Faultless Weapons Handling

ankle-winged Word Thief flutters ~

orbiting The Muse

wicker creel on shoulder

stealing words off succumbing tongue, from depraved pink lips

collecting manifestos, dispatches, commands, lexeme-threads for unborn poems.

deliciously spilled onto insatiable empty page

deciphering their tangled satisfying meaning

blustery afternoons, elven queens, entangled roots, deep set red brick walls, swim in halo eyes outside time and space, float and dream, bask in caressing warmth, a vision, possibility, sensuality. Mythological building blocks held down on the table ~

kaleidoscopic paper spun round

allowing entry inside

to new worlds.

 

Gleipnir bindings hold winged ankles fast to Little Deaths.

faultless weapons handling in niche darkness.

stiff bow

arrow loosed

raining towards purposed destination

crossing through streaks of bright light

fleshed out totemic monument pierces orienting Dionysian-natured North Star

drowning inspirational beacon in gratification

 

seeking simultaneous orgasmic release of the lore-neuron

greedy minds shine with mythic legend veneer

wandering the halls around midnight

for satisfying heights of pleasure

organic and ever-changing panoply of wonders and sensations

lingering into daylight-crippling twilight delight

 

intent on breaking prey

the beast is afoot, baiting; heavily armed with unpredictable body language.

safe, at a distance

summoning strategic Sun Tzu’s ancient wisdom

the way, the weather, the terrain, the leadership, the discipline

coding memories of my nightmares, my fantasies.

 

verklempt knight walks seven unlit blocks to doors that can’t be closed after opening.

tectonic plates shifting under pace-worn leather boots.

Paineater stills the chaos

disarms the shadows

guards the spiraling-wanderer.

 

J. M. Platts-Fanning

J. M. Platts-Fanning is an award-winning writer nestled within the woodlands of the wave-tousled coastline of Prince Edward Island. Recipient of a PEI Writers’ Guild2022Island Literary Poetry Award2020 Island Literary Short Story Award, the 2022 Battle Tales VII Champion and 2nd place winner in the Humans of the World 2022 Summer Poetry Challenge. Publications include, The Dalhousie Review 2024, Burningword Literary Journal 2024, Pownal Street Press’ 2023 anthology, Fiona: Prince Edward Island Accounts from Canada’s Biggest Storm, Toronto Metropolitan University’s White Wall Review 2023/03, 2022/11, The Write Launch literary magazine 2023/08, 2022/08, 2022/06, Prometheus Dreaming cultural magazine 2022/11, Artistic Warrior’s 2022 Dribbles, Drabbles and Postcards anthology, Common Ground 2020/03 and GIFt Horse anthologies Vol 1 through 5. Her plays have appeared on various theatrical stages, including her dystopian fable, “Apple Bones” performed at the 2021 PEI Community Theatre Festival, “An Answer to the Question on Death” staged at Fridays with Fringe in 2019 and “Held to the Fire” chosen for Watermark Theatre’s 2018 Play Reading Series.

Cecil Morris

What Does Persephone Want?

 

Our daughter Persephone comes and goes.

She plays peek-a-boo with Oxycodone

and Ambien.  She likes it in the dark,

a paradox for when she goes she takes

our sun with her and leaves us only night.

 

When she returns, she brings pallor and chill

and slumps in sleep like asparagus boiled

to limp defeat.  She carries bruises, too,

as if she wrestled with demons or gods

and did not quite escape their fiercest holds.

 

We welcome our daughter, this almost ghost

who does not smile or speak, who barely lifts

her head.  We feed her favored fruits and honey,

make evident (we think) our love, but she—

she sleeps and only sleeps as if the weight

 

of waking crushes her, as if she has

become her great grandmother, embodiment

of death who waits (asleep) to take the last

step from this world to the next, as if done,

done, done, and unwilling to wrestle more.

 

We Have to Let Persephone Go

 

Our daughter Persephone went down to death

to see what it was like and liked it well enough

to stay the whole season in darkness and damp

 

in that underground of hidden things and worms.

With her, she took her secret toys and our joy

and left for us her sad-eyed terrier mix,

 

her unfinished business, and a disco wig

of purple tinsel that seemed to spark with light.

We imagined her scrubbing her hair with dirt

 

and soaking in rejuvenating mud baths

then returning more youthful and radiant

than before, our one daughter renewed, re-born.

 

When it became clear she was not coming back,

we offered to visit her there, to bring her

the red cinnamon candy she preferred

 

or that frozen yogurt sold by the pound

and layered with multi-colored sprinkles,

but she said we could not come, could not yet pass

 

the needle’s eye as she had done.  We were left

bereft as when she went to college but more.

 

Cecil Morris

Cecil Morris retired after 37 years of teaching high school English, and now he tries writing what he spent so many years teaching others to understand and (he hopes) to enjoy. He has poems appearing or forthcoming in English Journal, Rust + Moth, Sugar House Review, Willawaw Journal, and other literary magazines.

Madrid

Tang of ammonia, the yellow bins outside our apartment.

Fetor of urine, cardboard sheets in an abandoned doorway.

The girl who brushes past us in the cathedral,

sweat, cologne, and the sweet remains of her night

lying in her lover’s arms.

 

Didn’t the men who toiled to erect this cathedral,

laying stone on stone,

understand that stone is but hardened muck?

Foolish petitioners, standing before eternity’s bolted doors,

the soil from which we have been fashioned

hard-caked under our nails.

No, for us awaits no heaven,

no chaste and shitless Elysium.

 

Better to return to the stews of grimed clothes

we leave about our rented rooms,

clothes we faithfully launder,

and faithfully foul again,

sinks of dishes we faithfully scrub

and faithfully dirty again.

 

Rising from my dinner,

this warm Madrid night,

I go to lie in my lover’s arms,

my hands smelling of roast flesh and oil,

of lemon, butter, and basil.

 

Robert McKean

Robert McKean’s novel, Mending What is Broken (Livingston Press, 2023), has received coverage from Kirkus Review, Largehearted Boy, KRCB, Author2Author, and more. His short story collection I’ll Be Here for You: Diary of a Town was awarded first prize in the Tartts First Fiction competition (Livingston Press). His novel The Catalog of Crooked Thoughts was awarded first-prize in the Methodist University Longleaf Press Novel Contest and declared a Finalist for the Eric Hoffer Award. Recipient of a Massachusetts Artist’s Grant, McKean has had six stories nominated for Pushcart Prizes. His website is www.robmckean.com.

Metaphysical Exam

She begins:

How have your spirits been?

Tell me your name. Where we are right now. The day of the week.

Have you noticed any smells that others around you cannot sense?

Such as the smell of charred toast—

or honeysuckle?

Do you feel this?

 

She touches across my face.

How’s your vision?

Last night, when headlights fanned across your bedroom floor, did you feel clean? Or did the light catch in your curtains and remind you of being watched? Everything the light touches proof that the window is all that keeps you from the outside.

Can you hear this?

 

The sound is alive and mechanical and whirls like a machine.

 

Smile, like you’re trying to convince someone of something.

As though you’re trying to produce in me a change– the starting edge of which I won’t notice until I leave this exam room, gone home for the day, and let my car idle in the driveway

a minute too long.

When you slice your finger with a knife,

the blood rarely appears as quickly as you’d expect.

Puff your cheeks, now–

 

her hands against my face as though to test the strength of an inflated balloon.

 

Very good.

 

 

She pulls out a pen light.

Follow this light with your eyes.

 

She spells out H E R E T I C with her pen.

 

My eyes roll around in my head.

 

Now–

put out your hands as if to see if it’s raining. Like you’re the first person at the picnic to feel a drop.

Close your eyes.

Think about the grandfather you never knew. He was a preacher and a liar. Your father sang you to sleep with The Bankrobber by The Clash so you would know what he couldn’t tell you.

Very good.

 

Liz Irvin

Liz Irvin is a writer and second-year medical student at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School. She holds a B.A. in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies from Barnard College at Columbia University. Her essay “Seasick: Lessons in Human Anatomy from Hyman Bloom’s The Hull (1952)” appeared in Hektoen International. She lives in Worcester, Massachusetts.

Featured Author, Ditta Baron Hoeber

Untitled (Coke was taller than most women)

 

Coke was taller than most women and moved in a way that somehow provoked anticipation     watching
her cross a room you wondered if this splendid thing would actually happen to you     same with her voice
with everything she’d say and I remember that her eyes were grey

and Jimmy     once Jimmy kissed me     I couldn’t have been more than fourteen when Jimmy kissed me
his mouth seemed to take me over and afterwards I ran away     but stayed kissed all afternoon

I saw Coke on the bus wearing a mink jacket one morning and big diamonds looking a handsome late
thirties on her second marriage twelve year old child and she says Jimmy’s got his masters degree and his
wife’s a nurse and Coke says that Mileage whose black moon face and joke on you laughter used to
frighten me     has passed away

 

Untitled (when things get bad enough)

 

when things get bad enough

I start wishing I would die.

 

actually, I had intended to say,

 

when things get bad enough

I start wishing other people would die

 

so I would be left

the pleasures of abandonment.

 

you mentioned the word suicide today

I caught it in my teeth and

 

carried it home to put in a poem.

I am not respectful enough its true

 

of me of you

but thank you for the word.

 

Untitled (I have a small book)

 

I have a small book with yellow covers and half translucent pages.     I thought of using it as a drawing
book but never did because I imagined the drawings would bleed through to each other in disturbing
ways.  but now I have the idea of making my first drawing on the last page of the book, so I can see it as I
draw on the page that comes before.     that way I can design that second drawing to relate to the first.
and so on.

 

Ditta Baron Hoeber

An artist and a poet, Ditta Baron Hoeber’s poems have been published in a number of magazines including Noon: journal of the short poem, Gargoyle, the American Journal of Poetry, Juxtaprose, Pank, Burningword Literary Journal, the American Poetry Review, and Contemporary American Voices. Her work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and her first book, Without You, is forthcoming in March of 2024. Her photographs, drawings, and book works have been exhibited nationally and acquired by several collections in the US and the UK.

A Death of Logic

In another dimension, it is me & not Dostoevsky

who claims 2-plus-2 can equal 5.

 

I have pressed TV rewind enough times

to see how toothpaste can slide right back into the tube

 

after dissolving across teeth & draining into the sink.

The vomit gurgitates itself back into a glass of kegged beer.

 

I have seen blood pour itself back into the vein, from wine.

 

& who is to say that after her father laid himself to rest

under the commuter train that he didn’t lift his body

 

back into another world

 

where we are still twelve years old

at Fenway Park. At the seventh inning stretch,

 

he holds both a beer, & a camera

to capture our sweet Caroline smiles.

 

O, ode to the Jeremy Bearimy!

 

To be a dot in the I

& repeat that one life

 

forever and without time.

 

A place where nothing never happens.

 

I mean, if Leo himself can climb through a dream

inside a dream, then why not me?

 

There could be a galaxy in which I’m seen.

In which my body was never taken away from me.

 

A world in which I can spot love

3 trillion miles away.

 

I can hold it in my palms:

a crystal ball of intimacy.

 

A life in which your death is only a death in flesh.

& when your bones crumble to ash, they will

 

sprout with the grass,

germinate with the morning dew.

 

Yes, you will be reborn in a different world –

you will arrive again, as you.

 

Lis Beasley

Lis Beasley (she/her) is a licensed mental health counselor. She was previously published in the Worcester Review. A lifelong writer, her poetry often explores the intersection of family, mental health, substance abuse, and incarceration. She can be found on Instagram @lisbeaspoetry.