I can’t stop picturing
her hands on my neck, the inevitable snap of bone,
the ear-splitting crack of death. How pathetic to die in a spa,
how boringly bourgeois. Blame it on my nervous system,
the way it stands guard against the world, a sad little sentinel
scouting out every threat, every curve of mountain. My body
has caught on, puffs out in hives to protect against
an imaginary enemy. They call it chronically ill, but I call it
paying attention. Give it time. Everything breaks.
It’s hard to feel safe when you’ve never seen peace up close.
I remember breast-feeding my son, the bloom of milk
each time I heard a high-pitched cry. Now I see a cliff
and my muscles clench. A miracle, really. All the things
we do to protect ourselves. The way we’re built to stay alive.
“Dinah Won’t You Blow Your Horn?”
In my Mother-In-Law’s retirement home, an elderly
woman sings “I’ve Been Working on the Railroad”
and I want to laugh and cry and die right there
on the polyester red carpet before I myself am sent
to a rickety old house filled with nurses and Clorox
and strawberry Jello topped with sugar-free Cool Whip,
before an emergency button is glued to my door,
before my teeth fall out eating corn on the cob,
before my back is hunched and humped and my ass
cannot be wiped without assistance from a nurse
named Marge who is just trying to put her two sons
through community college, but would really like
to touch less butts if it’s okay with management.
Before my kids resent me and leave me to rot,
and my husband divorces me for a younger woman,
and my liver fails from all that wine. Before all that,
please just let me die right here and now while I’m still
youngish and dewyish and punch drunk on the wildness
of the world. Forget staying alive all the live-long day.
Let me out of this life while I still love it.
Jillian is the author of the upcoming poetry collection, Set the Bone, published by Arcana Poetry Press. She was selected as an Honorable Mention for the 2025 Jack McCarthy Book Prize and short-listed for the 2026 Central Avenue Poetry Prize. She has been nominated for several awards, including 2025 Best of Net and the 2025 Pushcart Prize. Her poetry has been featured in several literary magazines and anthologies. Find her online @jillianstacia to read more of her work.
Carrie Conners
Keep Your Chin Up | This Is Me Now
Keep Your Chin Up
To the person who put up the letters on the VFW sign advertising
CHICKEN PARM
& ASTA
dinner on Thursday night: nice work. You made the right call.
This Is Me Now
My eyes blinked from neon pink
when I opened the box of new running shoes,
not the modest burgundy I ordered,
a throwback to my preschool maroon
velcro Roos with the hidden pocket to stash
a quarter for candy at the Marshall Dairy.
These were a shade darker than highlighter pink,
enough to make you reach for sunglasses.
My husband, confused, “You picked those out?”
Even my dog seemed suspicious,
though she can’t see pink. It was the year
of Barbie, so I thought I’d give them a shot.
Maybe they’ll be safer. Get drivers’ attention
as I chug around the neighborhood at dusk.
Honestly, I just didn’t have the energy
for customer service. The pink seemed more
florescent against my normal jogging clothes,
blacks, deep purples and blues, like a bruise.
The effect was immediate. People gawked.
Made eye contact. Talked to me more, Nice day
for a jog. A car honked. I flipped the bird.
Hot pink’s an extrovert’s color. I’m not
cut out for it. I stare down at the concrete
or up at tree leaves to avoid anyone’s gaze.
But I still feel it. Flush pink as I bound down
the sidewalk. And, I swear to you, I run faster.
Carrie Conners, originally from Moundsville, West Virginia, lives in Queens, New York and is an English professor at LaGuardia Community College-CUNY. Her first poetry collection, Luscious Struggle (BrickHouse Books, 2019), was a 2020 Paterson Poetry Prize Finalist. Her second collection, Species of Least Concern, was published by Main Street Rag in 2022. Her poetry has appeared in Barrelhouse, Kestrel, Split Rock Review, Killing the Buddha, and RHINO, among others. She is also the author of the book, Laugh Lines: Humor, Genre, and Political Critique in Late Twentieth-Century American Poetry (UP Mississippi, 2022).
Samuel Day Wharton
After the Big Bang | What's Your First Bird of the Day
After the Big Bang
at 2am
lying awake
I imagine disaster
a plane crash
an assassination
bombs under bridges
(our sun too young to collapse / the universe expanding
at speeds too fast to imagine
none of it comforts me as much
as your hand at my side
your breath at my neck
dogs at our feet)
as helicopters swirl in the night sky
What’s Your First Bird of the Day?
someone asks & I look
immediately, though it’s mid-
day, out the windows
at the house-finch
it’s roseate likeness hanging
off the evening primrose
seeding the ground
around the fig tree. I look
with all my eyes the ones
fully covered by salt-
moss & the ones my niece
gave me in hopes of clearer
weather. Inches away, steady-
handed D. takes a blade
to the straggling morning
glory in my hair. The furthest
I’ve been in this memory
is dawn & there they are
every morning: the mourning
doves in pairs, there pecking
through the redwood mulch
Samuel Day Wharton makes wine & writes poems in Sacramento CA. Recent work has appeared (or will appear) in Stone Circle Review, the engine(idling, The Shore, Some Words, & Poetry Is Currency. You can find him on Bluesky here: @fakeourway.bsky.social
Lucas Wildner
Representations | Another Fraction | Radetzky, Grant and Swan
Representations
Stacy,
baking was my escape
that first pandemic December.
Seattle’s Pacific Standard gloom
and isolation summoned
sentimental visions
of the Advent Jause
I was missing.
Every Sunday a candlelit wreath
on the coffee table,
joined by steaming mugs of frütchetee,
a platter of Vanillekipferl,
Husarenkrapfen, Lebkuchen,
Rumkugeln—all homemade
by my father, transformed
from the man who saved foil
in a drawer for a second or third use
into a baker in need
of another stick of butter,
another tin for the latest batch.
Nostalgic,
I was a good consumer.
The night the hand mixer arrived
my boyfriend and I
ate Husarenkrapfen on the couch.
They tasted like my father was about
to return from the kitchen
with a refilled platter,
like practice for the inevitable after.
They didn’t last a week.
*
You bought a kettle
to boil water the Austrian way.
A chopper
to chop onions Austrianly.
For an Erdäpfelsalat, I assume.
I’m stalling
because I don’t want to say
how I learned your name:
the Notice of settlement email
a year after you became
Class Representative
for all who believed in Mueller’s
Austrian Representations,
the red-white-red,
umlauted distractions
that allowed the company
to overcharge us
for European quality.
Suffering,
the attorneys called it—
the cooks and bakers tricked
by Chinese-made products,
who needed Austrian quality,
Old World magic in the kitchen.
I never told him. I knew
he would have scolded me—
it hadn’t been on sale.
But news of the settlement
almost made me reconsider.
$7.50 to make me whole.
It would have made his day.
Another Fraction
There were
years pretending
to read his birthday wishes,
handwriting as inscrutable as the German.
Silently you would count to eight
then Danke, Papa interrupted your smile.
The party could move on.
Didn’t need much German
to be grateful.
Decades later,
a first: in a card for Easter
addressed to you and your boyfriend,
you find your parents transformed,
twin territories held together
by boundary: Papa/Günter Mom/Mary.
That he can’t or won’t write Dad—
a joke possibly only to you,
one you feel guilty enjoying, but
isn’t this
what you wanted, a boyfriend
and a relationship with your parents
that don’t get in each other’s way?
Part of it is how he sounds in English,
I hope that a visit in Seattle is on my travel plans.
Part of it is the retreat, again, from German.
Another fraction subtracted.
You agree, the card is nice.
An attempt at gratitude.
Don’t need much at all.
Radetzky, Grant and Swan
Late night errand for conveniences
at the 24-hour pharmacy. I park
and my parents are waltzing again,
memories of Neujahrskonzert broadcasts
in the living room that fade
as soon as I step out of the car,
startled by the outdoor speakers
management has armed
with Classical, enough decibels
to discourage loitering,
provide an un-unhoused shopping experience.
A hostile hospitality
already half-forgotten
by the time I drive off
with my electrolyte packs.
Turning to the audience
the conductor lifts his baton.
The imperial capital claps along.
Victory, victory. In their hands
a sting sharpening.
Lucas Wildner (he/him) lives in Seattle. He is repairing his relationships to German and English and.... Ghost City Review published his debut chapbook Fluency in June 2022 and his chapbook [eyes emoji] was published by Hot Mess House in 2024. He can be found.
Laura DeHart Young
Truck Stop Prayer | What I Couldn't Fix
Truck Stop Prayer
Bless the smell of cinnamon buns,
burnt coffee, wet gravel after a
sudden rain.
Cigarette smoke and truck exhaust,
engine oil, garbage stench, and grit.
Bless finding a truck stop just in time.
Bless a strong woman
who studies the horizon,
doesn't bend or bow.
Weighs her words—
a fire in her silence
revealed through dusky eyes.
Like the woman at the next pump,
directing the flow of fuel
into a black pickup—
her glance straying
from the shimmering horizon
to my wrestling
with a jammed gas cap.
Bless the arm that reaches across
and twists it open
with a calloused hand.
A hand you want around
to open dill pickle jars
and strawberry jam.
“Where you headed?” she asks,
cowboy hat flapping in the breeze.
Maybe it’s a blessing I don't own
a western hat—just passing through
these foreign plains
where footsteps shed grief
and forward motion dulls pain.
I am good at running away—
from discomfort,
reckoning.
Shattered stoneware
flying past my head
in nightly dreams.
Bless glances that say just enough—
this woman leaning
against the pump,
asking with concern: “You hungry?”
Sunlight burns her shoulders,
streaks of gold woven
through brunette hair.
She must have noticed
the bruised cheekbone, stitches.
Bless the gravel crunching
under our boots
past license plates from states
I’ve never visited.
We order Buc-ee’s brisket sandwiches,
eat in the bed of her truck—
closeness I no longer remember.
Bless the wide felt brim
casting shadows across her face—
hiding softness,
voice quiet, but deliberate.
She owns a small dairy farm off 80 East
outside Lincoln—
runs it with her brother,
barely breaking even.
Her forehead is lined with hard work,
face tanned, shoulders sculpted.
She lifts me down—
presses a number into my hand.
“Call me,” she says.
Bless that.
What I Couldn’t Fix
There wasn't much visible
under the sink.
Laced boots and an inch of jeans.
Your muffled voice,
asking for the crescent wrench.
I study the same tool
in a hardware store off Route 66—
balance its weight on two fingers,
cold in my palm as I adjust it.
Imagine your hand reaching,
pipes clanking years ago.
The screen door slams for the tenth time,
never fully closing.
The store a dinosaur of time—
stuffy, organized chaos
with an inch of desert dust,
sharp smell of grease, and
tang of WD-40.
A lone fan spinning overhead
accomplishes nothing.
I return the wrench
to a faded pegboard
where it's likely been dangling
for a decade—
step over a golden retriever
sprawled in the next aisle.
Locate tire pressure gauges—
what I really need—
piled high in a plastic bin.
I remember using one on your Datsun—
you standing, hands on hips,
asking, “What is that thing?”
The same woman who could
fix a sink
was car clueless.
I pick up a handful,
let them slip back
through my fingers into the barrel
like I’m sifting
through old memories.
Kneeling on snow-covered ground,
testing tires—pressure low.
Explaining the readings to
a blank stare.
At the counter, a man in a stained apron,
informs me, “Cash only.”
Punches an old-time register,
indicator window displaying the price.
Bells chime, the drawer flings open.
I forgot what a penny looked like.
I leave this museum of spare parts,
each one built to repair something—
except what’s gone.
No tool has ever existed
to fix what happened to us.
Laura DeHart Young is a queer poet and novelist whose work explores memory, resilience, and the emotional terrain of relationships. Her poems have appeared in The Eunoia Review, Last Leaves Magazine, The Ravens Perch, The Bluebird Word, Book of Matches, and elsewhere. Her chapbook, Burnt Toast and Benedictions, was published in October 2025. She is the author of seven novels from Bella Blooks.
JR Walsh
Celebrating our cheese anniversary | Our bags were packed for us | The semester always flees
Celebrating our cheese anniversary
Here is a maze.
I drew the maze.
Begin at start. Trace a line (use this pencil) straight forward until you are blocked. You are
blocked? The maze is defective. I drew the maze badly. I authorize you to jump that
blockade. Here let me– Give me– I used pen or I would erase the
blockage. Look here. Go again. Take back the pencil. Go until you are
stopped. You are stopped again? Go back the other way.
The way you just came from. There. It’s boxed in a sideways L with some pencil scratches in it.
Start. I know those are yours. How can you see your next move with all that back and forth scribbling?
Here. I’ve crossed out that barrier. Pretend it’s a pond. To wade through. Drag the pencil
through. Get your mouse to the cheese. I should’ve told you, you’re a mouse.
We’re mice. In the middle, that’s cheese. Swiss. See the holes? Those
are holes. I think we mice can swim.
Swim the shallow puddle. A puddle from a much-needed rain. A puddle of our mistakes. Just go again.
Start from here. You’re almost there. Give me the– Look–
If you can’t– Give me– You just jump these walls and you’re in the cheese. I know I know.
The pencil is dull now. Sharpeners are not in our budget.
Our bags were packed for us
Everyone asked, Why don't you move
away again?
They were sad that we were missing out
on the experiences everyone enjoyed so much.
The vibrating noise! The specific smells!
& not necessarily in this order.
Every fun example free from our loss.
We didn't wish to be swayed by public opinion,
so we only half-considered moving again.
But you can't only half-
move even if you think it will be
at least or
at most half-
fun.
We moved to take a vote.
It was unanimous.
Fun didn't move us one bit.
The Semester Always Flees
Special thanks to Feiga Khutoretsky
“Happy Friday of Mondays!”
Collective shrug.
“Something I'm trying out. Tell the people.”
Near-collective mystification.
“Only two more classes are left, so today's our last Monday!”
Student asks, “Will Wednesday be the Friday of Wednesdays?”
“Absolutely.”
“When's the Wednesday of Fridays?”
Calculating. “About seven weeks ago.”
Unison mumble. “Would’ve been nice to know.”
Four days later, “Happy Friday of Fridays!”
The instructors face falls off, suddenly sullen.
Tepid faces. Fidgeting.
“Remember those first days, when I couldn’t remember your names?”
It’s different now, the instructor doesn’t say.
“You want a medal?” nobody says, not out loud anyway.
“You promised cake.”
The podium spotlight flickers.
Nothing new, but rather,
consistent like slow blinks
or iambs Chaucer dreamed of before death.
JR Walsh teaches creative writing at SUNY Oswego. He is the Online Editor for The Citron Review. His writing is in beloved publications such as The Greensboro Review, New World Writing, Switch, Litro, The Hong Kong Review, FRiGG, Bull, Flash the Court, HAD, Fractured Literary, 50-word Stories, 3rd Wednesday, Taco Bell Quarterly, and Esquire. More: itsjrwalsh.com.
Mark Jackley
Some Nights | Kenny, Almost Heaven | Cul de Sac Morning
Some Nights
my head’s
a jar of
fireflies,
more the
jar, not
the desperate
light, a gift
trying
to reach
the world
Kenny, Almost Heaven
survived
the wrecks
but walked away
from all twelve steps
whose turnips
taste like
cancer like
crumbled
mountaintop
so hungry
no one sees him
only
deer heads
in the taverns
staring through
the dimness
as he hunts himself
Cul de Sac Morning
I was sizing up last night’s dream.
But never mind the handcuffs,
the hacksaw, and the kiss.
Its remnants won’t exceed
the size of tarnished keys
to getaway cars that don’t.
I will stick them in my pocket,
I will jingle them all day.
Mark Jackley lives in Richmond, Virginia. Recently retired, his back aches from volunteering at a nearby community farm. His poems have appeared in Fifth Wednesday, Sugar House Review, The Cape Rock, Tampa Review, and Does It Have Pockets.
Rebecca Michels
Moon Phase | Women's Work
Moon Phase
Before I knew it
was the lunar eclipse,
I caught the reflection
in my kitchen window:
low and yellow. I was
searching for an email—
a discount for a lymphatic
facial brush; could I really
brush the burgeoning
wrinkles from my forehead,
lift my cheeks back up
where they belong—
I searched the words
I remembered, sorry late.
Instead, a missed reply
from my long-ago ex.
I hope you’re safe was all
I’d written. He’d survived the fires,
but, he went on, a week later
his brother killed himself.
I knew his brother—his brother
was a complicated asshole.
Years later, I’d write about him.
Years ago, he’d written about me;
a song about the hike
my ex and I took
on the tallest mountain in Maine.
On top of the razor’s edge,
I was terrified. He called it Loon.
I downloaded the attachment,
and he sang out my name,
sang about us pulling through
—we didn’t pull through.
His voice was tender, alive,
and the moon was high and
crystal-clear in the black sky.
Women’s Work
I know women have a lot to do,
says the woman in the next seat
as she holds mine down
so it won’t snap up. I’m overloaded
with the kids’ jackets and programs.
We’re here to see a musical
about the Suffragist movement
and half-way through I’m ashamed
to admit I learn a lot, like how
the leaders were force-fed in prison.
The washing machine breaks down
at my parents’ place while we’re visiting;
I wash heavy jeans and sweatshirts,
small cotton underpants in the tub.
Leaning over the edge, I move
the way I’m sure my grandmother did
with her washboard in the basement.
Are you a project manager?
asks the plumber. Yes.
I make the kids’ breakfast, pick
white pith off mandarin segments.
Good luck, my mom says as she does
when I’m on my way out. I’m picking up
my shoes at the shoemaker.
He shows me my shoes, half-soled,
You didn’t tell me to do the heels.
I recognize the character actor in front of me
with her daughters, tap her shoulder,
I’m a longtime fan of your work.
She says, That means a lot to me.
I’m here with my kids too, I say, and
sit back down for the second act.
Rebecca Michels is a poet and artist living in Madison, Wisconsin. Her recent work appears in Plume and Midway Journal, and is forthcoming in UCity Review and Grand Journal.
John Cullen
Seeking | On Your Knees | Limon Libertab!
Seeking
I’m finding hope in strange places.
When I kayak, I paddle close to shore, the desert
of lily pads, the hilarious hair of young waterfowl
and the suicidal courage of an enraged swan.
Last week, I witnessed a Saguaro cactus
near Adam’s Motel outside Tempe, Arizona.
An elf owl peaked from a woodpecker hole.
Thunder rumored. I understand now
old mystics who fingered innards
and washed the mandrake’s weeping
thighs with wine and incense
to discover in the red flow
the raisin of hope.
On Your Knees
Watch a mouse negotiate
into grass after you shroud
him with a tea towel
and release, or deliver mail
to the nursing home and discuss
slippers with a failing patient
who wet his pants but calmly
awaits a nurse, or forget you will die
and feel the buzz reverberating
bones as you touch the power grid.
Renewed, you understand
forgiveness isn’t necessary
or yours to give. But if it makes you
feel better, go ahead
and forgive yourself.
Bended knees is not about knees
but about levelling eye to eye
with mouse, diaper, and death.
Limon Libertab!
Bees on the butterfly bush clog
a stumbling foreplay to recreate
the world, pollen and nectar
pellets in saddle bags, each centimeter
the right direction. Staring
out the kitchen window,
you too plan to stash and drink
sweet tears as a reward.
Behind your back, huddled
lemons in a bowl discover courage.
They felt the breeze sing,
and cry “Limon Libertab!”
A lemon’s cry is like a fly’s curse,
and yet there is a possibility
they will parachute onto the lawn.
because when you read those lines,
aloud at Starbucks or mumbled
in the dusk of your eye, you danced
with the bee and wed shy fruit.
This happens for the same reason
compelling anyone to stare
into an open manhole.
John Cullen graduated from SUNY Geneseo and worked in the entertainment business booking rock bands, a clown troupe, and an R-rated magician. Recently he has published in American Journal of Poetry, The MacGuffin, Harpur Palate, North Dakota Quarterly, Cleaver, Pembroke Magazine, and New York Quarterly. His chapbook, Town Crazy, is available from Slipstream Press, and Bass Clef Books will release the chapbook Observation of Basic Matter in 2025.
Jennifer Hyde Dracos-Tice
Roar of All Septembers | Trying to Transfer the Weight
Roar of All Septembers
She stood on stage, class president,
red boa round her neck, sparkly
tiara: raised her hand, and the party began.
Opening trumpets of Earth, Wind, and Fire—
and seniors burst like victorious fans
through double doors behind
teachers who lurked in back
for quick get-away, drank
forbidden coffee, fidgeted
with phones. Kids streamed
down aisles in slow motion,
spinning, striking disco poses,
progressing arm in arm,
a parade bugled forth
under the bars of September,
of life that can’t see
its end. Do you recall
summoning our memories,
faculty on our feet, pulled
into the aisles, too, reliving
ancient pep rallies in wooden bleachers,
roar of all Septembers, young bodies,
beads tossing hair pumping
palms bumping sweets flying,
tuba trombone flash of brass—
scrim lift and fall, we celebrated
the beginning of our end.
Trying to Transfer the Weight
1.
Fourth position, practiced at the barre, preparation
for center work. Shifting in plié, from back foot
to front, anchors the arabesque’s rise.
Travel in triplets across the floor, one-two-three,
waltz of the modern dancer, down-up-down,
cover swaths of sprung floor, launch
into a partner’s hands, which grip below hipbones,
rutch tights pulled over a black leotard.
When a man lifts a partner, she must
pull abdominal muscles tight, as if tethering
them to her spine’s inside, careful
not to give him all
her dead weight.
2.
My wife’s working air traffic again
in her nightmares, radar down, pushing tin,
no one answering her hand-off phone calls
from Atlanta Center to a faceless guy
in another underground bunker
in Tulsa or maybe Charlotte,
to hand off control of a plane
to a new airspace. Burden
of 200 souls on her back,
pulling her neck, already straining,
until she wakes up, wrenching covers
tight like locked seatbelts and
screams. I touch her arm, sweat
cold, press my palm
between her breasts. She
sits up, turns on the light.
3.
Knees pulled tight under chin,
arms hugging shins, a student
will sit close by, looking
at anything but me.
So, how are you?
And the stories inch in,
sit around us, fat full caterpillars
on the classroom floor, stories—
pills taken
or that should have been
an uncle staying
down the carpeted hall
from her bedroom
a sidewalk soaked
with a cousin’s blood
a fall down stairs
to take care of it
Today, my student leans
forward in a sage-green chair, sinks
back, eyes on a carpet square,
wants to tell me, but wants
me not to tell. I can’t
not tell. I’ll be fine, I’m fine—
She unfolds each leg, pulls denim
purse to her chest, shoulders
her blue nylon pack, book
corners jutting like fetal
elbows into her back.
Jennifer Hyde Dracos-Tice (she/her) has poems in Witness, Psaltery & Lyre, SWWIM, Literary Mama, Whale Road Review, and elsewhere. Her debut collection, Lodged in the Belly, was published in 2024 by Main Street Rag. A long-time high school English teacher with literature degrees from Brown and Indiana-Bloomington, she lives with her wife in Florida. Learn more at her website: jhdracostice.com/
Colleen Harris
Funeral Shoes | Hobbyhopper | Christmas Cake
Funeral Shoes
for Shara
Your dress is black—dark, plain, cut
below the knee for the modesty
expected in a Southern church,
covering most of your tattoos.
Standing barefoot before the closet,
one more absurd decision to make.
You would go barefoot, you would go
naked if you could, the way she walked
out of the shower, unabashed,
toward the dresser with less care
than when you stood over each other
in fraternity house basement bathrooms,
safely pissing by turns and checking
that the rum hadn’t smudged your red lips.
The closet looms. Fifty-two pairs
to choose from: sedate Mary Janes
somber in black, platform hooker-heels
refusing all reality in purple and green,
sneakers, mules in classic brown leather,
ballet flats in a pink delicate as new skin.
Blue, red, leopard print, colors wheel
before your eyes, they blur like lights,
like central Kentucky college party nights.
Finally you choose—dusty purple
and yellow, with black leather bows
and witch-point toes, a muted whimsy
her contrary spirit would have loved,
would have stolen at the first chance.
The drive to Louisville takes years.
The casket is closed. There is an easel,
a poster-sized photo of her smiling face,
still alive, she could walk in any moment.
You walk to an open pew in low heels—
click clack, come back, click clack.
Hobbyhopper
First it was Red Heart yarn, when her mother taught
her to crochet. Hours walking craft aisles, choosing
colors, shades of olive, blues, and plums, she sought
every hue along the haunted spectrum of bruising.
After that, quilting. Ignoring fiscal sense, she bought
a Singer sewing machine, carry-case, sharp notions,
fat quarters of fabric in red, gold, and grey. She ought
to start small, stick to one hobby, but once set in motion
she is a menace, a fanatic, a woman demon-possessed
to find something—anything—to bring her mind rest.
Christmas Cake
Pine Knot, Kentucky
When the cake tin tipped
landing icing-side down
on the Tahoe carpet,
I ducked my head,
waited for my father’s rage
to spill from your lips.
Instead, you laughed,
said it would make the dogs happy,
and brought the hounds out
to sup on the sweet mess.
I knew then you would ask,
that I would say yes.
We arrived late, small
store-bought cake in hand,
sugar still on our shoes,
laughter like champagne
rising from our throats.
Colleen S. Harris holds an MFA in Writing from Spalding University and works as a university library dean in Texas. Author of four poetry books and four chapbooks, her most recent collections include The Light Becomes Us (Main Street Rag, 2025), Toothache in the Bone (boats against the current, 2025), The Girl and the Gifts (Bottlecap, 2025), and These Terrible Sacraments (Doubleback 2019; Bellowing Ark, 2010). Her poems appear in Berkeley Poetry Review, The Louisville Review, and more than 80 others. Follow her writing at https://colleensharris.com