_For Abunic you told me of death/the pain and the weight of its scars when it paddled canoe with grandma on the hot surface of tears my tears still falling on the footprints of death when it walked off my doorsteps with daddy's breath you undressed death in lines of poetry planted on grandma's grave never told me that you'll be a poetry/poetry that will count my teardrops ball of my pen runs through your flesh for words that'll give you pillow in the Lord's arms you left your broken pieces scattered on my sheet like puzzle you were the pen i knew -spilled on what it feels to run out of ink like strolling with breeze along the seashore & told me not of this day day that will fall like rain from my eyes day that will push the arms of the clock without counting the sounds of your breath in the air i fasten buttons to cover the pain in my chest fighting to find the semicolon that once held my poems it was Wednesday, when the news pointed gun at my head & stole happiness of my closet march 16/ the chapter of 2022 that taught me how to recite euleulogy & write elegy for a brother with bundles of unfulfilled dreams let the soul Rest In Peace as the memories forever Rest In Pain hoping to capture you again.
Monthly Archives: June 2022
Multimedia work from Jeff Crouch, Soumailia Zoungrana, and Diana Magallón
Poetry from Yahuza Abdulkadir
Broken Legs it's Ramadan, & we would wear the lips of a night, & speak of the dark memories standing on the borders of our country. we would watch the back of our hands, to see the pictures of schoolgirls, whose mothers are through waiting for them to come home. we would try to echo the screams of people, who lost their hopes inside a moving train. we would remember the burning bodies of women, & children whose ashes now paint our sky grey. & we wouldn't want to taste the blood, that quench the thirst of hungry zombies walking through the borders of our country. our legs are broken, we don't have the strength to stand and fight again. we are left with only our hands, & we would raise them tonight. & ask our lord for a piece of cloth, that would wipe our tears.
Poetry from J.K. Durick
Gasoline The price of gas – just think of What it has cost us, miles and Miles, gallons and gallons. It Once made sense. I recall as A teenager buying a dollar’s Worth for a night out – same Station had a cigarette machine A quarter a pack. Imagine how It was heading out for the night Four gallons of gas and a deck of Cigarettes. Who could ask for More than that, but it happened. Prices in the driver’s seat and we Became poor ride-alongs. Last Time the prices went way up, we Began talking about smaller cars And less driving, even talked about Public transportation, but when Prices went down a bit, we became A country of SUVs and pickup trucks. Driveways filled up with our sense What is essential – gallons and gallons Miles and miles. We have learned to Consume and complain without doing Anything but consume and complain As miles and miles go by and gallons And gallons we buy – the price of gas Just think of what it has cost us. Out Shopping Grocery shopping, we wait our turn picture the gunman setting up getting ready to shoot, to live-stream the action we make, he makes. How long before we begin to run scream, try to hide, our whole lives flashing before our eyes, how long will it be, how many of us will get away become survivors, witnesses they will ask about him and how he appeared before and what did he say, shout as he began becoming the lead story? This is Friday grocery shopping. Here we are trying to get a jump on the weekend a task accomplished – and there he is trying to get a jump on what he wanted wanted to accomplish – the first few are carefully picked out of Produce, the rest are random, much like our grocery shopping might have been. Cut to the Car Chase Shoot-outs, we grew up on them, war pictures, cowboys and rustlers, gangster films. We’ve seen it all, so when they happen around us, they seem almost scripted. The guy, whose sad face we saw on TV last evening, tells the expected story about the masked intruder who he chased off, then on a car chase, three towns long, shooting out his window, like some action star, a budding Clint Eastwood, shooting as they tried to get away. The passenger got hit, didn’t make it to the hospital, and now our shooter gets his TV moment. His story holds together as well as any other, a few shots to explain, charges filed, and of course the pictures, the car with a blown out back window, the roadside, and our hero’s sad face, his bloodshot eyes. They say it’s drug related, like most of these tales. They are always seem to be scripted that way. J.K. Durick jdurick2001@yahoo.com
Poetry from Steve Brisendine
Motif II: Crash/Landing (A Semi-Tragedy in Two Acts) I. On the south side of Liberal, Kansas For some reason, we all know to gather along the old highway just north of where it meets the bypass; between them, a wedge of dry prairie grass anticipates dawn and something else. The plane comes in from the south: long, thin, white, unliveried. (Picture the offspring of a Concorde and a 707, its father’s nose and its mother’s wings, and you have it close enough.) Gear still retracted, it slides in and turns top, three perfect spins down the field without bending so much as one thin dun blade; there is no sound but breaths all drawn in at once. No flame, no laceration of aluminum skin, not so much as a cloud of honest Kansas dust; nose pointed back where it came from, the plane rests unperturbed, maiden-flight pristine. From somewhere in the crowd, a Panhandle-tinged twang: Well, that ol’ boy done ‘er again, didn’t he? Might as well go see what all he brung us this time. II. Manhattan, Kansas, on the street where Jim Roper lived Stuffed with burgers (eaten, as ever, standing in the kitchen), we walk north toward the football stadium, discussing the quarterback situation and whether threatened rain will hold off. Someone – probably Gary – brings up a years-ago summer solstice party, the honey-haired girl nobody knew who showed up in a toga and antler-danced with Jim in the living room. This is routine, ritual, sacrament, not to be disturbed by anything like that belly-flopping 747 two blocks ahead, plunging into low brick blocks where married students live. Impact now, an infrabass thump and rumble. A fireball races to consume families, tricycles, maples, all of us. It is red and orange and beautiful; I breathe in and am not afraid. Shawnee, Kansas, Which is Not Really Shawnee, Kansas: Dream II This is another in a long line of whole-cloth hotel lobbies on streets which both exist and do not: a tile-and-Formica spot on an off-map stretch of Johnson Drive (pick dumpy or retro and either will suit, depending more on you than on the place), and I’m trying to explain to Larry that I did (eventually) recognize the young Clint Eastwood and the older one when I ran into both of them at the coffeehouse in Union Station sitting at a table with either Anthony Hopkins or John Wayne – or occasionally but not always both, though why the Duke should resurrect for three-dollar drip is beyond me – and for some other unfathomable reason James Urbaniak, thin and vaguely dangerous, who smirked at all of us and left halfway through the conversation. Larry all the while fiddles with his phone, poking it with a little screwdriver, only making appropriate noises so as to seem engaged, so I walk out into a half-dawn of backlit plastic, oddly angled streets and lumen-polluted overcast. I suppose I might eventually find my way back to the map and home – that, or just go upstairs and fall into dream within dream, still in my clothes on forty dollars' worth of rented sheets. Don't press me for a clear answer; I am and will be asleep the whole sometime. Bonner Springs, Kansas, Which is Not Really Bonner Springs, Kansas: Dream II The stakeout is just beginning. I have time to go for coffee. The town’s heart is only a few blocks south; its buildings are taller than I remember, but this bodes well; somewhere in this tangle of five-story limestone, there must be a place. The sidewalk spans a ravine, brush-lined, hundreds of feet deep. There is no handrail, and the walkway is less than a yard wide. I take no shame in dropping to my knees to cross, but a man on the other side rolls his eyes and tosses a few dead dogwood branches to impede my way. No need; I am being called back. We have been made. Our target has seen telltale peanuts floating in his gutter. (He looks like a television character actor of some minor note, one who always seems to play a well-meaning but largely incompetent foil to the protagonist. I will remember his name someday, likely on my deathbed, and my loved ones will always wonder why those were my last words.) We will have to take another tack, so we roll back into the city along Kaw Drive. I see a coffeehouse, set back among trees on the north side of the road. We do not stop.
Photos from Texas Fontanella
Poetry from J.J. Campbell
the rules of any society scribbling poems in the rain like this poor soul that doesn't play by the rules of any society flicked cigarette butts, empty bags of fast food trash, and a cruel car of teenagers and the asshole dare of tossing piss he has seen it all nothing dares to ever come close to surprising him anymore school shooting celebrity death war in a foreign land he knows what it really is thursday -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- not made of sugar old bones screaming in the rain caught out in the elements without a jacket or umbrella you remember your father telling you you're not made of sugar you won't fucking melt as you got older, you realized he was full of shit thankfully, that fucker is in the ground it won't be long now, you will be as well at least parts of you i figure most of the body will be burned to destroy the evidence --------------------------------------------------------------------------- like failure is not the only option laughing at my perv switch as i watch a black woman walk back into the offices to go clean them should i strike up a conversation and see what happens or should i see if she just wants cash instead somewhere my mother is reading this and knows she has failed like failure is not the only option available to us all she just caught me staring at her that wasn't the finger i was hoping for ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- my answer to john fogerty yes, i have seen the fucking rain it hasn't stopped around here for nearly five days before too long, i'm expecting cats and dogs to start falling from the sky and between the drops i'm expected to shop among the masses like hell the less i am around people the better i feel and i know, i sound like the bitter old fuck that secretly wants it both ways so be it -------------------------------------------------------------------------- for days on end dark brown skin and enough curves to keep your imagination buzzing for days on end there's a certain way the hips shake that you know that a challenge is ahead of you but a certain body part is more than willing to not only accept that challenge but conquer that mountain and plant a damn flag on it

J.J. Campbell (1976 – ?) is currently serving time in suburbia, taking care of his disabled mother. He has been widely published over the years, most recently at The Beatnik Cowboy, Horror Sleaze Trash, Misfit Magazine, Mad Swirl and Terror House Magazine. You can find him most days on his mildly entertaining blog, evil delights. (https://evildelights.blogspot.com)