Karen and the Birdwatcher

by Angie Dribben Seems especially us white women like to shout, The problem  with this world  is the men running it. Perhaps it is because we slog beneath the horrors we commit in our own privilege. After all, it was our plumed Victorian hats and all the feathers we stuck in them that nearly eradicated

Elegy #21

by Martin Willitts Jr August trails across the sky, rippling shadows. It is finished raining. The quiet cold remains, trees dazed by the sudden changes, ripen with crisp eminence. Juncos quiver on maple branches. Soon, September’s wingspan will darken and lengthen into drizzle-chills. Already, the clutch of winter berry and red holly berries begin their

birthday wishes

by Linda Wimberly i want to drink to get drunk sit on the floor get stoned talk existentialism maybe transcendental meditation i want to pick up a stranger who sits at the bar not be afraid to show my body wake in a strange bed naked spent i want to fill the holes left by

An element of unfairness.

by DS Maolalai drunk and frustrated in the kitchen at the kitchen table, explaining the rules of the card-game to my best friend’s quite lovely new girlfriend. making eye contact with chrysty and frowning, as if common sense knew how to play. perhaps a judgement with an element of unfairness – no, certainly that’s what

Baggage Reclaim

by Ben Nardolilli Travel brings out strange combinations for the sake of space, all improvised, my oxblood loafers sit on top of t-shirts, rolled up socks sit inside my boxer briefs, and toiletries are nestled in breast pockets. I have worn each of these items down until they became personal talismans for me, mass manufactured

Anisomelia

by Lauren Scharhag i. We were nine, and it was the age of MASH and paper fortune tellers. Choose a color. Choose a number. Close your eyes. I will draw a spiral until you say stop. We unpopular girls sat together in the lunchroom, huddled like birds on an electrical wire, all part of the

Among Grotesque Trees

by Millicent Accardi We amuse ourselves through the absurd March forest, comical and childish, dupes in this quarantine of looking for breadcrumbs, a pathway out. Set aside on a fool’s errand, seven times funny and infantile, the dance of the woods creating stockpiles of leaves, like court hesitators we wash tree bark And dance together,

Grown Men and their Toys

By Christopher Clauss There is a lifelong benefit to action hero fantasies and the crash of toy cars, the larger than life scenarios, the sound effects uttered thoughtlessly by young boys at play lost in the fantasy of adventure, sounding almost nothing like the real thing. We are grown now, aware of the listening ears