Poetry from Sanjeev Sethi

Bamboozlement

Echinated transfers spike: a dystopian

tryst I wish on no one. Never happy as

a satisficer: this is my essence and ache.

For years I vocalized, may speechless-

ness fly where my drumming failed to.

A slow learner it took half a century to

read the cast in your eyes. Crushed  by

suppositiousness is blankety-blank worse

than straight out swindling. One can’t

even seek relief by rebuking oneself.

Colors

Whorls of your finger as fard on pinnate

of my brows. When appetence prods us

we peel ourselves of paint. Our lines, pauses,

intonations turn to autoschediasm, breaking

into brogue. Pilgrimage is a guilt-free holiday

in house-holds of humble bearings: flushing

with resin of restive beats our orison. Pan-

handlers of love: this calm, our wages.

Evoker

Auditory sensations from symphonette

initiated the much needed collyrium.

We never possessed musical skills for

a melisma, in essence that was the thrust

of our tie-in. Especially in the early part

when unilateral rulings hadn’t coerced

us to backslide from the constitution

of closeness. It unleashed a rum do

we failed to capitulate.

Burn Up

In our region there are no eglantines.

I inhale the dash from dustbins.  An

unanswered email hurts less than a

smile not returned. Demulcent fuel

packs distance. You volplane in my

mind’s home plate without signals.

I need to sack my ATS officials. I

will cashier from your ledger.


Sanjeev Sethi is the author of three books of poetry. His most recent collection is This Summer and That Summer (Bloomsbury, 2015). His poems are in venues around the world: The Broadkill Review, After the Pause, Chicago Record Magazine, Horror Sleaze and Trash, Former People, Stickman Review, Ann Arbor Review, Neologism Poetry Journal, Home Planet News, London Grip, Morphrog 16, Postcolonial Text, and elsewhere. He lives in Mumbai, India.

Poetry from Ken Allan Dronsfield

Dreams in Blowing Sand

Whilst living as a pragmatic loser,

searcher for the holy grail in bars

walking the beaches finding dimes

losing my patience with patrol cops

sleeping under rowboats on the sand

buy a mug with tarnished, sandy coins

fighting gulls over discarded hotdogs

great ships sailing out of the harbor,

meeting people from so very far away,

I lie in the sand at night and wonder

what it would be like, but for now I’m

living lost upon leftovers of yesterday.

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Poetry from Alex Johnson

Withdrawal A Rant

This morning someone
shot up a waffle house, strapped and naked
squared up to shoot right
and it’s awful but it happens once a week
we were waiting for the wheel to turn again
and next they’ll be parachuting in balls flying
shooting family restaurants in rows
and massacre will be exponential
so someone will start the betting
and wager on the details
massacre with pancakes and nudity versus
massacre with schools and fully clothed with some hiding naked versus
does any of this make sense I’m sorry
you’re right it’s a tragedy but very soon if not already
I haven’t checked in an hour
somebody in power will seriously suggest
weapons grade waffle syrup
to throw at the shooter and blind them
anything rather than take away their fucking guns
because guns are more sacred in America than human life
unless it’s the life of the elite

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Modernized Book Titles from Cheeta Born2dv8 Lachender

To Kill a Mockingbird     >>>>>     To Grill a Cookingbird     (A cookbook for amateurs living on the street)
A Room of One’s Own     >>>>>     A Roof on One’s Home     (An elegantly written polemic arguing for the rights of homeless folks)
Gravity’s Rainbow     >>>>>     Verbosity’s Brainblow     (Alternates: Senility’s Insanebow, Depravity’s Groinbone, Celerity’s Raceboat, Lucidity’s Dreamflow)
The Old Man and the Sea     >>>>>     The Old Manatee and the Sea That Dried Up and Left Him in the Sand
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe     >>>>>     The Lying Bitch and the Wart Hog
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari     >>>>>     The Ethics Probe and Possible Impeachment of Dr. Caligari (Who As it Turns Out, May Not Even Be a Real Doctor)
A Midsummer Night’s Dream     >>>>>     A Midsummer Night’s Gentrification So Severe You Hardly Recognize It as a Midsummer Night Any More, and Anyway, You Can’t Afford It

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Poetry from Joan Beebe

A Heavenly Night of Beauty

It is a warm night with a cool breeze –

The air is filled with the scent of newly cut grass.

In the sky the moon is aglow with light flowing into

The darkened sky and lighting up the heavens.             

Many stars in the sky are twinkling and seem to

be dancing  in a waltz of joy.

Clouds are lazily floating across the sky

Creating an unreal luminous veil as they

Drift towards an unknown destination.  We

Gaze at the heavens, and let our senses

Beguile us into a dreamy state of mind.

The night has caressed us with its touch to the

Senses.  We embrace this night of beauty and

It will remain in our dreams forever.
Hearts That Are Broken

Sadness may fill a heart with longing —

Longing for the sound of a baby’s laughter

Or the sweet chirping of a bird outside your window.

Sounds of nature bring a pleasant relief to a

Heart that is feeling so alone.

One’s heart is so entwined within our emotions

And we need to let the purity of nature

Fill us with  joy as we immerse ourselves in the

Gifts of nature’s beauty.

Then our heart will know the peace that comes

With becoming a part of nature’s delight.
What is the use and Who Cares

A dark winged bird flew to me

With a stark and frightening message.

My precious was leaving me and a

Knife tore through my soul.

My emotions became that of anger,

Jealously and hopelessness.

Where do I go and what will become of me.

My days became those of despair and melancholy.

My nights are sleepless and my mind goes crazy.

In all this despair, I began to want to end this agony.

My thoughts are still with this idea and one of these

Days, I will be no more.

Where do we go

There is a saying about “any port in a storm”.

When our lives become like the rough undulating

Waves of an ocean—

We try to smooth our own waters of

Frightening peril and dangerous moments.

We cry out into the darkness surrounding us

Because we don’t know the way.

Suddenly we see a light illuminating this

Darkness.  We begin to realize that we

Have found our port in the storm.

Our faith in that light has brought

Us safely home.

 

 

Elizabeth Hughes’ Book Periscope

 

Connie Pwll Tyler’s Earth Woman Tree Woman Quartet

earthwomantreewomancover

The Earth Woman Tree Woman Quartet by Connie Pwll Tyler is a fantasy novel in four parts. It would be perfect for adults and older teens. Even though this is a fantasy, it is also pertinent to events of intolerance in the world today. It takes place in Arundel. Arundel is a small town with residents that claim to be Christians, but are filled with hearts of hatred and intolerance toward others who are different. Giselle Raphael is a teacher who takes a drive into Arundel and finds a calling to stay. She buys a home that others in the town call strange or haunted or evil. It is near some woods that the townspeople also call evil, but is anything but.

Giselle learns that she and a few others are a type of shape shifter. The shape shifters want to rid the world of the growing prejudice and evil. The Earth Woman Tree Woman Quartet is an excellent novel that will keep you on the edge of your seat all the way to the very end. If you enjoy fantasy this is an excellent novel for your home library or as a gift. School will be out in a few months and this would make a great gift for a teen or young adult.

This book is available here. 

Fiction from Kaia Hobson

For Me?

By Kaia Hobson

If I had to feel even a grain of dirt in my sweat soaked socks again, I would never return. Even Reno was more pleasant than the trip. I had made it to my hotel after nine hours in the car, not including the four bathroom and stretching pitstops where I had attracted all this dirt. Deserts were beautiful on my computer’s screensaver, and the crunch the dusty gravel made under my sneaker was a pleasing sound, but I’d rather observe from afar. However, Salt Lake City seemed different. The surrounding mountains were fresh, like something that would emit cold, clean air.

I stepped into the hotel shower, and immediately stepped back out. The water back home heated in less than a couple seconds. I waited until the temperature matched my insides — I wanted no contrast. As I watched clear water turn gray upon hitting my toes, the thought of dinner floated around inside my head.

I was right about the cold. Perhaps it was the combination of my wet hair, or the fact that I had left the hotel without a coat, as I had come from the desert. This prompted me to walk into the closest restaurant, a burger-joint. I sat at the bar, menu in one hand, the other digging into the soft wood of the counter. I glanced around, and happened to lock eyes with a familiar looking man sitting three chairs down the bar.

“Mike?” I asked.

He smiled back at me, still staring. I shifted in my seat, hoping he was who I thought he was. If I remembered correctly, we had worked together at a Burger King for a few years during college. He didn’t have much of a distinctive face, only his eyes stood out, brick red, dark enough to look somewhat natural, but strange enough to stick out.

“Hey, are you — do I, know you? You’re Mike right?” He continued to stare as if I was blocking something from his view. “Uh, I must’ve gotten you confused with someone else. Sorry to bother you!” I lifted my hand from the table, silently acknowledging the depth of the fingernail dents I had made, and went back to waiting for my food.

As I began to leave, I heard who I thought was Mike mutter, “You!” The sound didn’t seem like an invitation. After turning back to find “Mike” staring blankly at the drinks lining the back wall of the bar, I collected my belongings and left. Upon turning the last corner to the hotel, I bumped right into a small young woman. She stumbled, looking flustered as she collected herself.

I threw my hand up, “Lillian? Hey! Funny to see you here!”

She paused, then, without hesitation, embraced me in a hug. “Richard! Oh, it’s been so long! How have you been?”

Our parents had been friends when we were kids, and naturally, we too became close, though it had been many years since I last saw Lillian. We caught up for a just few minutes, as she was apparently expected at home, where her newborn child lay waiting for dinner.

“I was going to tell you, I was! But you know, it can get pretty crazy.” She said, referring to the baby.

I awkwardly waved goodbye, and continued off to the hotel. I had an urge to shower again, but thought better of it.

The next morning, I opened my room door to find a small bouquet of daffodils on the carpeted floor outside in the hall. I picked them up gingerly, carefully examining the exterior. I didn’t know anyone in Salt Lake City. I had merely come to escape.

Life in Reno was draining, cluttered even. Friends and family seemed to always find me, at the grocery store, the post office or gas stations. The city was even dubbed “The Biggest Little City in the World.”

The day was filled mostly with walking and eating, exploring the unfamiliar city. When I arrived back at my hotel, I was greeted with yet another “gift.” However, instead of flowers, it was a small unsigned box of chocolates. I stepped over the box and into my room, where I then phoned the hotel lobby and asked if gifts were regularly delivered to guests. The receptionist on the other end replied with a definite “no.” I thought perhaps someone had mixed up room numbers and delivered gifts to the wrong door. I quickly scrawled a short note on the hotel stationary paper explaining the situation:

To whoever is leaving gifts at this door, you must have the rooms mixed up as I am not expecting any gifts, nor do I know anyone who would do such a thing. Sorry about that! (P.S. if you would like the previous gifts back, just knock!)

I stuck the note on the front of the door, turned the TV on, and soon fell asleep to the sound of a tense cooking show.

When I opened the door the next morning, I found a large unpotted cactus lying on it’s side, dirt spread across the carpet. With that, I began to pack my belongings, and rushed downstairs to the lobby. As the elevator door opened, I could see a man walk out the door and turn to walk down the street. He glanced my way, and I could see the unmistakable eyes I knew I recognized. I stepped up to the lobby desk.

“Who is that man that just walked out the door? Have you seen him before?” I hurriedly asked the receptionist.

“Hey, this city is small, but not that small,” She said, rolling her eyes, “Yeah sure, that creep. He’s not staying here? He sure comes around often.”

“I don’t think he stays here.”

“Well, heard he was knocked real hard on the head couple years back. Strange guy huh?”

I nodded and told her I would be checking out early. Halfway out the door, I turned around and shouted across the room, “There might be a bit of a mess in the hallway of the third floor!”

I raced to my car, and decided to take a different route back home, one with no deserts.