Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Monday, December 22, 2014
New Poetry by Dawnell Harrison
A party
The rocks in my front yard
a mill of raindrops battle
with the forecast bruising
the human beehive buzzes
in one at a time as they
lay their needs on me.
for such desires.
as the headlights of cars
trail down the street.
- Dawnell Harrison 2014
Fresh paingrey and black as the wind
blows my golden hair sideways -
in her soul that only God
- Dawnell Harrison 2014
in a tubular vase
off balance.
these beasts inhabiting
my house, my eyes,
from the world.
- Dawnell Harrison 2014
Dawnell has been published
in over 200 magazines and journals including Queen's Quarterly, Fowl
Feathered Review, Nerve Cowboy, and many others. She has also had five
books of poetry published entitled Voyager, The maverick posse, The fire
behind my eyes, The love death, and The color red does not sleep.
New Poetry by Les Wicks
Formication Fridays
As someone
who was certain
in this gangrel
runaway beige
thanked them
realtors & lords
shot.
If money
can be sharp
then I’m lost.
Ants sweetheart
(dead abnormal).
So back to please
don’t pay
this wrapping
I know.
In strength
you are away
so I comprehend cold
& crash the tides.
Get away with silence,
defeat the mouth.
Shelter is a rough binary,
but it’s not worth it.
- Les Wicks 2014
Les Wicks is a widely published Sydney poet.
Monday, December 01, 2014
New Poetry by Daniel Barbare
Mother Cooking
Mother eats watermelon.
Watching the news. Talking
the whole while. Goes
back to the bedroom.
Comes back wearing pajamas.
Boils corn and slices fresh Blue
Ridge
tomatoes. Fries chicken. While
biting her tongue. The house
smells delicious. The
oil is just a crackling. The
kitchen is quiet. It’s ready.
Mother eats watermelon.
Watching the news. Talking
the whole while. Goes
back to the bedroom.
Comes back wearing pajamas.
Boils corn and slices fresh Blue
Ridge
tomatoes. Fries chicken. While
biting her tongue. The house
smells delicious. The
oil is just a crackling. The
kitchen is quiet. It’s ready.
- Daniel Barbare 2014
Roadside Stand
Labor Day. Coming down
the Blue Ridge Mountains. Sun
on our backs. Gravel
drive. Dust flying off the wheels.
Looking at squash, fuzzy
whole okra, green beans. Tomatoes
soft enough to slice this evening.
Wildflower honey, pickled beets,
bread and butter pickles, dill and
garlic. Mother buys sweet
potatoes.
And peaches to soften in the
kitchen
window. I buy three plump and
red tomatoes for $2.00.
- Daniel Barbare 2014
Danny P. Barbare resides in the Upstate of the Carolinas. He works as a janitor at a local YMCA. And has been writing poetry off and on for 33 years. He says he enjoys the cold weather in the South and taking long walks especially if it snows. His poetry is mostly about what ever strikes him at the time.
New Poetry by Colin Dodds
The Urgent Center Expands
The urgent center expands,
takes the newspaper as its skin.
As it went in history,
so ran the NFC wildcard game.
The religiopolitical Saints
overran the astrological Rams.
Aside from that, the story was familiar and unchanged.
The linemen were terrifying,
though easily persuaded, hulks.
The receivers were handy
with the razor and the getaway.
The running backs went straight home
and would be foremen someday.
And the quarterback was the driven patrician
with nothing but an immense promise
and an immense burden for a life.
- Colin Dodds 2014
Colin Dodds grew up in Massachusetts and completed
his education in New York City. He’s the author of several novels,
including WINDFALL
and The
Last Bad Job, which the late Norman Mailer touted as showing “something
that very few writers have; a species of inner talent that owes very little to
other people.” Dodds’ screenplay, Refreshment,
was named a semi-finalist in the 2010 American Zoetrope Contest. His poetry has appeared in more
than a hundred publications, and has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He
lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife Samantha. You can find more of his
work at thecolindodds.com.
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