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Brian Kapra Briscombe: Nothing To Do

Far worse than being unemployed, in some respects; Employees with nothing to do.   The Dubai street sweeper polishes his sidewalk, that is already polished. His mate pretends to pick up garbage with a pole grabber, the streets are absolutely empty.   Ana, my hotel tourism saleswoman sits at her little table by the exit, tries small talk with the Pakistani bell boy to no avail. She stares out the glass door at the rain.   Muhammed at Fish World has Read more [...]

René Solivan: Pigeon Peas

The chocolate-covered calendar read August yet the citrus pork bellies lounged casually on Christmas china waiting for their escorts to the table, pigeon peas freshly picked and still boiling in a pot on the iron stove the iron as black as night the coals singing below while nearby they lay the potatoes quiet and still meticulously scrubbed carefully dried and seasoned now asleep in a glass bowl the red Idaho’s peeled and poached in white wine as Read more [...]

Stefanie Botelho, Witness: Scenes

i. April, 2005 The week before, his hands in the seat of my jeans. The lake before us is low. The exposed shore reaches under the beached docks, spread open to coming rain. He said he'd wait for me here. Hours after I leave him, he calls. His voice nods slow through affections. I never shot the shit. Never saw it, either. I refused to see he still did. After five days, the phone rings. His mother found him, a needle in his arm, seven a.m. He ran into the woods outside his house, screaming that Read more [...]

Cyndi Gacosta: Poems

Old Memories Between wake and sleep in the hour Of silent noise of dust and clocks filled space There are old memories both brittle and tender Like the fingers of a palm leaf and the shade it spins On our sunburnt faces, so we bury our cheek on the beach sand Into another half dream sunk up to our knobby knees Deep and wet in the riverbed where we collected things That took shape of arrowheads, or marbles crystallizing planetary nebulas And sometimes atop the feather-grass Read more [...]

Christopher Austin: Poems

Paris Our paths cross as they have before greetings exchanged upon a hint of recognition though unable to  place when or where I was thinking French class, or maybe we were lovers in another lifetime. Perhaps Paris… expatriates sharing café au lait and stories of home. Strolling down the Champs- Elysees I remove my chapeau and bowing deeply, I ask you to dance. Your cheeks blush, desperately trying to match the perfectly pink parasol you twirl above your head in the sun- splashed Read more [...]

The Ansonia Girl

by Peter LaBerge After a while, I got used it. I think the shrill wind’s kicking at my dusty, bloody ankles is the most painful part. I guess you could call it trading one set of parents in for another- the amorous couple in Cadmonic, then the old rickety woman on Lincoln Avenue, and now the newspaper salesman with the clouded cheeks and constantly stuffy nose. The first time, I had to sit for a couple hours at the train tracks across the street from Henry’s Barber Shop. The same boring Broadway Read more [...]

Sheila Ann Dane: Poems

Umbilicus "What cha doin', kid", Your living voice spirals over telephone wires. "Nothing, what choo doin'?" "Nothing." You sound as thin and reedy as a child. Cancer is rocking you backward, backward, Undoing you Soon you will be an infant Suckling at your mother's breasts But they were dry, as I Am dry, a dry sea bed, Replenishing my waters by Drowning in a vat of Brandy while your bones, Ghastly in hospital whites, are Busily being devoured. Faithful Read more [...]

Keith Moul: Guilt By Implication

A man came to my door claiming witness to atrocities committed on my behalf, but in places I had never been.   He said I was duty bound as a citizen beneficiary-- whether on hillsides of poppies bodies explode, or not-- to stand behind our rightful leaders.   He offered digital images for sale, un-enhanced, if I preferred. If I preferred, guilty charges made first in ancient texts illustrated by monks, could be had-- actually his biggest seller--all Read more [...]
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