Lucid Lucy Lululy

She had plugged

The holes atop

Her head with hair

To keep the brains

From knowing there

Was more to life

Than dark and matted skull.

But if she’d once

Considered the cold

Bare fish tail strands

A-dangling exposed

To brushes, combs,

Hot water, wind,

Men’s clutch, she’d

Maybe not have shrieked

When all the hairs

Sunk down to sub-

Skull, crowded round

Her thoughts, coiled

Tight – for warmth –

And lit a fire; set in.

The smoke, an alabaster

Hue – burnt bone?

That smoggy ouster –

Shrouded baldened

Skin, and left

An airborne trail

Like bread crumbs

For the damned

Behind her head

Where all she went then on.

Rebecca White

 

Rebecca White is a journalist based in New York City. She is a frequent contributor to The New York Times. Her poetry is as of yet unpublished. Rebecca’s poems reflect both her personal experiences and the experiences of those who have shared their stories with her. Much of her work focuses on protest, pain, and power.

 

 

The Martyr

Who are you?

You don’t know?

No.

I’ll come closer.

Your face.  What happened to your face?

You don’t remember?

No.

Are you sure?  Look.

It’s horrible.  The holes in your face.  Your chest.  Your stomach.

Yes.  So many.

Why are you laughing?

Children laugh.  Don’t you know children laugh?

Stop.  Stop it, please.  The sound. It hurts.

Yes.  It’s supposed to hurt.

But why do you hurt me?

I asked you that, too.

Please. Please I am begging you.  Don’t look at me.

I have to look at you.

The sound, the sound!  But who are you?  I don’t understand. They said there would be virgins.

 

Marc Simon

 

Marc Simon’s short fiction has appeared in several literary magazines, including The Wilderness House Review, Flashquake, Poetica Magazine, The Writing Disorder, Jewish Fiction.net, Slush Pile Magazine and most recently, Everyday Fiction. His debut novel, The Leap Year Boy was published in December, 2012.

Kasandra Larsen

The Narcissist Hears What You’re Trying to Do There

 

Grabs your argument in a certain hand, clenches

your words in a fist,

spits

 

them back at you before you’ve decided

what you were even trying

to say. Perhaps

 

there wasn’t a manipulative germ

or any exhumed dirty word,

maybe

 

what he can hear and see

is the extent of it,

transparent,

 

but he’s perspicacious with a straight spine,

drawn to full height,

tongue

 

slashing, that dripping dagger

to remind

every syllable matters

 

in the way

it could possibly relate

to him. Admit

 

he wasn’t part of the intended audience,

meandering sentence

still unspooling from your lips?

 

Unthinkable.

Unforgiveable sin.

He has to stop you before you can begin.


Swing Song

 

Squeak creak squeal

squeak creak squeal: across the street,

a couple in their twenties

 

pumps long legs into glassy sky, bodies

flung nearly perpendicular

to the top of the bar, so high. Individual

 

horizons. Now she knows those sounds

last week at sundown

did not mean she was going to break

 

something.

How silly to think the weight

of forty-seven years means anything

 

to a swing

ready to squeak all comers into the clouds

and back to thirteen,

 

sullen, holding a Walkman

turned up loud, back to seven,

screaming in delight, pushed

 

so hard she had to hold on

tight. All the way home,

their palms will thrum

 

with effort while their minds

fly, worries having fallen

from their pockets like pebbles

 

into sand,

the smell of salty steel

still kissing their hands.

 

Kasandra Larsen

 

Kasandra Larsen’s work has appeared in Best New Poets, Hawai’i Pacific Review, Into the Void Magazine, Stoneboat Literary Journal, Two Hawks Quarterly, and others. Her manuscript CONSTRUCTION was a finalist for the 2016 Four Way Books Intro Prize in Poetry; her chapbook STELLAR TELEGRAM won the 2009 Sheltering Pines Press Chapbook Award. She is a two-time Pushcart nominee.

 

 

Notes for an Awkward Morning

A few things you will seek
the morning after: wallets, words, contact

lenses, meaning, directions. Lessons
learned upon rising: kisses can complicate

as much as language, dividing desire
does not diminish desire, no victims

exist once the sun peels back darkness,
drink and decision. You will remember

what she was quick forget: boundaries
between teachers and students, rules

to minimise complication. You will stop
dressing up for her classes. You will not

feel the need to sit in front. But for years,
you’ll waste poetry on pointless questions,

never once raising your hand to ask.

 

Tania De Rozario

 

Tania De Rozario is an artist and writer based in Singapore. She is the author of And The Walls Come Crumbling Down, (Math Paper Press | 2016) and Tender Delirium (Math Paper Press |2013) – the latter was shortlisted for the 2014 Singapore Literature Prize. Tania was the 2011 winner of Singapore’s Golden Point Award for English Poetry, and is an alumna of Hedgebrook (USA), Toji Cultural Centre (South Korea), Sangam House (India), The Substation (Singapore) and The Unifiedfield (Spain). Her poetry and fiction have been published in journals and anthologies in Singapore, India and the USA, while her visual art has been exhibited in Singapore, the USA, Europe and the UK. She also runs EtiquetteSG, a platform that develops and showcases art, writing and film by women from and in Singapore. Founded in 2010, its current work includes the development and facilitation of art and writing workshops focused on issues of gender-based violence.

Golden Fields

The night breeze kisses the amber,

coaxing it to twirl and dance

A twinkling speck of rich medallion, melting

my fingers, warming

all these downtrodden

souls.

 

Faceless fields of fire, voices

both green and golden, crying

for the fall of a marionette

and her puppeteer

To snip off the poisoned strings, once

and for all.

 

A beautiful scene to be woven

in the lies of textbooks

Calm and serene, without a trace

of crimson, yet

 

Where has the marionette gone when

the denouement has come?

When will all the puppeteers in the world

be rid of, cast away with their

tarnished gold?

When will all fields, scarlet and marigold, be left

to rest in peace?

 

These still remain, unanswered

But the streets still blossom

into golden fields, ripe

with courage and ire

An eternal blaze, kindling inside

our palms

 

An angel’s tune charms the streets,

lingering, joined by voices

of fire

When sorrow hangs in my heart,

drop by drop

I rise in the morning hill and

learn a little smile 1

 

 

1 “Morning Dew” (composed by Korean singer Kim Min-gi), a protest song banned under President Park Chung-hee.

 

Soo Young Yun 

 

Soo Young Yun is a student living in Seoul, South Korea. She has been recognized by the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, Origami Poems Project, Ann Arbor District Library, and Writing for Peace. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Aerie International, The Best of Kindness 2017, and the Austin International Poetry Festival Di-vêrsé-city Youth Anthology.