Language Only Heaven Understands

by Donna Vorreyer

 

dents left by umbrella tips in a barrel
discarded by hands of hotel guests

blood drops on a gardener’s hands after
trimming the roses without gloves

drunken wedding guests slur apologies
for eating all the frosting roses with their hands

the silent syllables of a skull, its unhinged jaw
open like a mute and welcoming hand

a spider’s intricate web, its silken grids
and fine design destroyed by careless hands

my hand on your hand, connection, conjunction,
parentheses for language only heaven understands

 

 


Donna Vorreyer is the author of Unrivered (2025), To Everything There Is (2020), Every Love Story is an Apocalypse Story (2016) and A House of Many Windows (2013), all from Sundress Publications. She hosts the reading series A Hundred Pitchers of Honey and is a co-founder/editor of the new journal Asterales: A Journal of Arts & Letters. Find her on Instagram @djv50 and on BlueSky @djvorreyer.bsky.social.

2026-04-18T10:24:03-04:00April 18, 2026|

A word in your shell-like

by Anna Fernandes

 

There’s no blood spotted on my pillow.
No sand pouring forth or anything like that.

It’s just that sounds land dully
as if plopped into ashes and I think
somewhere in there my cochlea might be
a tucked-up prawn —
overcompensating, sussurating whispers —
stuck in a pin-sharp shriek.

In the pink dark, I see sound stumble
over patched and tender fuzz
where swaying stereocilia is worn
down to a brittle pearlescence.
It blindly corkscrews the eustacian tube,
whorling vast echoes round a gastropod’s columella.
Yes, there’s some distortion.

Through a grotto’s burnt-out membrane,
vivid liquids mingle in secret pools —
oil and sea-sick water.
When that happens I cock my head
this way and that,
dislodge ancient mineral salts, tumble crystals

until they shake loose —
a mute rock-fall
of filthy shale and ammonites
and pyrite trilobites and snatches
of songs and words unpronounced
and that’s when I
violently flail, float away.

I can’t hear very well
and there goes my blood
lapping the shore, that’s all.

 

 


Anna Fernandes lives near Bristol and writes about grief and chronic illness. Her work has been most recently published in Canary Collective, Ink Sweat & Tears and Dust Poetry and was shortlisted for the Laurie Lee Prize for Writing 2024 and 2025. Anna is on Instagram @annafernandeswrites.  

2026-04-12T10:29:35-04:00April 12, 2026|

my robe gives off sparks

by Jeannie Prinsen

 

when I reach for it, fumbling, long before dawn.
they crackle in a blackness my eyes have not yet
adjusted to. no comforting shapes of chair, table,
dresser, so I go by feel, by the plush sizzle and
sputter between my fingers. synthetic fireflies
are surprisingly good company in the lonely
hours. don’t we all grope in the dark for a wink
of light, however dry and cold, for a soft
place to touch, as the blanket of night pulls
back, filling the room with stars.

 

 


Jeannie Prinsen lives with her husband, daughter, and son in Kingston, Ontario, where she works as a copyeditor for a news organization. Her writing has appeared in Dust Poetry, Relief Journal, and elsewhere. Find her online at jeannieprinsen.substack.com and jeannieprinsen.bsky.social

2026-04-11T10:28:41-04:00April 11, 2026|

Planets

by Hazelyn Aroian

 

and so you float through the twilit cemetery. pink ribbons threaded along the horizon, pink ribbons tasseled through your hair. the sound of September wind through dry grass is not unlike the sound of graphite, frazzled chicken scratch on a baby blue exam booklet. if death is a prickly essay question, a headstone’s more footnote than thesis. and if death is a physics lab report, at the moment you’re workbenched, stuck fiddling with your pendulum, your balance scale. but enough of that. look to the cemetery oaks, orange leaves shattering around you like dozens of satellites. in the heat of a brief supernovan bloom is it better to study the wrong thing? to study nothing at all? look to the graves, knit in such tidy rows. the symmetry makes you want to pull your own chair back, sit down for class. as the neighbor boy pedals past the wrought iron cemetery gate, as his wheels spin, whir, flicker in mechanical tandem like the phases of miniature moons: recite your times tables, aloof as a runaway helium balloon. keep rising all light and airy up into that most intimate infinite. keep racing towards that starless blank slate, black granite.

 

 


Hazelyn Aroian lives and writes in Massachusetts. She recently graduated from Northeastern University, where she studied computer science, English, and philosophy. She has worked as a software engineer, grocery store clerk, and movie theatre attendant. Her writing has been nominated for Best Spiritual Literature and can be found in The Shore and Strange Hymnal.

2026-04-05T11:10:42-04:00April 5, 2026|

Shotgun Diagram

by Brendan Byrne

 

I only watched it once: that video of you in the
stick-trees, cradling a 20-gauge in your arms like
a child, like melting snow in the palms of spring,

firing it three times, with the crow’s crows, into
nothing, although it could have been anything,
the frame only holding your body and the gun’s

hot steel, glowing like a star, like a constellation
bit come to ground, broken off or freed. And
years ago, drowning in your brother’s clothes,

lying on the late-winter bed of leaves, having
followed me into the dark, both of us afraid
of the morning, sun spilling over the horizon

like wrath, like a hound, soft kiss to my temple,
I wondered if this were a sign, a flood, a grave
robbing, for when your hair grew long–as I hid

still, buried with a thousand undaunted beetles,
first snow coming for me–that buckshot might
fill me like rain, three thuds like the slowing

of a train, the sewing of a wound, lips pressed
into a wooden comb like the nape of a neck,
prayer bound in the squeal of a weather-vane.

 

 


Brendan Byrne is a student at Hamilton College in Central New York. His work has previously appeared with Green Ink Poetry Press, the Hyacinth Review, and The Shore Poetry. He will begin his MFA in Poetry at Florida State University this summer. 

2026-04-04T11:46:51-04:00April 4, 2026|
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