Tuesday, December 22, 2020
Bluepepper returns 6th January 2021
Sunday, November 29, 2020
Submissions closed until further notice
From December 1st 2020, Bluepepper will no longer be accepting submissions until further notice. We would like to take this opportunity to wish you all a safe and happy Christmas and hopefully see you back in the New Year.
New Poetry by Carson Pytell
Monday, November 23, 2020
New Poetry by Yash Seyedbagheri
Sunday, November 22, 2020
New Poetry by Suzanne Verrall
Thursday, November 19, 2020
New Poetry by Darrell Petska
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
New Poetry by Eric Persaud
In an explosion
of dust
settling
I expand
and engulf
the planets
that surround
Pull them in
swallow whole
leaving behind
scattering
of dust.
Sunday, November 15, 2020
New Poetry by Jean Bohuslav
Wednesday, November 11, 2020
New Poetry by Kathleen E. Krause
Tuesday, November 10, 2020
New Poetry by Heather Sager
Sunday, November 08, 2020
New Poetry by Paul Tanner
Wednesday, November 04, 2020
New Poetry by Earl Livings
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
New Poetry by Paula Reed Nancarrow
Monday, October 26, 2020
New Poetry by Patricia Davis-Muffett
Friday, October 16, 2020
New Poetry by Holly Day
Thursday, October 15, 2020
New Poetry by Carson Pytell
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
New Poetry by John Tustin
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
New Prose Poetry by Howie Good
Monday, October 12, 2020
New Poetry by Kate Clarke
Sunday, October 11, 2020
New Poetry by Marianne Brems
Saturday, October 10, 2020
New Poetry by Zebulon Huset
Wednesday, October 07, 2020
New Poetry by James Walton
a lizard so small on the broken vase
drinks and looks back motion less
the unflappable virtue of a nodding iris
all Van Gogh wheezy at the angle
the horse paddock bounteous with feed
an abandoned rusty bike maintaining a post
cherry blossom graffiti over the porch
how the noise of children swimming amplifies
the clamorous life of air
a neighbour’s dog being spotted
walks by to the fence next door
our postman yelling penitent
how much he loves the new letter box
a swelling memory of the great west sea
as Tasmanian Devils stole the cooking chops
waking to rain just loud enough to hear
corrugated radio stations broadcast in between
budding shoots out of the midnight kernel
of trees willing life to be
you unfurling in the morning
complaining of my bony shoulder
a stranger’s handshake above fallen wire
the unravel of borders in an embrace
James Walton is published in many anthologies, journals, and newspapers. He is the author of four collections of poetry. He lives in Gippsland. He can be found at jameswalton.poetry.blog
New Poetry by Fred Pollack
New Poetry by Bruce Morton
Sunday, October 04, 2020
Rebecca Law reviews S.K. Kelen’s "A Happening in Hades"
Friday, October 02, 2020
New Poetry by Robert Ford
Sunday, September 27, 2020
New Poetry by Doug Holder
(From a New York Times article about a museum exhibit)
On the museum wall
appointed
next to a
well- hung
gray
duct-taped banana
the artist's
mission statement
his heated breath
confined in plastic--
swirls of sputum
particles of modern
postmodern
conceptual
are in a slow,
threatening cloud.
And it is best
that it is contained
amidst the refined,
patrons'
nuanced breath
It is best
to be deaf.
Saturday, September 19, 2020
New Poetry by Yash Seyedbagheri
clouds puff with pink and white linings
across a pale blue dreamscape
shadows spill over country roads
long and deep
where trucks no longer sputter and roar
with exhaust and frenetic energy
and cracked laughter cackles
Bushes burst with gold and flame
Ponderosa and aspens sway
hundreds of needles and tender little leaves
bending
swishing
the wind whispers her breathless hush
a butter-colored light flicks on through the pines
the crickets begin to call
frogs join the chorus
shadows deepen and shimmer
- © Yash Seyedbagheri 2020
Yash Seyedbagheri is a graduate of Colorado State University's MFA program in fiction. His story, "Soon," was nominated for a Pushcart. Yash has also had work nominated for Best of the Net and The Best Small Fictions. A native of Idaho, Yash’s work is forthcoming or has been published in WestWard Quarterly, Café Lit, and Ariel Chart, among others
Tuesday, September 08, 2020
Monday, September 07, 2020
New Poetry by Paul Tanner
woe, yay!
this poem is about depression
so you better publish it.
this poem is hashtags
and well-meaning ones at that:
it’s #depression
and #mentalhealth
and you don’t want to miss out, do you?
never mind it’s not very good:
it can’t NOT be good
because it’s about mental health.
never mind you don’t like it:
you can’t NOT like it,
otherwise you’re prejudiced
against mental health.
never mind you don’t like me:
you can’t NOT like me
because I write about mental health.
look,
if you don’t publish this poem
I’ll have to write another poem
about your intolerance
and everyone will back me up
because they don’t want to be seen
as intolerant either
so publish me
or else.
publish me
for both our sakes:
the awards
and rave reviews
and royalties
will really help
with my depression.
- © Paul Tanner 2020
Paul has been hounding independent magazines for many years. His latest collection, “Shop Talk: Poems for Shop Workers”, is published by Penniless Press.
Sunday, September 06, 2020
New Poetry by Karen May
Respectfully
Rinpoche clears his throat
sips his tea
presses the left side
of his nose
shuffles pages – English
over Tibetan
over Sanskrit –
settles a buttock
offers a sonorous prayer
and launches.
Two hours later
– slowly releasing pressure
and forgoing altitude –
his hermeneutic
time and space travelling
Zoom-cushion
touches
down.
- © Karen May 2020
Thursday, September 03, 2020
New Poetry by Jillian Smith
Portent
I dream of a wing
blood-colored and trembling.
It glistens, spit-thin,
unattached to body or being,
riding the air without singing,
carrying without lifting.
From a tangle of cloud,
it jostles to be free.
A fragment in space,
it seeks wholeness in others,
reminded by itself
of what it cannot be.
- © Jillian Smith 2020
Monday, August 31, 2020
New Poetry by Dan Raphael
Blank Slate Blank Clock
As if a satellite in an invisible sky
observing from another time
oxygen slowly evolving
a quantum sunrise
before we can duck or get on the freeway
negotiating the tide, setting the moon free
when people without worry or clockwork
with an appetite for other light, drunken sun
regular as dogs needing attention
a drummer with more hearts than hands
We learned to make light with heat an unexpected by-product
soon as trees got dead enough
the story of an erupting volcano handed down like a zen koan
i only let this stream step on me once
that spring the soupweed didn’t grow
we learned to eat coyotes so more rabbits for us
When we realized the mountain had another side
a splash a stain scars without wounds
bruises without falls or collision
talking with someone who knew my great great grandmother
figures in moist smoke
a deer turned inside out
a rock with my face in it
- © Dan Raphael 2020
Friday, August 21, 2020
New Poetry by Les Wicks
Harbour Town
In this season I can only aspire to make trouble.
Wearing all my clearance clothes
I loiter at this bum-hole of winter
await any ending.
Constantly constant this
isn’t peace or retreat, just almost.
Wind rifles up the coast
an indigenous flag falters
beside an invader’s tomb of frigid marble.
The decommissioned sun joins the other homeless drifters.
Then September is ablaze.
Down on the docks trouble is brewing tea.
The union refuses to concede
while I sail by in my excuse thimble
& count money.
This drags on as all things do
the season rots the fingers…
they’d held on through nasty months,
now to compost beside
eucalypt leaves & nest-fallen chicks.
City beaches abrade our pert decisions.
Drinking all the salt we craze about in lethargic elegance
until the drum solo
when DNA wakes the lovers up to tweak & rustle.
Silver eyes watch, reflect on water.
- © Les Wicks 2020
Les Wicks is a Sydney poet.