Poetry from Eva Petropoulou Lianou

Light-skinned middle-aged European woman with long straight brown hair and blue eyes standing on a beach by a lake on a sunny day with trees and people behind her.

Miracles 

Miracles happens everywhere… everyday..

Just take the moment to understand and communicate with people….not fanatics… not close minded..

Miracles happens 

I have seen one in my younger age

Miracles are the people who are close enough to understand what is your purpose and your character and will Push you to achieve your dreams 

Miracles happens 

Miracle is your faith and your ability to maintain the Light in the darkness 

Miracles are everywhere 

Don’t confuse technology with faith 

Don’t worry about the fake..rich life..of a man who never tried in his life

Miracle is your inner soul to stay intact from evil attack 

Poetry from Derek Dew

What is Ours

Out of faded afterthought in its spreading yard of white flame

a line of dark that splits the light moves in several directions at once

and before long has left a skyline of hands raised for shade

to better receive the sight of land despite the only definition  

being a debt none of us can afford, though our purpose is the image,

to live in it, to know its glow, know the floor of eternity as the back of the mind

which is the image’s way of ending, of achieving stillness, and further

into the image, sleeves are rendered over the bulk of bare wrists, and we,

we become aware it is us seeing it all, that our silence is always our purpose,

is always to see and refuse what is ours, unable to afford what we’re looking at.

If they are present, the warmth is theirs, so I am still agitated,

wounded even by sleep. Carts of fruit have broken in the street.

Everything cannot form neat little lines; some things must splatter to happen.

The recurring aprons have failed their pledge. The self-checkout is gathering cobwebs.

The menus are blowing away in the wind. A couch in the street is the crested horizon.

But I am still here, shoes and everything, and I am absolutely wasting all of my joke.

I find my truth in what I don’t agree with, and from my seat on the airplane

I hear the flight attendant announce the only missing passenger, and it’s me.

                                                                                                            —The Banker

To Come

We thought we might shut the anthem up good,

so we drank, watched unspeakable joy capsize,

touched burgundy night, were outraged with ourselves

in the morning, and realized our inexpressiveness

was our only morality, the anthem. It came from

the heart of inconsequence, only to be glimpsed while forgetting.

It came from a place of purity, purity that rang like escape routes

from an implacable faith, where scouting was a shout at water

lathered in streaks of ash. The anthem came from a place

people weren’t sure really existed, yet had memories of,

memories that announced themselves like collective hallucinations

in rehearsal of childhoods to come, but in the end, the anthem

turned out to be nothing more than the stale air

shut away in a room that was locked from the outside.

           All the many thin, angled bars of light

           slowly floated dust down the old beer signs.

           The jukebox again repeated the good song

           which spoke clearly in the only voice.

          The bad song does not speak in the only voice.

                                                         —The Drinker

Cop

Soon it will be dark, and in her lack of sight

her ear will supply all the courtyard birdsong

of trickling water in a cold office bathroom.

There will be an elevator shaft, and in the silent elevator,

her ear will supply the sound of a dog walking in circles.

Outside on a park bench will sit a little harmonica

and passersby will invent a child blowing into it.

When we think of the past, our efforts seem silly.

It’s often difficult to decide on a monument

when every single sleep that comes answering is bare.

                                             A god is vice begins and ends vice

                                                                                 —The Thief

The One in Charge

One day the ice in his glass

did not melt properly

and he discovered he was empty.

But when no one can afford

to relax at the top, how to tell

what relaxing looks like?

          We kidded ourselves; we spoke of tar and rain,

          balconies and raw meat, sun on umbrellas.

          But what we desired most could only suffice

          if too much to receive, a place only visible

          from the outside, so we looked all over

          not for what we had lost, but for the moments we lost it;

          we looked for the beautiful ways, the ambitious ways which

          in the past, with far more people to know, we lost it all.

                                                           —The Second Gunman

Coin into Fountain

Like any precise enough metallic

put to milliseconds across a dome of daylight,  

it wasn’t itself as it was happening,                        

as it was happening, it was something else,

it was a flickering jewel between towers   

in shaky blue sky above city traffic,

then the slap of the surface, water closing fast

the circle by mimicry of shape and rushing

across the engraved profile toward itself

until a clash spiraling finger oil upward

to dissolve under the surface and its dialogue

which was then the intact hum of the buried above

while the bottom was struck and all the other coins

already installed long enough to bear small life

fell storied into their own respective borders,

and the dialogue above the surface continues;

who is there left to abandon?  

                                       They learn when they buy.

                                                                   —The Billionaire 

Derek Thomas Dew (he/she/they) is a neurodivergent, non-binary poet currently living and teaching in New York City. Derek’s debut poetry collection “Riddle Field” received the 2019 Test Site Poetry Prize from the Black Mountain Institute/University of Nevada. Derek’s poems have appeared in a number of anthologies, and have been published widely, including Interim, ONE ART, Allium, The Maynard, Azarão Lit Journal, Two Hawks Quarterly, Ocean State Review, and Overgrowth Press.

Poetry from Mickey Corrigan

.

Lucia Berlin
(1936-2004)

Lucia, Daughter

Northern lights in the sky
over Alaska her father
deep in mines, engineer
moving from mining
town to town
to tar paper shacks
to a boarding house
to a log cabin in the woods
long johns and a baby sister
then Father off to war. 

Waiting for him, waiting
under a treeless sky
air heavy with heat, dust
in El Paso with Granpa
the town dentist, mean
drunk and her mother
shut down, closed off
in a dark bedroom
with a bottle. 

Father’s new job: Arizona
a real house in the hills
the bright evening star
in the dark night sky
Mother in pretty dresses
baking cakes, playing bridge
picnics and potlucks
until the next move.

A prestigious position
in Santiago, Chile
a two-story Tudor
green lawns, fruit trees
purple iris, a gardener
Mother in bed all day
with a bottle.

Teenage Lucia the hostess
for her father’s social events
private school, rich friends
skiing, swimming, movies
dressmakers, hairdressers
nightclubs, balls, boys
then a dorm in Albuquerque
her girlfriends still in Chile
married with mansions
busy with children
but after the revolution
all her old friends
murdered
or suicides.

Lucia, Wife

She’s tall, lean, svelte
dark hair, sapphire eyes
at 17 still passive
when her parents reject
her 30-year-old lover
a Mexican-American veteran
throws her out of his car
never sees him again.

A few months later
she marries a sculptor
who rearranges her
hair, clothes, stance
and avoids the draft
with their first son
with a second on the way
he’s off to Italy
on a grant, with a girl
doesn’t see him again
for sixteen years.

A musician called Race
kind, quiet, a good man
talented Harvard grad
from a big warm clan
playing gigs on piano
gone while she’s home
with the babies
in a cheap rural rental
outside Albuquerque.

Dusty, silent except for
horses, cows, chickens, dogs
red chili on strings
drying in the sun
in an old adobe
rounded, wind-softened
the same dirt-brown
as the hard-packed earth
no phone
no stove
no running water
loads of diapers
she’s too alone
this pretty young girl.

Lucia, Lover

Race moves them
to an unheated loft
in New York City
he’s out all night
at his jazz gigs
she’s up all night
typing stories
while wearing gloves
while the kids sleep
in earmuffs and mittens

until a way out arrives
with a bottle of brandy
four tickets to Acapulco
another Harvard man
Race’s buddy Buddy
dark, handsome, rich
bad boy
with a drug problem

offering the sexy allure
of escape to hot sun
sky blue pools
white sand beaches
and crazy love
with a heroin addict.

She bites, writes
bears two more sons
an electric life
flying in Buddy’s plane
landing like crop dusters
for detox and retox
always fearful
of his dealer friends.

To keep him clean
they move away
to another land
live in a palapa
with a thatched palm roof
and a beach sand floor
on the edge
of a coconut grove
surrounded by mountains.

The boys love it there
amidst parrots, flamingoes
spearing eels and fat fish
dark nights in hammocks
swaying under rustling palms
in the soft ocean breeze
heady with gardenias
their paradise life

until Buddy gets bored
and the drug dealers come.

***

Lucia Berlin shared the stories of social outsiders with her own special brand of detachment, humor, and economy, presenting the brutality of blue collar life tempered by her compassion for human frailty. She was relatively unknown until eleven years after her death when a collection of her selected stories hit the New York Times bestseller list.

Born Lucia Brown in Alaska, she spent her childhood in mining towns all over the west. After her mining engineer father got promoted to an executive position, the family lived in Chile in relative luxury. She moved to Albuquerque for college, returning later for graduate school. 

Married multiple times, she lived in Manhattan, rural Mexico, and New Mexico. After leaving her third husband, a heroin addict, she took her four young boys and settled in California. 

As a single parent, Berlin worked odd jobs including cleaning woman, physician’s assistant, hospital ward clerk, and switchboard operator. Her stories were based on incidents she experienced herself in her difficult life. She would type late at night while the boys were asleep, a bottle of bourbon at her side. 

She eventually gave up the booze and remained sober, teaching writing at the San Francisco County Jail, Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, and University of Colorado Boulder. Lucia Berlin died in California at age 68.

Her books: 

A Manual for Cleaning Women: Stories

Evening in Paradise: Stories

Welcome Home: A Memoir

Originally from Boston, Mickey J. Corrigan hides out in the lush ruins of South Florida. She writes pulp fiction, literary crime, and psychological thrillers. Her poems have appeared in literary journals and chapbooks. A collection of biographical poems on 20th century poets is in press with Clare Songbirds Publishing.

Poetry from Alexa Grospe

Awake

You were the one keeping me from wake

As I slept,

your pillowed hair spread

across the skin above my aching chest

and broke my lungs in two

so that I couldn’t just suffer

from long term

asthma,

but that

my voice shook

everytime I spoke a word

that I wrote which felt

familiar to my tongue.

I bite down,

like it stings,

on the edge

of where thoughts

tremble out

and fall

onto solid table and paper and pen

instead of where they once believed they would reside.

When winter mouth veins

reach gray lines of work

they seem to soak

like edges,

attempting to raise

a fallen wood back

from death,

spit,

down,

onto a speaker’s face.

Water can never ease

a pain

so speak up

in the bottom

of one’s throat

God where even is that?

So let my nails dig in

while I choke on

words evenly written

but horribly pronounced-

they cannot hear a shaking song

from a side of the room

in which ink doesn’t rise.

You kept me from waking:

from pain never spoken nor taken

God why do my words shake?

They fall out irregularly

like tongue twisters

or misplaced letters

in my own book.

I cannot

stumble

or trip

over something

I wish was never

put on the ground.

You keep me

from falling asleep

against sound waves,

distorted

in only

my ears.

Poetry from Turkan Ergor

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(Light skinned Central Asian woman with long blonde hair, a headband, a long green necklace, and a black top).

WASTED  EFFORTS 

Human sometimes 

Wasted efforts 

Wants Endless desires 

Loves 

Jealousies 

Even a bird sometimes 

Wasted flat its wings 

While flies in the sky 

Wasted efforts 

Everything as it should be 

Wherever self has to go 

Wheresoever it has to end 

Whatever it has to be 

Everything as it is 

The rest wasted efforts.

Türkan Ergör was born in 19 March 1975 in the city of Çanakkale, Turkey. She was selected International “Best Poet 2020”. She was selected International “Best Poet, Author/Writer 2021”. She was selected International “Best Poet, Writer/Author 2022”. She was awarded the FIRST PRIZE FOR THE OUTSTANDING AUTHOR IN 2022. She was awarded the 2023 “Zheng Nian Cup” “National Literary First Prize” by Beijing Awareness Literature Museum. She was awarded the “Certificate of Honor and Appreciation” and “Crimean Badge” by İSMAİL GASPRİNSKİY SCIENCE AND ART ACADEMY. She was awarded the “14k Gold Pen Award” by ESCRITORES SIN FRONTERAS ORGANIZACIÓN INTERNACIONAL.

Essay from Normatova Sevinchoy

Simplicity — the Most Natural Form of Beauty

Beauty is the pleasant and delightful appearance of a person, nature, or a work of art. True beauty lies in a person’s naturalness, simplicity, and sincerity. Real beauty is the beauty of the heart. Everything in this world has its own kind of beauty.

The essence of simplicity is to be naturally beautiful without unnecessary decorations or artificial things. Everything created by Allah in this world is beautiful, and among them, the most beautiful is the human being. To be a beautiful person is indeed a blessed feeling.

Inner beauty is reflected through one’s inner qualities such as kindness, honesty, patience, forgiveness, gratitude, and sincerity. This kind of beauty is not seen on the face, but shown through a person’s character and behavior.

“Outer beauty is seen by the eyes, but inner beauty is felt by the heart.”

Outer beauty fades with time, but the beauty of the heart shines brighter as the years pass. A person with a beautiful heart spreads warmth and joy to others just by being themselves.

The secret of beauty lies in being both outwardly and inwardly beautiful — loving ourselves, the world, and everything around us. Sincerity, simplicity, and kindness are the feelings that make a person truly beautiful.

In conclusion, simplicity is the most natural and genuine expression of human beauty. Sincerity and naturalness bring warmth to hearts, for indeed, simplicity is the highest virtue that adorns a person’s inner beauty.

Normatova Sevinchoy, Uzbekistan 

Short story from Bill Tope

The Gauntlet

The whoop, whoop, whoop of the police siren died to a guttural moan as Anais pulled her Kia to the curb just inside the small Ohio town of Springfield, within striking distance of Dayton. She peeped into the rearview mirror and spied a policeman alighting from the cruiser and striding her way. What now? she thought. She was driving down Rivers Road, a virtual gauntlet of police speed traps, according to her husband.

The policeman rapped with his knuckles on her window and so Anais lowered the glass pane. “Yessir?” she asked.

“Driver’s license, registration and proof of insurance,” said the cop dully.

Anais turned and fished through her glovebox and purse and eventually turned up the requested documents. She passed them through the window to the policeman, who accepted them without a word. Anais, a recent Haitian refugee, had never been accosted by law enforcement in this country. But, she had heard stories. She didn’t know what to expect, but remembered what her grandmother, who’d raised her, always said: “Hope for the best but prepare for the worst. Do whatever they say,” she’d cautioned. Anais waited.

The 19-year-old woman turned her head and noted that the policeman was staring intently at her, through the harsh beam of a huge flashlight. She couldn’t make out his features. Did he suspect she harbored drugs, because her skin was brown and she dressed differently from others? Unable so far to buy native apparel, she was still clad in a vibrant, red and blue chambray Karabela dress.

“Get out of the vehicle,” directed the cop, taking a step back to allow Anais to open her door. She silently complied. Out on the pavement, she stood by the car, uncertain and forlorn. Where was her grandmother when she needed her? She glanced at the western sky; the sun had already slipped below the horizon. It was quite dark now. The road at this hour was little travelled and not a vehicle had passed since she was stopped. She felt very vulnerable.

“Do you have any illegal drugs, contraband or weapons in your car or on your person?” he asked next.

She shook her head no.

“Do you speak American?” asked the cop impatiently.

Anais blinked. “I speak the English,” she told him in her thick accent.

He grunted.

“Why did you stop me?” asked Anais nervously.

Ignoring her question, the cop handed back the documents she’d passed him before and said, “Do you have citizenship papers?”

Anais nodded. “I have the green card,” she said.

“Let’s see it,” grumbled the cop, extending his tiny hand.

Anais gave it to him. He drifted back to his cruiser, engaged the radio for a few minutes and then returned and handed the document back.

“What’re you doing on the roads at this hour?” queried the cop.

Anais glanced at her cell phone: it was almost 9pm.

“I’m on my way home–from the grocery store,” she said. She began to feel some dark misgivings about the way this interrogation was proceeding.

Now the cop directed his large flashlight again into Anais’s face and after a moment, said, “turn around, put your hands against the vehicle, take a step back,” he ordered. She did.

At just that moment, another police can rolled up and parked behind the first. Men got out of both doors. Their boots scunched over the gravel on the side of the road. The first cop withdrew and met them halfway to his vehicle. They talked in hushed tones. That left Anais standing awkwardly against her car.

Anais looked up as the men exchanged a bawdy laugh. Were they talking about her? she wondered. Anais was a newlywed and she longed for the comfort of her partner, to hear his voice and feel his arms around her, but the policeman had seized her phone.

Finally, the first cop tromped loudly to her car and roughly patted her down and then, without warning, seized one arm and pulled it behind her back. Handcuffs clicked into place over her wrist. He took her other arm and secured that wrist as well. What was happening? she thought wildly, as the cop opened her back door and pushed her through and face down onto the bench seat in the rear of the Kia. Now the other two cops approached and stood staring down at her supine figure, chucking malevolently. They likewise had flashlights.

“Not bad,” murmured one of the newcomers, “for a greasball.” They all laughed.

“Got a nice ass for a spic,” opined the third racist cop,” reaching in and groping Anais’s backside and running his fingers between her legs.

She whimpered and struggled fruitlessly against her bonds.

“So,” said the first cop. “Who wants to do her first?” he asked the others conversationally.

One of the cops said, “Maybe we should do dinner first. You said she’s from Haiti. What’s your pleasure, senorita, a dog or a cat?” They laughed yet again. The burning essence of marijuana now wafted through the air.

Anais thought hard, then suddenly spoke out. “I saw your face,” she rasped desperately.

The three men grew silent as statues.

“I thought she didn’t see you,” whispered another of the three.

“She didn’t,” said the first cop. “I never gave her my name or showed her a badge or nothin’. I used my flashlight, like the last time. She’s lyin’.”

“But, what if she ain’t,” said another voice.

“Then you’ll have to kill me,” Anais spoke out. “Or go to jail for kidnapping and rape. I’m a married woman,” said Anais with sudden rage. “And my husband owns a big gun. You’ll be shot, if you touch me again,” she shouted. “You release me now, and I’ll forget about the touching and the disrespect. You decide now. You got five seconds to decide.”

In a matter of only a few seconds, the handcuffs were opened and Anais was freed. The other two cops hurried off to their car and sped away. The first cop snatched the keys from Anais’s ignition and tossed them and her cell phone into the weeds a few feet away and loped to his vehicle and likewise took off. She could hear the tires burning rubber.

Finding her keys, Anais stumbled back to her car and was soon motoring home, shaking and crying as she drove. She lived only minutes away. The only thing she saw when she entered the small house was Michael.

He said, in his rich, soft baritone, “Carino. I was worried about you.”

She fell into his warm embrance and immediately told him of her narrow escape at the hands of the rogue policemen. After she’d completed her narrative, Michael gently grasped her shoulders and said, “Did you really see his face?”

Anais had the grace to blush. “No, Michael. The flashlight was in my face the whole time.”

Then he said, “Anais, I don’t even own a gun.”

She smiled up into his face. “No, but you would’ve gotten one,” she whispered with confidence.