Vol. 8 No. 2

Fall 2025

under
Editor's Note
Soup
Everything is Burning
Spring in the Valley
This Place is Called The Body of Christ
the shape of things
The Transient Blessings of Nature I
Between This Scar and That Task
Creature of Habit
The Metaphorical Dog
Another Swim
Blue Hour
Compassionate Witness
Byd
In the Beginning
When the Swans Were Still With Us
The Transient Blessings of Nature IV
Keepsake
Suddenly, California
I Get Credit for Teaching You How to Bend Toward the Light
Red
Faustus in the Everglades
Colostrum
Olan Mills ’57
Golden Shovel with lines from Wislawa Szymborska’s "Landscape" trans. Clare Cavenagh
The Librarian
The Transient Blessings of Nature V
Poem That’s Really Just an Excuse to Tell You the Symptoms of Ovarian Cancer
Fall Sunset
Startipping
Incubations
Her Yellow Poncho
Everyone Signed my Godmother’s Card But Few Understood her Pain
Genocide’s Face
/
Break Maiden
The Yellow Voyager
"The challenge is to always find the ultimate in the ordinary horseshit..." James Tate
Crinoline
A Photo Series
Morning Ritual
refreshing
commune with the dead via voicemail
My Burden
On Asking God to Make You Something Else
Say Uncle
There’s No Such Thing as Fairies
Kindred Spirit Ablaze
In the Hot Spring Locker Room
Picasso, It’s Time to Sit Down & Talk Seriously
In another life
Dear Pinecone
The End of The Marriage
Party Time
Self-Portrait As Bearded Vulture Chick
Flamingo, Florida
UNTITLED oil on canvas 100 cm x 70 cm
rattlesnake/creek
untitled
elegy for a thirteen-hour road trip
Love Poem
October Prairie Metropolitan Blues
Brief Instructions for Unlearning
This Poem is a Message in a Bottle
Daydream
Catkin Moths
B-BOYS oil and cement on cd
Bees
Performance
Improv
Pot roast
Sky Omens
[when my daughter feels good about herself]
This Poem
Before the Arsonist
Between Kingdoms
I Remind Myself
Brief Rhapsody on Leisure
MI
Grace
The asphalt

Improv

I spread my drawings across the kitchen floor,
aquarium blueprints unfurling like small
hopes, while my father stands
in the doorway, fragile as blown glass.
In drama club, they hand me a slip of paper:
frying bacon, a joke about the way
I twist my bangs with sculpting gel,
the way I’ve learned to frame my face
without her. My father says, I’ve found
another girl in the same boat as you,
as if we are two strips of meat thrown
in the same hot pan, sizzling. I lie
on the cold floor, body klump-klumping
against linoleum while they watch me
fail to become anything other than myself.
Electrocution? someone guesses.
A dead fish? another calls out, and I think
of her, gone as suddenly as that.
I learn how to curl up small at home,
how to make sure he doesn’t topple,
saying, Okay, Dad, while inside I crackle
and spit. The day she left I watched him
fold over the kitchen table, body shriveling
in the heat of her absence. Later, I drew
belugas on newsprint, bodies
suspended in imaginary water,
navigating by sound, unable to see
beyond the next cold current.
In drama club, I learn that becoming
something else requires every atom
of your being. At home, I’m already everything:
daughter, caretaker, bacon and pan.

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