Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Ojo Olumide Emmanuel: Shards

Bruises are measured with the pinch of a finger.
i crave your voice & a morgue came.
i have unearthed my heart for you
i search my ears for the last beep of your voice, your laugh.
this world is strange, but what's more strange is
how each passing moment drowns you in an elusive frenzy
of what could have worked.
i observed my feet, they ache.
ached from a journey i thought had ended.
& damning thought that what/who
you call home is only a steam in a kettle- it never stays
it leaps & distance keeps stretching itself
the first poem i wrote after you became a bird is that:
if you were a dove, you'd bear home on your back & return
but when the poem conjured an owl, i knew you had gripped
the night & night is a peevish hope-
it dribbles dawn even when it tries to flicker rays on dimples.
again, in my meditation, i saw a gale around a stream.
i was washing my weariness & i tried to hold you in my arms.
as i came nearer, you dissolved like a gust of glucose on the tongue.
i waited, stared at the nothingness you've become;
i prayed & prayed & prayed
& i went back to bathe my weariness a second time.
mum says, someday your wings will dust itself above my roof;
she exhorts that i feed my heart butter because
hope does get fat & when it is plump,
it morphs into faith. & yes, i have faith, but
i have never tried it on what's lost.


Ojo Olumide Emmanuel is a Nigerian Poet and Book Editor. He is the author of the Poetry Chapbook "How Flowers Pollinate Before the Arrival of Butterflies (Authorpaedia, 2022). He is the winner of the Nigerian Prize for Indigenous Language (Pidgin, 2025) and the WeNaija Literary Contest (Non-Fiction, 2023).

Monday, 9 February 2026

Jackie Chou: God Is the Best Timpani Player in the Universe

Circular ripples
punctuate
the wet pavement 

I open the glass door
stepping into 
the frigid air 

How quickly 
my hair dampens
in the outpouring!

I tilt toward 
my reflection 
in the puddle 

The music of rain 
has drummed
into my ears

How close 
I have come to 
tipping over


Jackie Chou is a poet from Southern California. Her work has recently appeared in Lee Herrick's Our California Project. She is the author of two collections of poetry, The Sorceress and Finding My Heart in Love and Loss (Cyberwit Press). 

Friday, 6 February 2026

May Garner: To Learn To Endure

Some things arrive without asking:
the tilt of a jaw,
the way silence settles in the chest.

I carry my family in my body –
every apology that went unspoken,
every night that taught us
how to swallow silence.

Some things arrive without asking:
the tilt of a jaw,
the way silence settles in the chest.

This is how we are passed down:
not in stories, but in what we learn
to endure.


May Garner is an author and poet residing in rural Ohio. She has been writing for nearly fifteen years and has been sharing her writing online for over a decade. She is the author of two poetry collections, Withered Rising (2023) and Melancholic Muse (2025). Find her work on Instagram (@crimson.hands).

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Howie Good: AI Blues

It’s a cold, hard world – literally. The snow on the ground has crusted over. Walking the dogs or out to the car is as treacherous for someone with my old bones as wing walking in an aerial circus would be. Aging has broken me little by little, part by part, kind of like a slow-acting poison. My heart is chipped and dented, and my head crawling with monsters. No one knows the real me, including me. In the Book of Isiah an angel touches the lips of the prophet with a burning coal in a rite of purification. What can I help you with today? my AI copilot asks.


Howie Good is a widely published but little-known author.

Monday, 2 February 2026

Daniel Romo: Sequel

I’m uncertain if the man in the Target parking lot
is actually playing or if his clarinet is merely rigged

to the speaker welcoming tips and ignorance;
that’s how it goes until perception meets finality.

And when I recently sat next to my 20-something
son watching a movie about magicians, the sound-

track I played for myself was different than when
I sat next to my now 70-something dad a decade

ago and saw a movie in which a man killed a
Grizzly with only a knife and grit. These days

I’m filled with more answers than questions as
if I forgot to ask the basics such as, How was your

day, son? We either succumb to or strangle the
bears that appear before us, the way a dad shapes

or breaks a legacy with his bare hands, and at 52,
I’m only now beginning to examine the effect

my callouses have had on those whose hands
I’ve ever held. After the movie, I hugged my

son goodbye until the next time I flew in to
see him and I stepped into the center of the

subway car, my body balanced by a pole as if
propping up a man learning how to mend each

bad note he’s ever played.


Daniel Romo's latest book is American Manscape (Moon Tide Press 2026). More at danieljromo.com

Friday, 30 January 2026

LaVern Spencer McCarthy: Looking At My Brother's Photograph

 I was washing dishes the day
my brother was slapped into the Army.
Smirking and bold, loaded with
eighteen years of belligerence,
he was lounging at the kitchen table
bad-mouthing my uncle, not there to defend
his treacherous ways.
 
Mother, always handy with water-blistered knuckles,
knocked Harold all the way
to the recruiter's office.
Afterward, a Greyhound bus
propelled his furious momentum
toward boot camp.
 
He returned two years later
body-bagged and silent, all rebellion
lost in a rice paddy somewhere in Viet Nam.
Mother cried, but I stood at his coffin
angrily plucking petals
from his spray of long-stemmed roses,
wondering how he came to be dead
from a single slap.
 
 
LaVern Spencer McCarthy is a state and nationally awarded poet. She has written and published five books of poetry, five books of short stories and three journals. She is a life member of Poetry Society of Texas and National Federation of Poetry Societies. She lives in Blair, Oklahoma.

Wednesday, 28 January 2026

Mukut Borpujari: Stoic

It’s already summer, and we’re getting rid
of clothes, getting ready to greet
the scorching days ahead;
making the place airy and less cluttered.
We’re living on the edge, restructuring the house,
getting rid of the old furnitures,
obsolete machineries and funny gadgets.
A small table in the kitchen for two. Our world is
changing, our wardrobes mostly empty;
gone are the skinny jeans and the fancy moccasins—
the windchimes and the trinkets.
When someone comes to visit and admires
our complete works of Yeats,
the peacock feather in the open thesaurus,
the mantle vase on a shelf, we say
take them. This is the most important
time of all, the age of dissipation,
knowing full well what we are divesting is
like the fragrance of a burning incense stick
that lingers hours after it has been doused.
An ordinary Friday afternoon
when one of us stared,
and the other one just laughed.


Mukut Borpujari (he/him) is a freelance writer and a poet. He has a plethora of poems and articles published in top journals around the world. An active member of the Greenpeace Movement, he has a deep-rooted conviction about nature and the natural world. His other hobbies include computers & Internet, and driving.


Monday, 26 January 2026

Paulette Calasibetta: The Blood We Share

in dusty archives
you carried silent hope
walked

damp earth
marked by granite
headstones

weighted   memories
hushed
beneath the soil

you carried
a birth certificate
like a memento

haunted by
faceless names
wrinkled

and frayed
in the width
of time.

your beard
grows white ~
fingers tremble

unsilenced hope
flows in the
blood we share,

our mother’s
secret
unearthed.


Paulette Calasibetta is inspired by nature, and the spirit of the human condition; motivated by celebrations of life, and the weight of the hollowness of grief. Published in Ariel Chart, October Hill, The Academy of the Heart and Mind, Spank the Carp, and various other publications and anthologies.
 

Friday, 23 January 2026

Bernard Pearson: PLEASE BE AWARE!

In the coming emergency,
dreams may have to 
be shackled, children 
cleaved from their
mothers' breasts,
lovers not to our liking
may have their hearts impounded
and the homeless hungry
made to eat the sidewalks.
Everyone must play their part in
the coming emergency.


Bernard Pearson's work appears in many publications, including; Aesthetica Magazine, The Edinburgh Review, The York Literary Review. In 2017, a selection of his poetry, ‘In Free Fall’, was published by Leaf by Leaf Press. In 2019, he won second prize in The Aurora Prize for Writing,

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Allan Lake: R & R

Deep inside this open-door cafe
a nervous sparrow lands on back
of chair next to one I occupy.
Fly on table top is perfectly still,
like nothing bad could ever happen.
How Boeing of this identifiable,
beautifully-crafted flying subject.
Nothing in this place is mine
except espresso in the tiny glass
because I paid for it. Sparrow
and fly are freeloaders, skilled
thieves with no currency or sense
of shame. We three are not really
together, do not have a common
language, could just as easily be
somewhere else but all landed here
with a clear sense of entitlement
for refreshment and relaxation.


Allan Lake is a migrant poet from Allover, Canada who now lives in Allover, Australia. Coincidence. He has published poems in 24 countries. His latest chapbook of poems, entitled ‘My Photos of Sicily’, was published by Ginninderra Press. It contains no photos, only poems.