Face Of A New Moon On A Sunlit Night We walk together arm in arm, her head resting on my shoulder, the Sun decides to call it a day, permitting the night to spill darkness into a jealous sky, pouting over the star's sparkle obscured by clouds that bullied their way into the empty space left by the Sun, the moon grows larger and brighter as the Earth turns, spinning night’s beacon of light into a brilliant shining white, the scent of magnolia blossoms travel on every breeze, the sweet gum and oak trees appear taller and seem to scratch the sky with their fingered branches, the light from street lamps dance on her brown skin, highlighting the minute almost invisible hairs on her arms, her hair smells of lavender and her skin is soft like the fur of a sable, she possesses a celestial angelic air about her, it draws me to her with a hypnotic charm, there's a distance in her eyes, and if I gaze into them, I become mesmerized as though she had cast a spell, I'd be in a trance, drifting off to a place where the night comes to rest, the dawn tucks in the moon, and the stars go to dream.
Poetry from Brian Fugett
100 DEAD BABIES the conductor’s wand rises suspended in the air for a speechless moment one hundred dead babies wail away a mute harmony on the floor of the orchestra pit & the audience sways gently to the thunderous roar of the air conditioning unit and a billion goosebumps tickle their arms and nipples while the rest of the nation sways in unison as they veg-out on a lethal dose of CNN



Poetry from Dan Raphael
3/7, 7:10 am choose your week, name your month can’t stick a label on time my breath won’t bring anything closer the floor tries to influence my direction doesn’t trust stillness if the light could switch itself off the faucet would rather chant than sing i almost forgot the stove, the subtle differences of the flames’ shapes and colors a dozen or so sparkling vibrations orbiting my skull’s bald plain thin fog no match for the sun the sun never sleeps always a car moving somewhere nearby as my walls expand incrementally, unsure what to do with the space tween interior and ex- like the surprise of a line of jam tween two volumes of cake as long as i cover my hands, feet and head if my mouth skips a breath something else will catch it up whether my heart is bass or drums my eyes violins or flutes take the time to make space my internal compass searching for its sun sky so vacant the stars can’t sleep What If Sun and Earth Are Ovens A hole in my working pond as if something screamed in resolving spin, momentum, heat and appetite as the stillest pond continues breathing with the sun’s warmth exhaling before midnight, mindnight when the dough immediately springs back when pressed it’s time to keep it from fermenting any further: bread with sausage, bread with fermented cod, a loin of pork rolled in rock salt to clear a path through the snow of hunger, this internal mountain pass so steep you can only carry water and a cloak with many empty pockets since I’m next to a bakery I like I’m hungry and must go in used to be a warehouse, indoor soccer, testing grounds for paper airplanes hurled by the lifters in the basement gym powering the ovens with their cardio where do they hide all the pumps that hold up the tallest buildings, keep Miami above water, why does no one say our major earthquake will be caused by all the new weight on the land of this former delta of two large rivers negotiating a mutual surrender after a billion years of yeast, tectonic dough folding toward the seethe with permanent icing and seasonal convection above, our subductions beginning to overheat and who knows what mutant crystal lattices what heavy meatal muscles, inert and anonymous gases releasing their eons of choreography as the dance floor unzips everything’s jeans we have no idea what amazon will be selling or what we’ll pay to stay here, the imaginary numbers of address, the lack of durable seismic surfing gear, the temperature when I’m hungriest, the shopping lists in solar flares When Time Could Dance and Stutter hollow as the breeze take the skin off my arm and see a busy neighborhood storefronts to live above how many years of path window reflecting what’s several blocks away who gets to scent this late morning two dogs walking each other because chocolate melts, cause oats won’t leave the bowl voluntarily last day of May, and June was stopped at customs sent back to wherever the future is like an underground spring not caring which way’s downstream, the cat who’s a different species each night drilling at dawn’s door clothes demand to be worn clocks don’t need to think about moving news breath, traffic breath my lenses fog despite the temperature I pour a little coffee into my milk all the chairs are full, no one’s home waiting for the rain to set the agenda for a dry week striking my finger against the sidewalk as if a match becoming a mini-sun a transformative flashlight on the tightrope of noon no one is ready to roar with more days unseasonable than seasonable what do we call this time as if ‘June’ means anything out of context out of habit, out of frustration Unscription suddenly sepia, watching myself the air is frictionless, thin, breathable as normal or have my lungs acclimated so many feet in this crowd—which are mine in the event of the inevitable camera catching car, everyone gets out and the car keeps going I’m not in the road but on a the porch of a plantation now a care facility, or a banquet hall where is this walking into empty places clearcut 20 years ago and nothing’s changed the doorknob comes off the door stays closed window shutting like an eye a chimney three miniature people are escaping from the chimney of my neck: is my head smoke or a stork’s nest I’m running on the inside, trying to inflate, the sunlight’s picky about which windows to shine through, one window nudging another the street too dry to reflect, mind wiped by weeks of rain, not racing the earth’s rotation but never wanting the day to be dry enough to go out in, driving without windshield wipers the air smells like gasoline, I doubt the existence of stars rising from my fetal curl cause this is my stop either the stairs up or the stairs down like a parking garage with more birds in it than cars staircases remind me of bow strings, of bass strings notes the ears can’t hear but from chest to groin can after dinner all the lights and walls go away an on-shore breeze, a deep orange full moon just clearing the ocean’s border not sweat but salty rain from inside me Retrospeculative if rain fell as one thin sheet every couple minutes would wind cooperate. drive for a slice, cut for tomorrow lean out the wall where a window should be how do i shift gears in this living room a 27 inch rear view dialing 911 gets me helicopters outside two o’clock is riddled with potholes a million clocks step backwards at once— no one wants to be now, ready but not willing, clinging to the recent past coz it’s still edible so many garden hoses migrating toward the ocean i only wear shoes so i don’t root if i was naked i might photosynthesize and what would that do for the economy i’m feeling retrospeculative is the future north or east would it take a billion staying up all night for the sun to hesitate, whether out of curiosity or self-doubt like china, every continent should be a single time zone no more of getting there before you left a day no one remembered to experience even the calendar goes right from 22 to 24 it’s usually Wednesday who complains people used to be able to assemble clocks but time could never be fixed space is constant but room keeps shrinking as do lots and apartments not a walk-in closet but a studio soon be a world where those over 5’ 10” will either stay outside or develop back problems i was once able to see the future but my vision got corrected i can’t decide which of the labels in my pantry is my name, how to know which can wants to open what i think is outside is a warehouse i can’t see the other end of one path is red, the other is slippery there’ll either be a place to lie down or a place to swim, the mice and fish are slow enough to read but their evaporating language, how a couple of my muscles want to break off and fend for themselves when i get this far inside when the right direction’s not the answer if i can get a majority of my parts to believe they’re someone else we just might reassemble
Poetry from Yusuf Salisu Muhammad

My Mother My mother my mother ! I want us to always be together like kidney and blood whenever You're not glad tears I must drop If you go on trip I will trap myself in a cage my love for you has no price yeah ! never can it be priced worthier it's than bride price not even that of the princess our home darkness in it no light shines when You are not around all food taste naught even if cooked with salt never will it have taste. no attire accessorizes your beauty you turn it into comely you glisten the Moon In the sky any food not cooked by you tasteless is what it is I love you my mother. ©️ Yusuf Salisu Muhammad. Yusuf Salisu Muhammad writes from Katsina state. He is Currently studying at Umaru Musa Yar'adua University, Katsina state of Nigeria.
Mr. Love By Yusuf Salisu Muhammad Your love calls my name which is always in a red in my heart is a white,white man it shines like a star oh ! he is a gold ah!, love you are a bété de scéne that no one angry at oh ! Mr. love recall when I chatted you You confided in me you will never betray & never bite me so if you dare do I will retaliate. Yusuf Salisu Muhammad writes from Katsina state.He is Currently studying at Umaru Musa Yar'adua University,Katsina state of Nigeria.
Poetry from Gerald Onyebuchi
A Psalm for your body i tongue this hill your body o woman this pure ground of worship is a journey to horeb a goddess I must appease I must wet with petals of songs here is my voice take it: the mower plying your sacred lawn from your scriptures I eat the torah of longing & fill the desert of my bones with chapters of your dew o woman you are genesis you are fire & rain & clouds you are leviticus you are the storm that cannot be you are revelation gathered in the mouth of a brook everything beautiful and broken teeth of a knife eating the poisonous bud of history even God knows: when hunger tickles a woman's heart when the molars in her song becomes the gasp of a dying bird silence becomes a name screeching in the dark these hands your hands are alabsters of memories every touch every song they make prays me into an altar of fresh wine all shades of sweet-darkeness & honey o sweet honey sweet shepherd of my soul come ferry this heart to a house filled with colours
Poetry from Chimezie Ihekuna

The Soldier's Will You can take all his weapon But you can't take from him the spirit of a champion You can take his fellow brethren But you can't take away from him his divine amen You can take away his food But you can't take away from him the knowledge of his hood You can take away his health But you can't take away from him the beauty of his eternal wealth You can take away his frivolities But you can't take away from him the fullness of his priorities You can take from him the presence of wars But you can't take away from him the ' 'eternality' of the cause You can take away from him his meal But you can't take away from him the Soldier's Will
My New Face of personality My face is burnt; Should I hurt my thought? Fire tries to end my facial physicality; Should I affect my reality? I had no idea my face with experience such; Should I negatively talk about it much? I realized beauty comes from within; My facial look is just kidding; When the need for character steps in I realized my current facial condition is to make me reach a decision; Separate the grains from the chaffs of my situation; Appreciate a true friend and frown at a false companion. Now... It has motivated to smile in the face of life's hurdles It has inspired to surmount life struggles It has courageously positioned me to always stand tall It has amazingly strengthened me to see direction, despite a standing wall It has helped me define character in a proper perspective It has shown me why focus should be my prerogative. Though my face was burnt, causing facial deformity but... My facial deformity is not up for mockery; It is a situation that makes a good story My facial deformity is not up for ridicule; It is a situation that makes a good life riddle My facial deformity is not up for caricature It is a situation that makes the building-up of an amazing creature
Synchronized Chaos April 2022: Climate Sensitivity
Climate sensitivity is a term used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to describe to what extent rising levels of greenhouse gases affect the Earth’s temperature. Specifically, it describes how much warmer the planet will get if the amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere doubles.
In this issue, contributors grapple with the effects of our actions on our climates: ecological, political, social, and personal.
Note: If you’d like to make a difference for the Earth by planting trees, you may visit One Tree Planted for information on how to replenish natural forests around the world. One dollar plants one tree! Also, if you’re an artist who creates work inspired by ecology and nature, you can include your work as part of Earth Day’s campaign to showcase Artists for the Earth.
Several writers from the B Street Writing Group in Hayward, CA address ecological climate change in a collection of pieces which they will perform at the Sun Gallery at Hayward’s first annual Lit Hop, Saturday April 30th.

Leticia Garcia Bradford wonders whether her individual actions are making enough of a difference for the environment. Linda Hibbard speaks on climate through the POV of a melting snowman. Gloria Lopez and Tess Tyler outline the effects of environmental change on humans as well as the rest of the ecosystem.
Patricia Doyne’s work crashes into our consciousness, illustrating storms as an effect of our changing planet. Lisbeth Garcia-Lopez brings a poignant tale of flowers destroyed by pollution. Al Murdach depicts a green statue of Jesus and its potential significance, including stewardship for creation.
Finally, with his trademark humor, Hayward’s poet laureate Bruce Roberts encourages us to pack our bikinis for Arctic sunbathing.
Other writers take a more personal and psychological approach to writing about landscapes of various kinds.

Loretta Siegel celebrates nature in a piece inviting someone to join her out “where the rabbits run,” while Michael Hough describes a walk out at night with his dog and the screech of owls in the air. Gabriel T. Saah’s speaker contemplates his deep love for his partner while walking along the beach at sunset. He draws on nature within himself, his own body, as well as outdoor scenery for imagery.
Sarika Jaswani highlights the solitude that gives her the space for creative thought, which she finds in rural, urban, and literary landscapes. Jelvin Gibson evokes the rich beauty of nature while mourning a lost love, and Mahbub waxes poetic on the delicate embrace of birdsong, sprouting grass, and pastureland.
Mamadee Kanneh probes the inner landscape of his moods, often as complex and out of his control as the weather. The sun, and its mythological connotations, illustrate Isabella Hansen’s speaker’s grief over the loss of her brother. Hazel Fry stares into the ocean and muses on evolution, ecology, fluidity, and femininity.

Geoff Sawers paints European urban landscapes with language evoking their complex, rich, and sometimes dark pasts. Do Toan Dien draws on the spiritual, natural, and architectural heritage of Vietnam in his bilingual poetry. Federico Wardal covers a talk from archaeologist Dr. Zahi Hawass on how researchers located Cleopatra’s tomb in a piece that celebrates ancient Egyptian culture.
Nadja Moore depicts various miscommunications: a humorous disconnect over dinner and a more poignant tale of a child ghost trying to get her family’s attention. Doug Hawley’s flash fiction explores through humor the dangers we face in the wild: age, declining health, animal and human predators.
Stephen House looks in on others with compassion – a man with mental challenges, animals bred and destined for slaughter – and also speculates on how we might bring different perspectives to the same circumstances.

Sheila Murphy probes human nature with a mix of short pieces and character sketches that explore both our fragility and our resilience. John Grey writes of the imperfect human experience: bumbling dancers, drinkers with bad breath, marital disillusionment after a flood. J.J. Campbell conveys the awkwardness, hope, and cynicism of love at midlife, while Emmanuel G.G. Yamba vows not to let death take him without a fight.
Ivan S. Fiske’s speaker draws upon various religious images to describe his profound connection with the person he loves. Michael Robinson presents calm odes to the spiritual nourishment found through instances of beauty in urban environments.
Christopher Bernard contributes a poetic piece on history and memory and speculates that becoming a poet might be a calling as much as a professional identity.
Still other writers play with mixed media and language.

Jerome Berglund pairs nighttime urban shots through a car window with haikus, while Heller Levinson fragments concepts, definitions and ultimately words into thought pieces. Mark Young’s first piece harks back to Ezra Pound’s style while his other poems reflect on political communication.
Other writers address the global sociopolitical climate.

Patricia Doyne mourns the invasion of Ukraine in a piece from the point of view of a little boy who loses his mother. Steven Croft addresses war in Ukraine as well as Iraq from a more panoramic perspective, while commenting on Bolivia’s economic growth.
Chimezie Ihekuna urges humanity to abandon war as a means to solve differences. Christopher Bernard depicts the Ukrainian tragedy through the trauma of a young refugee boy, while David Dephy’s work honors the beauty of Ukraine and issues strident calls for chaos to depart. Ike Boat shares his service as the master of ceremonies during a Christian university’s graduation in Ghana.
We hope that this issue adds a bit of inspiration to your day while challenging your heart and mind and imagination.
As a reminder, we encourage the readers and writers who enjoy our publication to write letters of support to be included in care packages to be delivered to refugees around the world by the nonprofit New Beginnings. Click here to write a letter online (anonymously if you wish) that will support and encourage a refugee family in their new home.
Also, PEN America campaigns on behalf of writers facing persecution for their nonviolent work. Click here to read and sign online petitions for different writers at risk. Also, the organization Free Women Writers is looking for volunteer editors for pieces they are collecting and publishing from women and girls in Afghanistan.