Wednesday, 26 March 2025

Faye Boland: Forest Therapy

Now I know that moss-covered rocks smell different to moss-covered trees
that moss covered trees smell different to one another
that the strongest forest smell is rotting wood
that wood sorrel has a rubbery underside
that Scots pine leaves smell stronger underneath than above
that the taste of air on my tongue is colder than the touch of air on my cheek
that stones hold cold as well as heat
that the flow of a waterfall depends on the shape of the rocks it passes over
that a tree nourishes its offspring through mycelia
that I am nourished by forest
that I come alive in its woody, leafy womb


Faye Boland won the Robert Leslie Boland Prize 2018 and the Hanna Greally International Literary Award 2017. She placed third in the Bere Island Poetry Competition 2024. Her Chapbook Fishing For Tea was highly commended in the Fool for Poetry Chapbook Competition 2024 and she was highly commended in the Desmond O' Grady Competition 2019. Her first poetry collection Peripheral was published in September 2018 by The Manuscript Publisher.

Monday, 24 March 2025

Angela Zimmerling: playing the game

‘i win’ he says
‘i know the game’
                    and
                    sometimes
                    she believes
                                a professional poker player
                                is not a contradiction
because
 

he says
            ‘love’
and other things. ’
 
he plays
                        texas hold ’em
               
                        those games
                        television broadcasts
                        from somewhere
                                              sun-glassed players hide
                                              within themselves
                                                                      and women drape like tinsel
 
texas hold ’em
                        he plays that game
                        in glass and neon
                        poker rooms
                                                without time
 
                        he forgets himself
                                                fades like mist
he weaves
through her life
a thread
that frays and
twists
            and breaks
 
they tie
the ends
            again
                        at a corner shop she
                        sells coffee and doughnuts
                        to oil stained factory men
                        and boozy eyed executives
                        to the undead who sit until dawn
                        her shift’s a graveyard.
 
they pay their
rent in coins and bills
 
in promises
 
                        he knows the game
 
 she’s
learned
            his language
                                    aces
                                    on the river
                                    flush
                                                this shit
 
 
her wedding ring
                            is twisted
on a broken finger


Angela Zimmerling is a former journalist who works in poetry, fiction, non-fiction and illustration.  She is passionate about human and animal welfare, and the planet.  She lives on a small subsistence farm with her beloved animals and husband.

Saturday, 22 March 2025

Kristin Roedell: The Southing Geese

The wind blows through the trees
on an oboe, the fields unfurl
like sheet music—
the long fences the staff,
the crows on the line
the notes.  

They are playing the song
of the rural, the farms:
the winding path,
the sheep beneath a blue spruce,
the cats hunting shrews,
Orion in the stars at night.

All of it is a wild orchestra:
The brown owls, the blue jays,
the southing geese calling.
Every new lamb
is a concerto in C
on trembling legs.


Kristin Roedell graduated from Whitman College, 1984, and U.W. Law School, 1987. Her poetry  appeared in JAMA, Ginosko, and Crab Creek Review. She's authored two chapbooks: Girls with Gardenias (Flutter Press) and Night Circus (Legal Studies Forum) and a full length collection, Downriver (Aldrich Press.) Her website is at kristinroedell.wikidot.com

Friday, 21 March 2025

Erik Korhel: Modern Music

Read this in the voice of a coward. Over-
whelmed and unfulfilled all at once. Sometimes
appearing equally matched, but not quite. With no
one to visit the following day. Curtain
permanently shut. A request delayed.
Fearful and dormant. This poem now the bur-
den. And so, the disconnect begins. May cause
internal bleeding and a distance between
those uninvolved. Uneasy smile and quiet
demeanor. In search of trouble. Just like a-
ny good empath. I do not recommend it.


Erik Korhel is from Seattle, Washington. He currently has three children's picture books of poetry. Korhel has achieved a 'Must Have Books and Resources' listing with the New York City Department of Education. He is currently working on what he hopes to be his first full collection of poems.

Wednesday, 19 March 2025

Angela Topping: Enamelled Boxes

for Pascale Petit

Harold Raby Collection, Manchester City Art Gallery
 

Unlike eggs, their treasure,
is not within. These are inside out.

Look at this frog, self-satisfied, its jewels
gleaming in the spotlight;

this speckled hare, ears back
couched upon a mound of green;

head of Neptune, empty of brains
as though someone had sliced his skull
at the temple, but being immortal,
he’d survived to wear this hat
of painted shells, sea serpents and fish,
whatever the painter’s wild dreams brought.

Then there’s the mottos:
Though absent not forgotten;
I prize the gift because I love the giver.

Raby, bank manager, came home each night
from a colourless day, to these gaudy dainties
he’d braved bombs to buy,
bonbonnières and patch boxes,
to bring him levity and joy.

[Originally published in the collection Paper Patterns, Lapwing, 2012]


Angela Topping is the author of nine poetry collections and four pamphlets. Her latest book is Earwig Country (Valley Press 2024).She is a former Writer in Residence at Gladstone's Library. Her poems are widely published and have won several prizes. She blogs at angelatopping.wordpress.com

Monday, 17 March 2025

Vidya Hariharan: Bad Hair Day

As I step out
In the morning
On my way to work
Clutching my bag and
Disobedient hair,
I am aware of
myriad patterns
of light and shade -
under the old oak,
rainwater flowing
down the sloping roof
into my neighbour’s
koi pond,
the feral cat sprawling
on my car’s hood
challenging my ownership,
floating in a puddle
on the road -
finally, a rainbow!


Vidya Hariharan is an avid reader, traveller, published poet and teacher. She recently was shortlisted for the Editor’s Choice Award for her haiku from Under the Basho in 2024. Currently she resides in Mumbai, India. 

Saturday, 15 March 2025

Richard Oyama: A Portrait of the Artist as a Sparrow

I peck at particles like meteor dust
An offering of egg, rice and chicken
Skittering from a moto bike.
Outside the beauty salon the girl
Forages a nose, arranges immaculately a part
In her braided hair, polishing her teeth

On a Narcissus phone.
This is the shock of the human, its
Unnatural speed and disturbance.
This is the city, a boutique hotel abutting
A sheet-metal shop. Sparks fizzle and glow
Like fireflies in a jar.

The roadside offering
Is sufficient.

No one remembers.


Richard Oyama’s work has appeared in Premonitions: The Kaya Anthology of New Asian North American Poetry, The Nuyorasian Anthology, Breaking Silence, Dissident Song, A Gift of Tongues, About Place, Pirene’s Fountain and Buddhist Poetry Review. He has a M.A. in English: Creative Writing from San Francisco State University.  

Friday, 14 March 2025

Kendall Snee: Anointed by the Bottle, Left Over

When they canonized me, I felt a buzz in my leg.
I was anointed by a bottle left over; once lost, 
now found. Limbs loosening with the flickering of 
some overhead light. I felt slack in my jaw. 
This made my words kinder– softened upon impact. 

My chest swung open like an ornate jewellery box. 
The spring-loaded doors said,
 “Welcome any and all!”
The opening lied, to me and anyone who’d listen,
 – heavily, into its megaphone;
saying: I had never been hurt before and 
never would ever be again. The people 
around me, heard the call and started filling 
the cavity in my chest, like a pantry. This 
was most astounding of all because—
I hadn’t even asked them to. 

The compliments felt so nice.
I stowed them away–tucked in hiding places
where they kept me warm like a
lavender aroma pillows 
heated on a cold night– by someone 
for the sake of you.

But the concerns felt nicer;
to be worrying someone like that,
having someone thinking long and 
hard about your ongoings – 
well that sure felt the nicest of all.


Kendall Snee is a Pittsburgh Poet and 10th grade English teacher. Snee serves as a board member for Write Pittsburgh, a coalition to help further Pittsburgh's writers' place within the city. Snee is the current writer-in-residence at City Books. She performs live with the Pittsburgh Poetry Collective/Steel City Slam.

Wednesday, 12 March 2025

LaVern Spencer McCarthy: Memento

No one knows that long ago
        I escaped dirty dishes,
        casseroles and laundry
to go dancing with someone forbidden.
We whirled all night! We sang and touched
        the stars. Nothing existed
        but ourselves and fire.

Since then, I have grown mellow
        with middle age, comfortable
        with life, complacent with marriage,
but once in awhile, thinking of that white-hot
        guy, I rush to my closet
        humming an old, love song,    
        searching for a certain, red dress
that even after all these years, still smoulders.

[Originally published in Quail Bell Magazine, 2023]

LaVern Spencer McCarthy has published twelve books of short stories and poetry and two journals. She has won over five hundred state awards for her poetry and thirty-four national awards. She is a life member of Poetry Society of Texas She resides in Blair Oklahoma.  

Monday, 10 March 2025

Jennifer Browne: On the Difficulty of Saying: Gorse

1.
Months of dreamless sleep. I wake still smelling gorse flowers, implausible coconut in the heathland air.

2.
Next day, I read about the Dartford Warbler, which will perch “a gorse stem to sing,” which has “struggled with harsh winters.” Grey-brown sweetling, look out from this field guide with your too-beautiful eye. Why do I forget there is so much I haven’t seen, that there is such cause for singing? 

3.
“Associated with Lugh, the Celtic god of light, [gorse] was believed to be a sign of hope in times of difficulty.” Have I ever felt so drained of color? Words that would be easy are tender in this open space. We shelter in little breaks from scraping wind. What I say seems difficult to hear. 

4.
Varieties of grey in winter, even the evergreens turn silver in mist. What is one to do but burrow, keep their blood warm with wool and fire?

5.
Gorse shrubs are protective, keep the sheep in, keep the fae out. What is on the other side of spines I’m stacking? When I see it, will I say that it’s myself from whom I need defence? 

6.
I have slept in my bed and still feel lost, wondering. You have slept and also wake to snow. What can I know of your sleep, your dreaming? I’m told to make a tincture, gorse against unease. I’m told the gorse appeared to cure my hopelessness. I know the obstacles so well, I could step around them in the dark, but I forget and fracture every toe. 

7.
"common gorse was…collected from commonland for a number of purposes: it provided fuel…; was used as fodder for livestock; was bound to make floor and chimney brushes; and was used as a colourant.… However, there were a number of restrictions on its collection…only the amount that could be carried on the back could be cut for fuel.” 

8.
Gorse spines scratch the skin to bleeding, but see what I have brought you dyed in lovely yellow summerlight. See the dust I mean to sweep from corners, the hearth-fire toward which I heap my back with cuttings. Isn’t any labour looking forward a form of love? 

9. 
I fell asleep to ice and wake to snow and wind that shakes and breaks the branches, last year's leaves weighting twig-tips. Still, the days are lengthening, and the yellow flowers of which I dream say that I will touch you. Eventually, I will touch you. I think sunlight. I think singing.


Attributive notes: 
Dartford Warbler Sylvia undata.” The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. 
Donal Hickey. “The place of gorse in Irish mythology and folklore.” Irish Examiner
Common Gorse.” The Wildlife Trusts. 


Jennifer Browne falls in love easily with other people’s dogs. She is the author of American Crow (Beltway Editions, 2024) and some other stuff, too. Find her at linktr.ee/jenniferabrowne.