Saturday, 18 April 2026

Irma Kurti: Petals

Tell me, did you touch these palm trees, Dad?
Did you look at the immense field of lilies?
Did you stop for an instant with the camera
in your hand to stare at the slice of sea that
appears in the space between the buildings?

Did you think of me in that instant, just as
you are now my fixed thought? Did you
marvel at the peace of the green trees? Did
you try to decipher at dawn the rustling of
leaves?

I gather fallen leaves from the ground and
hold flower petals in my hands. They are
the few and rare memories left from your
walks then.


Irma Kurti is a poet, writer, lyricist, journalist, and translator. She is a naturalized Italian and lives in Bergamo, Italy. Kurti has published 119 works, including books of poetry, fiction, and translations. Her poetry has been translated into 40 languages. 

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Phil Wood: Snail Trails in the Rockery

Eyes, located on tentacles,
see light and dark, shadow.
No colour flowers their world,
no focus to see the details.

And yet the lower tentacles...

Touch will navigate their quest.
Crevices to cross, mountains
to ascend, moist leaves delight.
Intimacy is filigreed in silver.

Am I to resent their success?


Phil Wood was born in Wales. His lifestyle interests include learning German, watercolour painting, and chess. 

Monday, 13 April 2026

Holly Day: Da Capo

He’s too afraid to name the storm clouds
building up behind her eyes: it’s another migraine, it’s not,
it’s something worse, and they won’t give it a name,
this feeling, even with the ease
that classifying dangerous things sometimes brings.

Even with a name, it’s still cancer rotting her out,
even with a name, it’s hard to talk about
like an unwanted pregnancy, like an impending abortion,
like a dog you have to get rid of. If only they could talk about it,
if only we could talk about it, if, if. If.

Your hand brushes the spot in my breast
where the lump can’t be removed, the knot
that wells up bigger than our future, bigger than the two of us
could ever be together. In your sleep, you whimper
as your wrap your palm around my poisonous breast, pull me close;
this is as close as we will ever be
from this point on.


Holly Day’s writing has recently appeared in The NoSleep podcast, Talking River, and New Plains Review, and her published books include Music Theory for Dummies and Music Composition for Dummies. She currently teaches classes at The Loft Literary Center in  Minnesota, Hugo House in Washington, and the Indiana Writers Center.

Monday, 30 March 2026

Jim Murdoch: How Poems Work

We lead you up the garden path
with promises of a pig in a poke or
a quickie behind the tool shed or
a pissing contest or some such shit
only to lose our nerve and leave you
with your pants at half-mast and
your imagination flapping in the wind.


Jim Murdoch: Scot, gatophile, honorary woman, classical music aficionado, Whovian, novelist and producer of half-to-three-quarter-(and-occasionally-actually-fully)-decent poems for over half a century.
 

Saturday, 28 March 2026

Patrick Deeley: The Antikythera Mechanism

The Antikythera Mechanism is an ancient Greek hand-powered orrery variously dated to a period between 87 BC and 205 BC, and retrieved from the wreck of a Roman cargo ship in 1901.  Machines of similar complexity did not appear again until the 14th century in western Europe.


Thwacked, along with the ship that carries it,
twisted free of rope shackles, it drops
through planks groaning and splintering apart,
splashes into the Aegean Sea.  Lingers

afloat, as if the fate of everything on earth
is about to be decided, with slurps and gurgles
happening in and about it, lost
amid the shrieks of men and cargo’s wreck. 

Sinks, silently spiralling, offers the illusion
of being a sea chest devoid of weight. 
Emits bubbles, stirs dregs of silt that slowly lift
as it shoulders its way to the abyss.

Settles and stays, its bronze lustre dimming,
nuzzled by fish, which perform odd tilts
and takes around it, seeing themselves
in a mirror, pirouetting for an entry to shelter

or even status; eager – we may quip –
to solve the riddles it keeps, find their own
evolution magically quickened
by dials and pointers, gear-train complexities

not to be matched for another millennium. 
There they plate its surface, vast
blurry generations of them vivifying it, dying
into it – accumulations of flesh, rust

and oblivion.  It seizes up – the world no wiser –
this Egyptian calendar, tide watcher,
planet tracker, analogue computer. 
Until, finally salvaged, the gleam of its genius

reaches us – but with a caution, perhaps,
as to how great feats or engines of civilisation,
raised against barbarity and loss,
are prone still to slip back into the darkness.

 
Patrick Deeley is a poet, memoirist and children's writer from Loughrea, Co. Galway.  His tenth collection, Keepsake, appeared from Dedalus Press in 2024.

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Steve Wilson: We might settle ourselves, for a moment,

if, against the rush of
our Monday workday,
 
beside an alleyway trash bin
and the city’s inevitable detritus –
 
empty pint glasses, kebab wrappers,
an errant wool scarf –
 
in this crystalline winter sun
we discover a sooty yellow cat lazing
 
unperturbed within such warmth, within such
simple dawn-light contentments. 


Steve Wilson's poetry has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies; as well as in six collections, the most recent entitled Complicity (2023). He lives in San Marcos, Texas.

Monday, 16 March 2026

Jean L. Kreiling: In the Cereal Aisle

He never let go of his cart—he’d learned
to think about his balance—as he turned
his trembling head toward well-stocked shelves. He bent
to read the boxes, squinting and intent
on choosing well, convinced that his selection
could mean strong bones, efficient gut, protection
from aging’s worst offenses. Or at least
that’s how I understood his stance, his creased
and bushy brow, his unfazed concentration
as others scurried past. His dedication
to this task meant that I, behind him, paused
as well, and thought about what might have caused
his left shoe to have worn down at the heel—
a chronic limp?—and I began to feel
protective toward this man whose pants were baggy,
his cardigan threadbare, his white hair shaggy.
And as he studied low-fat shredded wheat,
granola (maybe drawn to something sweet),
the oatmeal with more beta carotene,
and Special K (the one marked “high protein”),
he maintained an unhurried dignity.
And so I waited—not impatiently,
but with a vague affection for this man
I’d never know. As I too turned to scan
the rows of cereals, I kept one eye
on him. He chose the oatmeal, with a sigh
that seemed to unclench his entire frame—
relieved that he’d achieved one crucial aim,
made one good choice. Or else his sigh revealed
a weariness to which he would not yield.
If I were lucky, I would be that old
someday, my shoes would need to be resoled,
and I’d be strong enough to shop here, too.
Today, I probably don’t have a clue
about this man, or what his sighing meant.
He slowly shuffled off, still slightly bent.


Jean L. Kreiling is the author of four collections of poetry, most recently Home and Away (2025). Her work has been awarded the Able Muse Book Award, the Frost Farm Prize, the Rhina Espaillat Poetry Prize, and the Kim Bridgford Memorial Sonnet Prize, among other honors.

Wednesday, 11 March 2026

Kristin Roedell: Bethlehem in Minneapolis

The deer cast long shadows
on the pasture fence;
with three crowned heads,
they are wise creatures walking to the city
for the birth of a necessary miracle.
There is a murmuration of starlings
pointing fingers east.
The wind blows the alder’s branches
towards a war in crowded places.

Boots and guns are moving
through distant streets.
Far away a father hides a small girl
in a toy box; she lies next
to a raveled bear.
Her door is kicked in by masked men;
her mother turns up beseeching palms.
In the window a needful star
lifts too late.

Was this the child?
I pick up the phone in the night.
There is a vast web of connecting whispers
far away. It links building to building
and home to home.
I hear voices say
She is gone.
They were here.
Hide. This
is where they are now.


Kristin Roedell graduated from Whitman College (B.A. English 1984) and the University of Washington Law School (J.D. 1987). Her poetry has been published in The Journal of the American Medical Association, Switched on Gutenberg, and Ginosko. She authored Downriver (Aldrich Press, 2015) and Lessons in Buoyancy (Poetry Box Press, 2026).

Monday, 9 March 2026

Maurice Devitt: Snowdrops at Altamont

Tales of Brigid crackle from the car radio
as we drive the roads, slick with dew,
through towns and villages – Baltinglass,
Blessington, Rathvilly, Tullow –   
streets empty, as residents prepare
behind closed doors, for whatever
the new year will bring.

We arrive, expecting a carpark filled
with the emptiness of winter,
the slow sweep of grey coats
across gravel, only to be greeted
by the giddy joy of friends meeting up,
snowdrops waiting politely in the wings,
their shy beauty blinking through the mist.


Maurice Devitt is the curator of the Irish Centre for Poetry Studies site. His Pushcart-nominated poem, ‘The Lion Tamer Dreams of Office Work’, was the title poem of an anthology published by Hibernian Writers in 2015. His second collection ‘Some of These Stories are True’ was published by Doire Press in 2023.  

Friday, 6 March 2026

Nancy Byrne Iannucci: Unanswered Questions

When I can’t get into you,
I get into a white magnolia tree,
where the Northern Flicker pecks & pecks above me
without severing a branch. I listen to its knocks
like the knocks in my head, thinking of the days ahead
and unanswered questions. I examine its leaves like tasseomancy,
following its veins, running with it, like the veins that run through us.
I see bits of gold, a trail of corn silk that the deer have left behind,
leading to a secret thicket. All I know is that it feels safe there,
safe with you, despite unanswered questions.


Nancy Byrne Iannucci is a New York-based writer and author of four chapbooks. A two-time Best of the Net nominee, she was short-listed for the 2025 Poetry Lighthouse prize. Her work appears in Thrush, Maudlin House, and 34 Orchard. She lives in upstate NY with her three cats. Web: www.nancybyrneiannucci.com IG: @nancybyrneiannucci