Three Poems By Benjamin Bartu
There was more than just one bullet,
were many,
Which riddled the earth they disappeared within,
In which they exchanged their earthly casings
For clouds of dust, from which man
Is said to have been made.
Two Poems by Dalia Taha ,tr. by Sara Elkamel (Winner of the 2025 Online Translation Contest)
By Dalia Taha, Tr. by Sara Elkamel
All my poems are attempts to copy, on paper, the poems before me: the inhabitants of my city. By day, I see them and by night, I write about them. In daylight, I observe how eyes compete with the dark circles beneath them for a larger share of each face, just as poem and white space wrestle to squeeze into one page. And at night, I wonder what each eye, shaped like a camera lens, had managed to record.
Four Poems By E. B. Bein
Correct. The game is better upside-down
with our goonlegs hooked over the back
and our goonheads hanging off the seat
and the point guard releasing
the court from his Air Jordans, the ball
pulling the Earth to it, hoop rising
like a fish to bait—who would test relativity
in public but you?
Two Poems By Will Summay
the geese won’t stop
staring, their dark-marbled eyes carrying worlds
of hot steel opportunities,
obstructing pedestrian & cyclists
along the shit-stained channel of the Heritage trail
Two Poems By Kaviya Dhir
My heart pops unsteadily
through its ribbed bars
as I clutch the curious burst
of air in my throat, swallow
my fright with the tangy burn
of a seasoned mandarin slice
nicking my tongue.
Three Poems By Jessica Ciencin Henriquez
I want to take a piece of him,
but there is nothing left.
So I reach for a lowered branch and pocket
a palm of florecillos to press between pages.
I Saw Work and Didn’t Like It By Cole McInerney
You can read a bible
on the bench, and people are
ignoring the tricks. There’s a beach
with plastic sand. When I run my hands
through it, they come out with an orange tint
and orange smell.
Three Poems By Madari Pendas
I want the noise. The too many
people in bed with no recourse
but to laugh. Argue. Play push.
I want the house to spill over,
overflow, drenched with problems
that now, at this age, are funny.
Two Poems By Therese Halscheid
Suddenly our feet moved us onward, though it seemed
as we moved we were locked in a spell.
What I am saying is that we were bathed by the trees
while the wind bent their branches and again
they swayed over us before a different wind came
and then they drew back — like the coming and going
of an ocean there were waves of energy.
One Doesn’t Choose One’s Memories By Ace Boggess
I’ve lost memories of most classes, faces of instructors,
names of many students I thought of as friends.
Yet prison comes back daily like an eagle in liver-lust
with me here chained to the past.
Two Poems By Bex Hainsworth
Nuns rattle keys in locks with cloven hands, clop down
corridors, dark as wailing mouths. The long dormitories stink
of exorcism, of mould crusting like old blood, of smoke from
a bonfire of birth certificates. Teenagers curl around their shame,
disowned, disappeared, already apocrypha in family albums.
Two Poems By Connor Watkins-Xu
If you come back tomorrow,
I’ll regret the way I’ve spent
my days stuck in the dryer,
shrinking, dyed red, like
the vintage T-shirts I leave
at the bottom of the basket
each laundry day that passes.
Three Poems By Shome Dasgupta
A sift of flaked leaves
and fallen moss—dirt
cooled between fingers,
crisp and brown, netted
grass itch for an earth:
King Tide By Haley Bossé
Each year, a memory
Of tourists makes their way
Below the thermocline.
Four poems by Kim Simonsen, Translated by Randi Ward
By Kim Simonsen, T. Randi Ward
This morning the ocean has again tossed man-sized
black boulders up onto the shelves of rock along the shore.
Three Poems By Deborah J. Shore
Sometimes you are carried by the wreckage
of your own ship—as helpless to direct this
flotsam as you were when it was floorboards
that lurched beneath disquiet cries of shorebirds.
2024 Online Poetry Contest Finalist: Ode to Finales
By Kiersten Czuwala
After dinner, my boyfriend tells me that I should learn to slaughter my own meat.
That actually, farmers have pinpointed down to the angle
exactly how to position a barrel against a cow’s skull
to flood the hollow of the bullet hole
with serotonin.
2024 Online Contest Poetry Winner: Half Brother (Letter to Eli)
By Luci Arbus-Scandiffio
Being a baby, I think, was like that–looking up and out
at something like a sea wall
feeling waterlogged
feeling nearly extinct
my face shiny like a seal’s face.
Story & Five Poems
By Ivy Char
It was Celia who first called me H. Although we were close, having known each other since kindergarten, I had learned to stray from topics that might turn to points of contention, as was apparently the case with the letter. And besides, there existed the distinct possibility, advanced by the satisfied look on her face, that this was all some sort of friendly challenge. “Why ‘H?’” I wondered, and wondered often.