“The Universe’s Brain” by John J. Brugaletta


“That ocean,” said Marvell (and meant the mind).
To be half-right is not exactly wrong,
for though the ocean functions as a kind
of hidden wellspring for the careless throng,

there is in fact the land with air and light,
receiving, like an artist, what it’s dealt,
transforming that into a holy rite
at which a bronze-age human would have knelt.

But rites should have a reason that makes sense.
A round and knobby planet without spine,
and lacking verbal person, mood or tense,
reflects on outer space its modest shine.

Here is reason, although logic is still mute.
It rises through the ether as dispute.


John J. Brugaletta is the first member of his family to finish high school and then three degrees from universities. He is now professor emeritus at California State University, Fullerton, where he edited South Coast Poetry Journal for ten years. He lives with his wife on the redwood coast of California.

“Cotton Candy” by Judith Solano Mayer


Studying the ceiling
tracing the migration patterns of angels there
along the fractured boundary of imagination
(a place where they love to kneel and drink)
I set traps; yes, I have sunk that low.

But I have to tell you—it is beautiful to see
that torn gossamer streaming like the spun sugar
we used to pull off paper wands at the parish fair, the magic
of its abrupt crimson color when the strands met
the sweat of our eager fingers, our stained tongues.
My sister would pinch off small puffs and brush her nail tips
like we saw mom do, or powder my face
leaving a rouge web across my cheeks.

It’s like that, just like that,
easing their fine wretchedness from the snare
in glittering strands, ingesting their brilliance,
licking my lips with a grotesque sort of satisfaction.


Judith Solano Mayer is a Pacific Northwest transplant with an ancient history in physical science. She enjoys the porosity of the multiverse and tries to incorporate its character into her poetry whenever possible.

“Rain, Like Idle Fingers” by Joseph Hardy


   might sound, tapping a metal bucket,
for all the lack of sun this morning,
the dim gray light, no heavier than that.
As though God’s not into dramatics today.
No fire and brimstone.
No rending of earth as when Jesus died.
No storm lashing Adam and Eve out of Eden.
No cataclysmic meteor striking the Yucatan
to extinguish the dinosaurs.
No glacial sheet of ice overwhelming Europe
to drive the Neanderthals south.
A day of forgiveness perhaps,
or an intermission.


Joseph Hardy is one of a handful of writers that live in Nashville, Tennessee, that does not play a musical instrument; although a friend once asked him to bring his harmonica on a camping trip so they could throw it in the fire. His wife says he cannot leave a room without finding out something about everyone in it, and telling her their stories later.

“岛” by J H Martin


The lake spread out before him in a liquid pool of ink.

This small island that his boat was headed for was no longer a piece of imagination.

Two years ago, it hadn’t even existed. Not even as a passing thought.

Things had been going well back then. Money had stopped being a concern. His wife was everything a man could want. And business had never been better.

And yet what had taken twenty years of hard work to achieve, took only five short seconds for its cables to snap, its brakes to fail and for it to crash headlong into emergency wards, liquidation and trauma.

After his release from hospital, he wandered far and wide in search of something. What that was, he didn’t know. And no matter where he went, he couldn’t find it either. Not in the bullshit of bars, not in the cleansing beach sunsets, nor on the long cold mountain retreats.

But now he had found what he was looking for.

Now he was here, bringing the boat in to land.

He’d found the location on a torn piece of paper in a small hut in the woods.

There was no map. There was no photograph. There were only some words.

They read:

“People eat dirt, dirt eats people.

No matter what you do, you must return to this earth.

None of this is real, everything returns to this.

If you see through this world and let go of it, this is wisdom.

If you see through it but don’t let go, that is just ‘talking Chan’.

Sat on the bank of the island, he nodded to himself and smiled. Kicking the boat away, he watched it drift across the lake and dissolve into its liquid pool of ink.


J H Martin is from London, England but has no fixed abode. His writing has appeared in a number of places in Asia, Europe and the Americas.

Website: acoatforamonkey.wordpress.com IG: @jhmartin72 / Twitter: @acoatforamonkey

“My Father Cried” by Laura Stroebel


Six foot six
Giant of a teddy bear
Well over 200 pounds
Much to my mother’s chagrin.
Came out of the Army
Scarcely 140
Before they married in
The Swiss Alps,
Then he discovered
Marlene’s cooking.

The first time I remembered
My father crying
Was when
I was bouncing across
Lemon-lime colored
Love seats
At nine-years-old
And the phone rang.
Daddy,
In his wild mutton chops
And Steve Allen glasses
Quietly answered.

It was mid-air
When I caught his face
Twist in a knot
Of pain
“Jesus no, dear God, no. Please, not my son.”
A good Catholic man
He rarely took the Lord’s name
In vain.

Splintered downward
Into a thud
Knees empty
Mustard yellow phone cord
Twirled
Around his fisherman
Hand-knitted sweater.
He fell hard
Onto that kitchen tile
Splayed
Like a broken marionette
My brother, Paul, the elder
Crushed
in a car accident.

Second time
Me
Running around the basement
Dad bursts the door open
Screaming in gurgled angst
A death grip on his wrist
Like a muscle tourniquet
“Call your mother,”
He choked out barely
Poor fellow
He was only trying
To get the wet leaves
Out from under our hand mower.
I grab some gas rags for bandaids
Tossing them at him, running
Frightened of my dad’s fear
But nothing could stop
That bloody stump of a finger
From soaking my mom’s
New beige rug.

Third time
Another phone call.

His whole life he had been
The caretaker
The breadwinner
A published engineer
Devotee to sonar submarines
But his love was never work
It was always
Art.
Painting, poetry, books
Foreign movies and those damned gladiolas
He could recite
The Song of Hiawatha by heart
But please don’t get him started.
His weekends,
Always, pure bliss
Pabst Blue Ribbon Sunday
Wearing baggy JC Penney jeans
With cobalt blue paint stains
And a gray-white t-shirt
Sitting in front of his easel
“Putzing About” as mother would say
In his labyrinth underfoot
Acrylic portraits
King Kong posters
And unfinished birdhouses
Awaitied his masculine touch.

Now back to the phone call

Mr. McTaggart
You have won first place
For your landscape
At the Mystic Art Association.

Caught him off guard it did
He looked at Marlene, curiously
Before turbulent tears rained down
Upon soft wrinkled cheeks
Unstoppable.
He was embarrassed
And looked away
Out the window
At the gossiping chickadees
Trying to wipe his face
With that ancient pocket handkerchief
Of his
Years in the basement
His dream validated
This was a big one
Somebody finally took note
It meant
He could at last be called
A true artist.

My father cried.


Laura Stroebel is a published author and poet from Connecticut. She enjoys attending local open poetry mics. Currently, she is working on her second children’s book, which is also poetry. She is married to a writer, works as a middle school math teacher, and has two children in college. In her spare time, she enjoys chess, photography and selling vintage books.

“When The World Was Still” by Courtney Robb


What was the hardest thing you’ve ever done, grandma?
My granddaughter, such a light

Oh, that’s easy, I say
All the caretaking
Yes, when my children were young
My dog was old, my cat was wild
Grandpa was there but he was working
The world was still
But I was moving as fast as ever

Oh, she says, slightly unsatisfied
Her fierce green eyes burning into me
My granddaughter, so curious

But I was lucky, I say
I was healthy, I was loved
And you know what, baby girl, I say, pulling her in for a hug
It doesn’t get any better than that

She smiles


Courtney Robb is a bilingual, Canadian aspiring poet. Mother of two young children, currently on maternity leave. Former flight attendant formerly scared of persuading her love of poetry and expression. She plans on re-attending university in the fall to pursue her passion.

“Hanging by a Thread” by Camille McDaniel


Hanging onto the thread of September
Hoping each fiber will pull me closer
To packed boxes taped
To the corners of our four-door

When the rubber licks the road
Tears tiptoe the fine hairs of salted cheeks
To a sweat speckled lip
Trembling with sweet possibility

Fraying the end of a fiber
With every goodbye and
You have to come visit!
The sparkle never leaves an eye
Even when it cries


Camille is a writer and out-of-practice gospel singer who has lived in Boston, Harlem, and Paris. In her spare time, she thrifts vintage picture frames and takes way too many pictures of her elder cat.

“To the Poet, Reading” by Hugh Findlay


You speak as if you aspire
to something holy and perfect.
White light attracts moths.
They are blinded by mystery.
Like the light, your words
are no greater than you.
Like the moth, you are
scalded by hubris.


Hugh Findlay lives in Durham, NC, and would rather be caught fishing. He drives a little red MG, throws darts on Thursdays, reads and writes a lot, dabbles in photography and makes a pretty good gumbo. His work has most recently been published in The Dominion Review, Literary Accents, Tiny Seed Literary Journal, Bangalore Review, Burningword Literary Journal, Wanderlust, Montana Mouthful, Souvenirs, Dream Noir, Proem, San Pedro River Review, New Southern Fugitives and Arachne Press. @hughmanfindlay

“Scattering the Poet’s Ashes in a Suburban Memorial Park” by Juleigh Howard-Hobson


Sunshine splashes out across green lawns;
Wreath petals, blown by breezes, fall
Down to sprinkle maintained plots
With tasteful accents. Shorn
Dandelions scrawl
Unspoken thoughts.
It’s all gone,
It’s all
…not.


Juleigh Howard-Hobson’s poetry has appeared in The Comstock Review, Noir Nation, L’Éphémère, Able Muse, The Lyric, Weaving The Terrain (Dos Gatos), Poem Revised (Marion Street), Birds Fall Silent in the Mechanical Sea (Great Weather for Media), Lift Every Voice (Kissing Dynamite), and other venues. A Million Writers Award “Notable Story” writer, nominations include “Best of the Net”, The Pushcart Prize and The Rhysling Award. She lives off grid in the Pacific Northwest next to a huge woods filled with shadows and ghosts.

“The Camel-Haired Clump” by James Barr


There’s an art form to commuting and it’s one I learned well while shuttling from my suburban home to downtown Chicago.

On a crackling cold January morning, very few commuters are seen. Most are huddled inside the depot or up against it, out of the wind. Then, as if a signal just shone from above, movement begins. The herd heads toward the track, artfully forming discrete clumps in very specific spots. These seasoned riders know exactly where they should be when the train stops and the doors open. And as an outsider clad in a journeyman cloth coat and a ball cap, I just didn’t dare to attempt to affix myself to this curated clump.

This station, being in a rather well to do suburb, has more than its share of well turned-out dandies. Camel hair coats are de rigueur. However, only an erudite few would know that their coat was made from the hair of the double-humped Bactrian camel. They just know they paid dearly for it and it alone gained them access to the herd.

As seen from above, these morphing brown clumps resemble a flock of Bactrian camels at a watering hole. Only these non-humped camels sport jaunty hats and oh-so-pricey Burberry scarves and kidskin gloves. Of course, highly polished wing tips or brogues complete the look. So these are definitely not your garden-variety camel.

These are well-dressed businessmen (and during the years I’m writing about, they were predominately men) heading to the Chicago Board of Trade, an ad agency or perhaps to some snazzy LaSalle Street law firm. The only other visual cue that proved these folks weren’t heading to less lofty jobs was a copy of the Wall Street Journal tucked under their arms.

Once settled into their seats, the conversations I overheard from these camel hair-clad corporate warriors were priceless.

“The wife and I just skied St. Moritz. We found the fondue lacking. The Swiss are just so uninterested and the wines, barely drinkable.”

“Recently visited the spa at Baden-Baden in the Black Forest. Doesn’t hold a candle to Parador de Corias in Spain, wouldn’t you agree?”

“We dined at Chez Mirage recently and found the wait staff indifferent. I don’t know what the world’s coming to.”

On the homeward train, the bar car was the place you always found these high-dollar commuters. Tales of deals made, trades consummated and clients acquired swirled through the car like a Sirocco wind in North Africa, only without the annoying sand and airborne fleas. It also didn’t escape my attention that while camels endure long periods of travel in harsh conditions without water, these guys couldn’t get through a day without a highball or beer.

So no camel hair coat for me. If I want to be at one with my inner ungulate, I’ll see them at the zoo. And they won’t care what I’m wearing.


Jim is a freelance writer and seasoned veteran with 25 years of creative experience at two leading advertising agencies. He’s proud to say that his stories are gluten free and that no artificial color is ever added to enhance their appeal.