No Poem

No thing.  No dream.

No soul toward

phosphorescence.

No burn.  No black.

No come.  No home.  No

yes, no. No do, undo.

No sky, holler, hug.

No blue.  No come back

as an ant or a king.  No hover

over the body until it’s time

to let go.  No know.

No now.

 

Whitney Hudak

 

Whitney Hudak holds an MFA from Bennington and lives in Brooklyn, NY.

The Density of Loss

And when it was over

I wondered how long

i would be immersed in that warm and familiar

feeling of loss. it seeps into me.

it never loses its density

can’t dilute it

even with the tears it sheds.

 

the tides come and go

and the moon and sun cycle in and out

but they come back

people and things frequently don’t. they go into a dust heap

of lost stuff some where out in the midwest, perhaps, or the other side of the world

 

they could also be right around the corner in full living color but i don’t see them

 

once i lost a brother for good

he went into an other life or world from this scarred one of wounded

and wounding people.

this foggy life this hazy world

the days and nights gray and black

 

i lost a cat

and then a school

and a piece of jewelry i loved a cottage where

i lulled in the summer’s sun in childhood

lost that too, two more cats

and now i’ve lost a house and another among the men, who’ve left or been taken

or been banished by my self

 

did anyone tell you that’s what life is a procession of losses and

jumping to stones in succession. don’t slip on that mossy one

or skip the shiny one

no telling what you’ll miss

or what will get broken or scraped or burnt or blistered, scarred by the scratch of a low hanging branch

what twigs or soggy weeds you’ll pick up

between your toes or around your neck, and you’ll have to carry them with you

 

the rest of the way.

 

Siobhan Hansen

The Chumpion Of Lost Causes

Sharmila is so naïve

She can’t pick between prudence and courage

She flogs dead horses

She allows herself to be found traipsing through the tulips

She’s a slow unlearner

She loves her unteacher

She wants 364 unbirthdays

What she resists persists

She depotentiates herself, silly goose,

Until her soul screams,”STOP”

 

Sonali Gurpur

 

 

Sonali Gurpur writes poetry and fiction. Her poems were recently picked for the ‘Commended’ and ‘Highly Commended’ categories of the Margaret Reid Prize for Traditional Verse, and for the city wide reading at the Austin International Poetry Festival. Her short story “See With Your Eyes Not Just Your Heart” was finalist at Glimmertrain.

Enchantment

be one and see this rose with me

she will snare and tear all that

care enough to be bold and hold;

all told, beauty reins with pain,

 

with a heart that will start and dart;

a tart, not a weed, she will need,

indeed, but inspire a choir and

a fire of want, she will taunt

 

a soul to pluck and tuck; she may

bring luck to a lover; discover

and uncover her scent; content

in her enchantment as she vies to die

 

Corinna Fulton

Bottled Message

The red shred of linen cuts

Mountains into halves and

Dyes the sand crimson black,

Burning holes into copper chests.

Brackish wind, no, waves.

 

Tides can’t decide. They

Run away only to come back.

Dry water shimmery reflects

Bulging eyes, singed black.

Roasting jellyfishes. Die.

 

The air tight, sand collapse.

Suffocating reds don’t do

Bottled messages, leaving

Crumbling bones, their

Tongueless cries.

 

Anny Fang

 

Anny Fang is a sophomore majoring in Psychology, English, and Women’s Studies. Contrary to her appearance, she likes to pursue hobbies that can only be categorized as extreme. This usually means that you may either see her chewing some book in an obscure coffee shop or bungee-jumping in a third-world country.

How Things End

Three black crows hop

in the deep snowy field

behind the library

 

The snow

glows orange

 

You sit in your car

engine killed

waiting for something

 

Nothing falls

from the cloudless night

*

There’s a point where you come to realize that this is exactly what you wanted to

happen

 

Why you start hiding things under your bed

neatly in bags

labeled and dated

 

Snipping out pictures of faces from magazines

for the simple way they feel between your fingers

how in dropping them

they resemble falling leaves

*

Your father sleeping upright on the couch

Your father screaming at you for not taking the dog out

Your father keeping the dog’s leash in his car for years after her death

 

Your father dying

*

The items pile up

all humming beneath you

shaking the mattress

asking you to listen

*

He isn’t dead

He’s just stopped

speaking to you

*

Someone taps on the car window

a school friend

asking for a ride

 

Asking too many questions

thinking you know

about something

 

how things end or are supposed to—

 

You’re not breathing but you should

 

You’re not listening because your ears

are packed with snow

*

Your collection

requires more stringent organization

so you begin sorting according to taste

tonguing each face

and placing them in tupperware

to keep out air

*

The white noise of winter

your friend in the passenger seat

fogging up the windows

with her living body

her kinetic body full of blood

 

A crow lands amongst the others

something in his beak

They fight for it

Splash of red

against the snow

 

Zoe Etkin

 

Zoe Etkin is an MFA student at CalArts. She identifies as a poet but is also interested in hybrid forms. Etkin is a recent recipient of the Beutner Award for Excellence in the Arts. Hailing from Memphis, Etkin is interested in the South, but having lived in New Mexico and California, she infuses the West into her aesthetic.