“Hitting the Wall” by Keith Polette


isn’t it always like that
a blackbird in a headwind
blown back by something
it cannot see

your heart crushed
blindsided
by a bus suddenly
out of fog

your best intention
acres of corn crop
bitten by blight
ploughed under

where do you turn
in a world
that makes as little
sense as a scarecrow
in ballet shoes

Keith Polette has published poems in both print and online journals. His book of haibun, Pilgrimage, was published by Red Moon Press in 2020.

“A.M.E.N.” by Valerie Flanagan


Awake. Breathe in sound to
surround the blue sky
spilling life unto the ground.
Make. Laughter in waves of
tidal green leaves
shaking the wings off demons.
Energy. Crying toward the moon
spinning laps of waltzing
rhythms home in phases.
New. Sleep against the sun
springing backward the molecules
marching across the path of time.

something new and good
about being you


Valerie Flanagan is an associate professor and graduate chair of education and mom to two boys who hold her heart. She enjoys reading novels and poetry of various genres, while waiting for poems to share their words with her.

“0430 Hours” by Bob Brussack


He lay among
the background hums of deep night
on this more inhabited world,
anonymous machines vaguely at large,
gears and wheels and rotors
spinning in service of the sleeping
and the sleepless,
the half-life of jet lag
yawning before him,
with days to go before he’d be
accustomed again
and ready for the routines
of this other place,
his feet willing enough,
notwithstanding
the Greek chorus
of dead French philosophers
he kept squeezed
into silence
on an untended shelf.


Bob Brussack is oldish and therefore burdened with the usual accumulation of reasons to grieve. He lived in Manhattan first, then Long Island, then in the southern reaches of the ancient foothills of the Appalachians, and mostly after that in Athens, Georgia, teaching law. Now he divides his time between Athens and a sea town near the coast of the Celtic Sea.

“Cute But Deadly” by Anne-Marie Delaunay-Danizio


The April night of 2013 when a young security guard was shot and killed in front of the MIT campus, Jazz was worried because their two cats were after a mouse in the basement. Jane was glued to the TV, preoccupied with the news. Also, perhaps because of her rural European background, she was prone to a fatalistic attitude about cats and mice, and did not move immediately to rescue the small rodent. Later, her six-year-old daughter called on her again: “Mom, they got him, but he is still alive.”

Jazz held the mouse in her hand on top of a paper towel. The little critter was not moving yet still breathing and apparently intact. Relenting to her child’s pleading eyes, Jane picked up a container. She added two pieces of cereal and punched holes in the lid with a fork. After gently placing the mouse inside, she hid it away from the cats on the top of the fridge. “I hope he will be okay, sweetheart,” she said.

She wished she could do something to reassure her little girl and bring a smile to her round face. Five years ago she had brought her home from a Chinese orphanage and called her Jasmine. Within a year, the lively baby named after a fragrant flower had become Jazz.

The massive hunt for a wounded mass murderer on the move continued on the following morning. When she checked on the mouse, Jane found that he was dead and, following the lockdown, did not dare to venture outside of their house to bury him in the backyard.

For the whole day mother and daughter were stuck inside with a dead mouse and the TV streaming the same announcements over and over again. Restless, bewildered, aimless, unable to focus on domestic chores, Jane, while checking on Jazz and feeding the cats dead food, checked the mouse’s description on the web: white belly, gray, round body.

According to the description, the little critter was defined as cute but deadly as a possible transmitter of a serious respiratory disease. Ouch! Jane hoped that his presence in the basement was just a rare, individual occurrence.

By nighttime, the fate of that poor little thing made her think of young Dzhokhar, the surviving Marathon bomber. She even felt a short-lived surge of tenderness and compassion toward the sweet-looking, puppy-eyed young man who, after causing such a deployment of armed police forces, lay hidden a few blocks away, bleeding to death inside a white boat.

“Yes,” Jane told herself after turning off the TV, “cute but deadly.”


Anne-Marie Delaunay-Danizio has a B.A. in English Literature from Emmanuel College; a master’s in Art History and a master’s in Museum Studies from Harvard Extension School; and an MFA in Visual Arts from the Institute of Art and Design at New England College. A visual artist, her artwork was accepted in the SEE|ME Winter 2020–2021 Exhibition at the Yard, Flatiron North, New York. Her writing is published in Atherton Review. Anne-Marie enjoys sculpting, painting, and practicing Reiki.

“Lavender” by Vanessa Rose


This lavender looks dead even when it thrives
Its dry grey leaves point at the sun
I want it to be other than it is
What if I accept its very nature?
Its tired withered struggle
What then?


Vanessa Rose writes poetry whenever she can. She lives in Sydney Australia and is a member of Writing NSW. When not writing, Vanessa is a researcher at a not-for-profit social purpose centre based in Australia, Singapore and the UK.

“Automation” by Cole Webber


The birds swarmed high overhead. The lovers held their hands, clasped tightly together, “Have I ever told you before,” the boy raised his eyebrows in wonder, as the girl’s attention was called to the low warm hum in his throat, “that all the computers in all the world, all wired together, could not send the same number of signals in one-second as just one human brain?” The birds continued to the place some of them had never been but all of them knew.

            “No,” she said, “but I believe it.” The clouds swirled above the birds gently. It rocked the lovers’ hands back and forth, not by force, but as the rhythm it inspired. Their hands were still swinging to the tune as they paced the sidewalk back to their vehicle. The melody still fluttered in her heart as she sat on the couch, waiting and clutching the flimsy plastic in her hand, until it showed the blue line.

            She couldn’t remember what she said to him. She cried in fear and excitement, all muddled together. Her stomach sank, weighed down with cherry pits. And it all burst into a warm winter’s fire when he hugged and brushed her hair and snapped her back into the moment.

            “I have faith in you,” the words spiralled in her ear canal like a feather, tickling and warming her. It was just what she needed to hear. It was nice beyond the pleasantries. “Faith?” her tear-stained eyes pointed in confusion, faked somewhat for she already felt what he meant, just wanted to hear it explained. “I don’t know what’s going to happen,” his eyes gazed cool and calm as water, dripping, melting her away in a cool spring, “I don’t know how this works.” He smiled sheepishly, “But I know that I don’t. And just because you don’t know how something works, doesn’t mean it doesn’t work.”

            “It’s just our best guess,” he laughed. And he shared the tickling laugh with the voodoo priests and the witch- and wish- doctors of centuries before.

            He patted her tummy. It was warm and soft and it radiated even through the raggedy shirt. “I feel it,” she said. And she did.


Cole Webber is an average human being and aspiring ‘comprehensivist’ (as opposed to a specialist). He tries to think about lots of different topics or ideas, and translate those thoughts into things that are somewhat useful. He enjoys writing, drawing, painting and design.

“Aftermath” by Diane Elayne Dees


A butterfly floats across
the balcony. A bird flies
over the roof. Someone walks
a dog. Generators roar the pain
of darkness and loss.
The hurricane has died,
the sky is blue again.
The scars are deep and long;
nature has put us in our place.


Diane Elayne Dees lives in Covington, Louisiana, just across Lake Pontchartrain from New Orleans. Though known as a poet, she has also written her share of fiction and creative nonfiction. Diane also publishes Women Who Serve, a blog that delivers news and commentary on women’s professional tennis throughout the world.

“Peanut Butter Oreos” by Nik Rajagopalan


I went to the market
To buy some cookies
Endless choices before me.
Peanut Butter Oreos
Sweet, yet savory all in one
I pay and leave,
taking one from the package
I bump into you and apologize
I’m so wrapped up in the taste
Of the cookie
That I almost didn’t notice
You call me
“Sandnigger”


Nik Rajagopalan is a student at George Mason University. He enjoys motorcycling, playing with his dog Tashi, and of course, writing poetry, especially for his young niece to enjoy.

“I Remember” by Mary Ann Castle


I remember a soft, gentle delicate light
a slight breeze on my face
This memory of when I last saw you
A feeling as if it were today
And, I remember this memory
of turning back to look at your
sleeping body,
curve of your shoulder

When I was young
when I was with you secretly
in those
nights


Mary Ann Castle lives in NYC

“Gettysburg, Pennsylvania” by Linda Miller

July 1-3, 1863, American Civil War


Three days under clear skies in the lush courses of
Shenandoah Valley, General Lee’s forces
struck Northern lands cross the Susquehanna River.
Over ten roads they marched and rode to deliver
a crushing blow to General Meade’s Union jacks
surrounding Gettysburg and prepared for attacks.

Forests and farmlands, ruined rolling hills and pastures,
rocked with cannon fire, mortars, muskets, and fractures.
Wild animals fled, farm animals under yoke,
birds in the sky receded into distant smoke.
North against South, toddler nation blood-divided,
brothers against brothers, families blindsided.

Gettysburg —the bloodiest battle of the war
death from mortars, cannonballs, acres of horror
wounded, casualties, lying on a grassy crypt.
Afterward medics walked the battlefield and tripped
on numerous muskets unfired, atop shoulders.
Just four of every hundred died because soldiers
saw men facing them, didn’t shoot, just paused the strife.
Humanity hesitates to kill when faced with life.


Linda (Stormyfalls) lives in a world where ERA is the 28th amendment to the Constitution, Black Lives Matter, democracy thrives, climate change is taken seriously, and walls are built only to decorate not divide.