Monday, December 19, 2022

Submissions closed for the year

 

Bluepepper will be on the road over Christmas/New Year and so will be closed for submissions until 3rd January 2023. Seasons greetings and stay safe.

New Poetry by Anthony Vernon










Birds

Terror Birds

Bird songs come from terror
They are screams
And cries of fear
Each note a desperation
Every tune a panic
Melodies are but anxieties
Chirps are but worries
And all flights are frights
As bird songs only come from terror birds

Window Birds

Like a bird to a window
I’ll fly into you now
Thoughts of coming through
Crush dead onto the ground
Found are feathers, blood, and bone
A dying alone
And a cry towards the transparent
But the words aren’t apparent
To a barrier to all but shight
That brings an end to flight

Kite Mountain

Sons are birds
Flying up and over mountains
But not before they breathe their mother’s body
Then their wings are born
And the old lungs are forgotten
And when I flew
You cried til the night
Then in your dreams
You clipped my wings
Keeping me in my cage
Where a bird’s flight is forgotten


- © Anthony Vernon 2022


Anthony David Vernon is a Cuban-American literary writer and master's level philosophy student at the University of New Mexico. He is a regularly published author of poetry along with short stories and philosophical articles in a variety of outlets. His premiere book is The Assumption of Death a hybrid work of poetry, short stories, and philosophical musings.


Thursday, December 15, 2022

New Poetry by Greg Jensen










Loneliness is a Killer

In the small room you rent 
several floors above the city
you put two words together 

to make conversation.
One word follows
the sound of the other

but just sits there in the room
not explaining like a father
who comes home and stares

deep into the center
of the television.
You put yourself together

and have a day,
instant coffee
and a tinful of tobacco

for company.
Your heart feels
like a hammer 

swinging low
after a long day 
nailing two words

to keep four walls
from falling down.
When it stabs

you take a small tablet 
of nitroglycerine
and swallow another five minutes

of watching the clock.
You hear footsteps
in the hallway,

another door
closing on another
person who rents,

like you, loneliness
for next to nothing.
The cost of living

in this city is high.
You pay to keep 
yourself locked up 

after years 
being locked out.


- © Greg Jensen 2022


Greg Jensen has worked with unhoused adults living with mental illnesses and addiction problems for over 20 years. His work has appeared in 'december,' 'Bodega,' 'Crab Creek Review,' 'Fugue,' 'Rabid Oak,' and 'Porridge Magazine.' Greg holds an MFA in Poetry from Pacific University.

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

New Poetry by John Rock










Chrysopeia

if I opened my heart
you'd see children playing in the sand
and the glass cauldron of a sunset
with foxfire beneath it
slow silver swells and a little boy sayin
"I'm a pickle"
and no one listening
this ocean on the edge of ornament
almost metal
almost pure
liquid
the soft blows
of swallows snatching beetles
lifting toward the mountains


- © John Rock 2022


John Rock is a long-time fan and contributor to Bluepepper and organic farm traveler just trying to get at some poetic truths and grow some beautiful food. More poetry, novels and recordings at johnrockpoetry.com

Monday, December 05, 2022

New Poetry by Mark J. Mitchell










Little God Lost

Disguised as art, he slides through the city
like some chess piece left behind when the rules
got drawn up. He sorts every face he sees—
checks or mates. His cracked harlequin mask, blue
under streetlights, can burn red when he needs
passion. He makes confetti notes. Swallows
them without reading. He steals just nothing,
borrowing dropped souls. He’s never allowed
in certain dreams. There are corners his mask
can’t hide, where the voice it uses to sing
is too cold. It cracks lost jewelry—glass,
not precious. He rests. Sleeps on the night bus.
It slides like a rook towards dawn. The last
notes cling to his framed mask. Cool. Safe as dust.


- © Mark J. Mitchell 2022



Mark J. Mitchell was born in Chicago and grew up in southern California. His latest poetry collection, Roshi San Francisco, was just published by Norfolk Publishing. Starting from Tu Fu   was recently published by Encircle Publications. A new collection, Something to Be and a novel are forthcoming. He is very fond of baseball, Louis Aragon, Miles Davis, Kafka and Dante. He lives in San Francisco with his wife, the activist and documentarian, Joan Juster where he made his marginal living pointing out pretty things. Now, he’s looking for work again. He has published 2 novels and three chapbooks and four full length collections so far. His first chapbook won the Negative Capability Award.

New Poetry by Paul Ilechko










Anthem

I see your fingers     scarred and bandaged
your hands are not the hands belonging to a child
I see your feet     the way in which you spin
the angles of your pointing     I see the way
in which you fell     the silence of it was so very
shocking     I see the flowers bursting into color

you were a visitor here     this was never going
to be your country     you wore the heavy coat
and sang the marching songs     your splendid voice
now quiet     your face the shade of candlewax
looking upwards in your stiff unportioned aspect
locked into a theory of directionless divinity.


- © Paul Ilechko 2022


Paul Ilechko is a Pushcart nominated poet who lives with his partner in Lambertville, NJ. His work has appeared in a variety of journals, including The Night Heron Barks, Tampa Review, Iron Horse Literary Review, Sleet Magazine, and The Inflectionist Review. His first album, "Meeting Points", was released in 2021.