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So far The Editor has created 344 blog entries.
15 04, 2023

Lost in Minnewaska

2026-06-10T21:08:14-04:00April 15, 2023|

by Ryan Norman

 

I could still hear the lake’s wooden teeth
chewing at the shore a thousand feet below
on skeletons of volcanoes, each wave a spicy drip
to melt the early wintered air as the sun
starred through the pine canopy,
which burned both iris and retina
as I searched for orange paint sprayed on
giant crags, sharper than my eyesight
till she called out I’m orange! I’m orange!
So, I followed her voice instead and the lake
stopped chewing in favor of the roar
of its sister-fueled crash onto naked stone
glistening under a moon-changeling sun.
It was her mist that kissed my sore eyes:
each kiss with tongue till my eyes were
sloppy wet. I pushed the damp cloak to
see the tree’s roots, bigger than its pointed
skin, deeper than its circular heart; and I
touched it knowing that circles go nowhere,
but the evergreen made me smile at its
barbed strength, each needle made from star
food, the same nourishment that scalds my skin,
and that’s what I get for touching stars on earth:
hands that no longer bend from inelastic scars
the same as its branches, broken in the wind,
which carries no secrets when the water screams
louder than that man with the selfie, seven layers of burrito
in his hand, numbering each year stuck
mid-air as every step was a slip into nothing
but the shallow creek below. Keep going she said,
and I listened because I, too, am water­–
the wood has left me wet and
lost in its orbital eras.

 


Ryan Norman (he/him) is a queer writer from New York living in the Hudson Valley. Ryan enjoys swimming in mountain lakes and climbing tall things. He is a contributing editor of creative nonfiction with Barren Magazine. His work has appeared in X-R-A-Y Literary Magazine, Black Bough Poetry, HAD, Maudlin House, and elsewhere. He has two chapbooks I ALWAYS WANTED TO BE A BOND GIRL (Daily Drunk Press) and CICADA SONG (Finishing Line Press). You can find him on Twitter @RyanMGNorman or ryanmgnorman.com

9 04, 2023

They Ask Questions

2026-06-10T21:08:25-04:00April 9, 2023|

by Mitchell Nobis

 

“Who was your first love?” they
asked as if love meant more
than the unknown then, but
my first love was not knowing,
not having to know, having
people who did the knowing for
you while you dug around,
explored the woods & the world
with mud on your feet and
fertile soil under fingernails.
You watched birds fly–
barn swallows fast like blinking,
like wind & what the eye cannot see
but is there, moving, swift–
while you were supposed to
be shooting them. You’d use
the sight to focus on a sparrow
pulling loose its dead feathers,
its fluff drifting, caught on a breeze.
You didn’t know where it would go,
caught in the trap of beginning to sense.
To yearn for it, to know it, what leaves.

 


Mitchell Nobis is a writer and K-12 teacher in Metro Detroit. His poetry has appeared in Whale Road Review, The Night Heron Barks, HAD, and others. He facilitates Teachers as Poets for the National Writing Project and hosts the Wednesday Night Sessions reading series. Find him at @MitchNobis and mitchnobis.com or falling apart on a basketball court.

8 04, 2023

In Which Our Daughter Takes Me for a Walk and I Bring the Dog

2026-06-10T21:08:36-04:00April 8, 2023|

by Daniel J Flosi

 

In the parking lot behind the strip mall
swept under some seedless tree
we found a skull
as pitted and burned smooth
as a meteorite

about the size of a squirrel
or maybe a small dog

perhaps it drank poisoned walnut meat
and visions doubled
lost sight of line and limb
before tumbling to the ground

explains the crack
or maybe the neighborhood fox
got to it shook her kill
playfully then bashed it
against the mallet of that tree

we try for a while to arrange
all its holes
you look deeper into the depression
of eye socket and hear the bell
of birdsong in the hollow point darkness

then you ask to take it home
so we can keep trying
to bleach the truth from it

turning back up the hill
in front of the house
whiskey toothed peonies lean
face first into the soft furrowed lawn

 


Daniel J Flosi sometimes thinks they are an apparition living in a half-acre coffin within the V of the Mississippi and Rock Rivers. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Funicular Magazine, Olney Magazine, Rejection Letters, Feral Poetry and many more can be found at dkflosi.wordpress.com. Find his chapbook at BullshitLit.com Drop a line @muckermaffic

2 04, 2023

Duet in an Unknown Key

2026-06-10T21:08:46-04:00April 2, 2023|

by Andrew Cox

 

Smaller birds with longer wings my father sings in a key only the dead can master. My mother rolls her deceased eyes at him and sings it’s always the quiet ones. Somewhere between a major and minor key my dad and mom perform their duet as the soundtrack to my sleep. The methods they use to establish the key to their serenade are the tonic’s well-kept secret. I should have named you a different name my mom almost chants things would have been better. As for being in the key of the tonic my mom and dad seem compelled to drive its chariot into their masterpiece. My dad presses his lips to the mic and sings longer wings and smaller birds. We all need someone to die for.

 


Bio: Andrew Cox is the author of The Equation That Explains Everything, (BlazeVOX [Books] 2010), the chapbooks, This False Compare (2River View, 2020) and Fortune Cookies (2River View, 2009) and the hypertext chapbook, Company X (Word Virtual, 2000). He edits UCity Review.

1 04, 2023

What Princess Peach Says to Mario After He Rescues Her

2026-06-10T21:08:56-04:00April 1, 2023|

by Kara Dorris

 

I love you like a cruise ship loves icebergs
like the coliseum embraces ruin.
I often like to play the if-you-were-dead game
& use your body towel (or the shirt you’re wearing)
to dry my hair. I love you like a stamp
on my passport. I use your razor to shave
my underworld areas & secretly watch
& rewind our tv shows so you never know.
I love you like a pair of flipflops loves the tide,
like a split pineapple, like curly hair loves
the rain. Every day I love so many someones
I’ve never met. They love me too.
I love you like a flame loves a candle holder.
You love me like a candle holder holds a flame.

 


Kara Dorris is the author of two poetry collections: Have Ruin, Will Travel (2019) and When the Body is a Guardrail (2020) from Finishing Line Press. She has also published five chapbooks, including the prose collection Carnival Bound [or, please unwrap me] (The Cupboard Pamphlet, 2020). Her poetry has appeared in Prairie Schooner, DIAGRAM, Hayden Ferry Review, RHINO, Tinderbox, Puerto del Sol, and Crazyhorse, among others literary journals, as well as the anthology Beauty is a Verb (2011). Her prose has appeared in Waxwing and the anthology The Right Way to be Crippled and Naked (2016). She has made a career of failing, of never being satisfied with her own writing. She loves ekphrastic poetry, slow country mornings, watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer, swimming laps, and taking naps with her husky. For more information, please visit karadorris.com.

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