R James Sennett Jr

With Barely a Smack

on the keister,

our young brother

was sent back

down home

to till his soil

solo,

Vesuvius bile

vomited

out of bitter lips –

even still!

Venom unabated,

poison spittle

distorting the crops

we consume:

hell, it’s in our clothing!

Endgame?

Dissolution of the collective

dream.

 

R James Sennett Jr

R James Sennett Jr lives, works, breathes, and chases his muse in Louisville, Kentucky. His poetry has appeared in numerous publications for which he is grateful.

Scott Penney

Polynomial

Lines as points that flow

from the first to last,

planes as groups of lines

that define a surface,

 

some rippling surface

a topographic map

defined by rippling lines

also to mean mountains

 

but they move too fast

to define a moving figure

a human figure computed

in its sudden contortions

on a flatscreen of colors

 

limbs that part from bodies

or melt back into the torso

from which they came

or part like distended ribs–

 

it’s all just lines distorted,

flowing points composing lines,

points that move on a plane

crossing boundaries of others

 

nota bene the wrestling harlequins

as they melt into another

in the prize ring.

 

Scott Penney

Recent publications have been in Artful Dodge, basalt, Faultline, Fugue, Chiron Review, and other magazines. He has been a fellow at the MacDowell Colony and the Vermont Studio Center. Currently, he lives in Chelsea, Vermont.

Ken Holland

Burn Pit

 

Always, our need to know.

 

The way a burn pit is in conversation

With its burning.

 

How we are ordered to breathe,

To stand and breathe

 

So our blood can acknowledge

What is entering the lungs.

 

The particulates of precious heavy metals.

 

Vulnerable as we are, ordered

To be more so

 

To perform upon command

Even when we suspect it to be lethal.

 

And somehow, still, our need to know.

 

The temptation to put the knife-tip of fire

To our tongue.

 

Smoke rising like the voice of a chanteuse,

The Steinway’s lacquer liquifying in the heat

 

Air to breath to blood.

 

And no one, no one

Is allowed to leave.

 

The singer still singing her desire,

The burn pit burning brighter.

 

Ken Holland

Ken Holland has been widely published in journals including Rattle, Atlanta Review, Tulane Review, and Tupelo Quarterly. His work has been nominated three times for the Pushcart Prize. He placed first in the 2021 New Ohio Review poetry contest and was a finalist in the 2024 Concrete Wolf and the 2025 Moonstone Press chapbook contests, which Moonstone subsequently published. Also, a finalist in Bicoastal Review’s 2025 contest. More at kenhollandpoet.com

Jason Davidson

Cadaver

I dreamt last night that Mothra died. Three pebbles and a few rented orphans attended her wake, a modest affair. I was working. I was lurking inside a bouquet of Forget-Me-Not’s. I was fucking around inside the last coyote’s lair and I still needed a hair-cut, a blue noose, a way to stop choosing my adventures. No one picked up Mothra’s body from the good morgue. No one cared. And I was scared, so I answered the telephone. The man from the morgue said: Everyone is dead here, Henry Sugar. Your mother’s wings are getting in the way of my salad. Would you like to play Marry-Fuck-Kill? Silly me, as if I am not still beholden to how poor we were, the burnt toast, the loaves of old ghost stories. I dreamt that I scared myself awake, on the way to the death chamber, the womb reclaiming. At the morgue, Mothra smiles at me like an old flying saucer and I book us two tickets to Tokyo. We wander around the Marunouchi, and she is reminded of San Francisco. She asks: Was I a wonderful mother? and I hate that every question has an answer. Lying is a strangled yodel and Mother Mothra is easier now that she is dead. It’s a simple thing to stay silent and so I quit my mouth like an overdose and went mild. She drinks sake. We eat o-nigiri and remember Ghirardelli Square. I wish my blood could turn our quiet love to technicolor. I show her the shop where my husband and I bought the painting of the tree, the color of sour limes. She asks me if I cried when she died. I don’t remember. I do not say that I forgive her, as my tongue is only as thick as rose-beds. I touch her ashy wing and little parts of her fall into me, a telescope or hesitant quicksand. I say: I am happy, now. On the third morning, I miss my husband and take a flight home. As the jet rises over the city, I look out the window. Mothra is still on that park bench, staring with eyes that will never close, over the vast bay. I let go.

 

Jason Davidson

Jason Davidson is a poet, fiction writer, playwright and performer. He’s written and directed over 200 works of experimental theatre and his one-act plays have been widely published. His poetry has appeared recently or is forthcoming in Hobart, SoFloPoJo, Heavy Feather Review, HAD, Luna Luna and other journals. Jason lives on California’s Central Coast with his husband. Find him on Instagram at @jasonwriteswords or visit his site at jasonwriteswords.com.

Brian Builta

Antlers Reflected in Water

 

I wake with that fear again,

leaping then hindquarter stung.

I’m out and I’m fake.

 

How am I in charge of myself?

I’m wasted opportunity,

a bug lit for only a second.

 

I hiccup madly, remove the dart,

resume my unfounded fear of the future,

the usual abracadabra routine.

 

Should’ve stopped for that hit cat,

should’ve penetrated more deeply

as I swam those laps.

 

Instead, a still life: Darkness

with Eyes Closed, the haunting feeling

I’m the one who hit the cat.

 

Brian Builta

Brian Builta is a graduate of the University of Texas and lives in Arlington, Texas. His poetry has been published most recently in Ploughshares, Beatnik Cowboy, and Sugar House Review. He is the author of three collections of poems, and more of his poetry can be found at brianbuilta.com.

Jane Hammons, Featured Author

Signal

 

Texas dawns humid

green anole at my feet skims

hot deck planks

 

pink dewlap

pulses orchid

throbs crimson

 

anole gutters

along downspout

adhesive toepads

cling

release

skitter

lust

out of view

in caliche cactus wood chip garden

 

When sun enough has ignited the sky

I call my mother in California

We laugh about how often we name upstairs

and down as recent destinations

Not beach or river downtown or lunch gym

84 she no longer drives; Covid she stays home

 

I order for both of

green anole toenail polish palette

Paint mine red    predictable

pad out to the deck          signal

 

Orchid my mother plants herself in the lupine bougainvillea

fuchsia gumweed garden at the cliff

Sea foam sketches the deserted beach

 

Blue whales

scoop krill

crack the Pacific surface

migrate south to Mexico

 

Jane Hammons

Jane Hammons taught writing for three decades at UC Berkeley, where she received a Distinguished Teaching Award. Upon retirement, she moved to Austin, Texas, for five years before returning home to New Mexico. Her writing appears in numerous journals and anthologies: Alaska Quarterly Review, Southwestern American Literature, The Main Street Rag, Yellow Medicine ReviewHint Fiction, (Norton), The EastOver Anthology of Rural Writers of Color, 2023 and 2024, The Maternal is Political (Seal Press), and Selected Memories, (Hippocampus Books). She enjoys photography as part of her writing practice, and three of her photographs are included in Taking It To the Streets: A Visual History of Protest and Demonstration, an exhibition of the Austin History Center. She is an enrolled citizen of the Cherokee Nation.