Saturday, 9 August 2025

Dave Wakely: As if...

As if the contours of a tune could outline
the route of a voyage, the skyline of a view,
the way that a drawing maps the dancing
of a pencil across a blank sketchpad.
Each dip and crest, every slow climb or
gleeful descent, and every unexpected turn:
the episodes of even the quietest adventure.

The syncopation of living – breath’s rhythm,
the throat’s libretto, the cadence of the heart’s caprice -
is the ancient jazz, improvised over the pulse
of all the inescapable verities, the shifting pace
of footsteps across pavements or footpaths,
over carpets or lawns, up an aisle or down
a cul de sac. Each day’s makeshift medley
from reveille to finale, from dawn chorus
to lullaby, is merely a wordless song
offered in the hope of an encore.


Dave Wakely’s writing has been shortlisted for the Manchester Fiction, the Cambridge and Bath Short Story awards, and appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. Online Programme Manager for Milton Keynes Literary Festival,  he lives in Buckinghamshire with his husband

Friday, 8 August 2025

Andrew Shields: London

You know he's going to bullshit you
about summer snow that falls
on every park and heath.

The reflections from the glistening towers
clash in the air and on the ground,
too much for even the most hardened

sceptic to ignore. He launches
into a dizzying round of images
and ideas so far beyond anything

you've heard before. Will you
succumb to his persuasive arts?
How fast will you run as you take

the hurdles every 35 meters?
How many will you pretend
neither of you knocked down?

You think you broke the tape,
but he insists he got there
just a stride ahead of you,

and you agree you must have
slipped in the snow you're now
so sure was on the ground today.


Andrew Shields lives in Basel, Switzerland. His collection of poems "Thomas Hardy Listens to Louis Armstrong" was published by Eyewear in 2015. His band Human Shields released the album "Somebody's Hometown" in 2015 and the EP "Défense de jouer" in 2016. Mastodon / Facebook

Thursday, 7 August 2025

John Grey: A Question of Survival

I think I'm cheating or something.
Otherwise, why do the gunmen
mow down the innocent in northern Kenya
and not here.
My life is like answers written
on the back of my hand.
Floods, earthquakes,
riots in the streets - no.
It says right here in my knuckles:
eat tasty dinner, watch TV,
go to bed and sleep deep.

Even when the violence is close,
there's a piece of paper
hidden in my pocket
that I can refer to.
Drug deal gone wrong?
No, it clearly states,
kiss on the cheek,
arm around the shoulder.
Three car pile-up on 295?
The missive declares,
drive on, go to your destination,
you're not involved.

I read the newspaper in the morning:
Kidnappings, muggings,
landslides and always more massacres.
Nothing in those pages indicates
that these or any other
crimes, wars and disasters,
can be avoided.
Not even the obituaries.
But the ones pictured
are always someone else.

If I knew my secret
believe me I'd share it
with all the ones
who don't know their secret.


John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in New World Writing, River And South and The Alembic. Latest books, “Bittersweet”, “Subject Matters” and “Between Two Fires” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in Paterson Literary Review, White Wall Review and Flights.

Monday, 21 July 2025

Devika Mathur: Things My Body Forgot to Bury

My knees still echo
with the prayers I mouthed as a girl,
beneath quilts that smelled
like mothballs and turmeric-drenched fears.

No one warned me
that the spine remembers grief
like a second language—
spoken only when I sleep on my side
and dream in static.

I once tried to unbutton my shadow.
It laughed,
said I stitched it too tightly
to my mother’s sighs.

I keep
half a lullaby in my clavicle—
the other half,
buried in a cracked soap dish
in a bathroom
where no one knocks anymore.

The body forgets nothing.
It files heartbreak between molars,
carries anxiety in its elbows,
and folds shame neatly
under the tongue
like a crushed hibiscus petal.

Every mirror asks me
what part of you is still yours?
And I say—
just the dust that gathers
on my name when I don’t speak it.

Even silence
has a noise threshold.
Mine hums
like a lightbulb too tired to die.


Devika Mathur is an Indian poet, writer, and founder of Olive Skins. Author of Crimson Skins, her work has appeared in The Alipore Post, Madras Courier, Pif Magazine, and more. She explores surreal themes and has contributed to various international journals and anthologies.

Friday, 18 July 2025

Sarah Mahina Calvello: haiku

Lulling of time 
Birds on the horizon 
Hopeful songs


Her name is Sarah Mahina Calvello. She lives in San Francisco and writes mostly haiku, and is addicted to nature and coffee.

Wednesday, 16 July 2025

Dominic Fisher: Subdural Haematoma

They drilled holes in your skull to drain the blood
which had leaked onto the inner terrain
slowing your steps and the steps of your tongue. 

Your pathways are lighter now and your tongue
is in touch again with places where blood
had spread a darkness across the terrain. 

There’s a distance to go yet, more terrain,
silence at times comes like mist on your tongue,
but I’ll walk with you through shadows of blood 

as brighter blood quickens terrain and tongue.


Dominic Fisher lives near the allotment he shares with sparrows and foxes in Bristol. An English language teacher for many years, he was a co-editor of Raceme magazine, is widely published, and sometimes broadcast. His second collection, A Customised Selection of Fireworks, was published by Shoestring Press in 2022. dominicfisherpoetry.co.uk Bluesky: @domfishpoet.bsky.social

Monday, 14 July 2025

R. Gerry Fabian: It Should Have Been So Much More

When I saw you last,
we were disappointed lovers
coming to grips
with the sour milk of parting.
We did not do it well.

Since you moved back
into our home town,
I’ve seen you three times.
Once you smiled in recognition.
The other two times
just the subtle head nod
glance away.


R. Gerry Fabian is a published writer and poet from Doylestown, PA. He has published five books of poetry: Parallels, Coming Out Of The Atlantic, Electronic Forecasts, Wildflower Women, Pilfered Circadian Rhythm as well as his poetry baseball book, Ball On The Mound.

Saturday, 12 July 2025

D.R. James: Great Chain of Being

          From nature’s chain whatever link you strike,
         Tenth or ten thousandth, breaks the chain alike.
         —Alexander Pope

You might be mildly surprised to learn,
if you haven’t Wikipedia’d it like I,
that demons (fallen) fall between (unfallen)
angels and the ranked array of humans—
kings to commoners—and that the wild
suspend above domesticated animals,
prized stones then metals above all minerals.
But no more surprised than I in 2006
and again in 2009 when my father
then my mother died, and I found
I’d climbed the chain a link by
vacating complicated Son. Hardly
the patriarchal type, I felt like those ‘divine’
boys who became kings by default
but deferred to regents—or princesses,
my sisters having long been the go-to girls.
Grandson had hung benignly empty since
the 80s, but this ascent asserted something
fixed—at least for me, my own four sons
soon to follow suit once I succumbed.
What healthy offspring feels the enemy’s
in everything, from his siblings’ eulogies
to the after-funeral well-wishings? Why now
so tender, when all those years so numb?
A revelation, at the least, devastation
not close to the worst, that train of transition,
the drinking of that cup, so different than
whatever’d stunned before. I’d bumped
a ceiling, hit an inevitable dead end,
reached a mythical crossroads without
an oracle, meanwhile missing all oases
in that wry desert of metaphor. Some
sons rise ready for the role. I, dangling
like bait over an abyss, glimpsed
a crevasse that smacked of the grave.


D. R. James, retired from nearly 40 years of teaching college writing, literature, and peace studies, lives with his psychotherapist wife in the woods near Saugatuck, Michigan. His latest of ten collections is Mobius Trip (Dos Madres Press). www.amazon.com/author/drjamesauthorpage

Friday, 11 July 2025

John Kenny: The Body

Eye sockets picked of tender flesh
by badger, fox, and blackbird,
head and angled body settle
in a dell purpose built
for the final dissipation.

Shade of oak, breeze-gentled grass
caress the body released from care
by a last violent act, brain cooled,
synaptic firings dwindled, last thoughts
of a short life spun out to eternity.

Blood gathers in its lower reaches
seeking exit, escape into the soil,
skin, hair and nails, organs offered
to the earth and air will
join both at their leisure,

break down and arrive at their
terminus, to find new being in
wind-rattled gorse, wildflowers,
rain-speckled weeds and nettles,
and live again, thoughtless,
dreamless.


John Kenny is a writer and editor from Dublin, working as a creative writing course facilitator for the Irish Writers Centre. His short fiction has been published in Uncertainties, Revival, The Galway Review and many other venues. His poetry has featured in StepAway, Smashing Times and Every Day Poets.  

Monday, 16 June 2025

Ashton Hicks: The Strength to Surrender

I used to be the wave.
The wave
that thought rising
was my strength.
I’d build myself up,
pulled by the moon —
swelling,
aching,
just to hold on a little longer.
A wave 
can only be 
a wave 
for so long
before it collapses
under its own weight.
It surrenders.
Crashes,
and becomes still water 
once again.
Is letting go the same as giving up?
This crash —
It’s not defeat.
It’s arrival.


Ashton Hicks is a writer and film photographer based in Chicago, IL, whose work centres on the beauty of the everyday and the art of noticing