Not This Time

by Julene Waffle Sometimes I embrace the stillness of winter, let it settle into the threads of my veins, twist itself into the locks of my hair, but tonight I lock it away in the drawer where I keep my lacy things and old letters that belong only to me. I knuckle down and sing

VACATION

by Elizabeth Morse Monica and Joyce set out for mountains in a beat-up SUV. Anytime is a good time for this much-loved excursion. The radio plays songs from years ago, as though time has been sliced open. They talk, and drink bottled water. Monica pulls back her hair, flicking the fastener once, twice. Their words

TWO POEMS

by Geer Austin Goodbye My name is Jérôme, and I live near the Avenue du Président Kennedy, you said. Your hair was green so I asked you to stay. Yeah but I got a ticket to fly, you said. We were in my apartment on Mulberry Street, watching hipsters clomp up the block. A tricolored

Sonic Babka

by Marc Alan Di Martino My first week in New York I spotted Thurston Moore sauntering out of a bakery on Spring St. Artists had once flocked to SoHo in retreat from rent hikes, but by then you couldn’t live there without a trust fund. He nearly ran me down, or so the memory has

Three Months

by CL Bledsoe Shaking hands. Shaking body. A red licorice panic twirling up my throat for days each time she calls. Stay busy. Projects. Work, like a weighted blanket. Date anyone, but be nice about it. Movies. Shows. Stand outside friends’ houses until they get home. Don’t make it weird. Bring dinner. Flowers. Be on.

Gowanus

by Gerald Wagoner Brooklyn’s skyline is a dank, indistinct  brume with snow soon. Another empty rusted warehouse opposite this side of the canal, useful last month, awaits demolition. Low old buildings on both sides of The Gowanus are being leveled. More glass high-rises will go up. Young people, couples with bright eyes will move in.

Killers by Design

by Jim Tilley Creeping is an act of stealth, moving slowly and carefully to avoid being heard or noticed, a label improperly assigned to the invasive plants rapidly climbing trunks of trees to erect themselves, smothering those trees’ leaves, blocking sunlight, suppressing photosynthesis, killers by design, somewhat like their cousins growing uncontrollably, spreading to other