Cover image: "Wild Muse" by Glenda Goodrich

Gallery 1

Put me into focus

Emilie Lygren

Insights from Arthropods

Sometimes all it takes
is another living thing
to ease judgment on myself.

Sometimes it’s
a crawdad
crawling across
slick white granite
next to a river.

Velvet body and jointed legs
skittering on shining rock
above a crushing waterfall.

I can see where
it will struggle,
where the sides
are too steep to climb.
The swift current,
the easy route one foot over.

How often I act like
I know what’s coming.
Pretend the future
is a language
I know how to speak,
but still, move forward
wary and scared:
               just in case, I’ll head in claws-first.

What if, like the crawdad,
I trusted this tiny inch of sight
was enough to go on,
tried to remember that’s
all I’ve ever had.

Emilie Lygren is a nonbinary poet and outdoor educator whose work emerges from the intersections between scientific observation and poetic wonder. Her first book of poetry, What We Were Born For, was chosen by the Young People’s Poet Laureate as the February 2022 Book Pick for the Poetry Foundation. She lives in California, where she wonders about oaks and teaches poetry in local classrooms. Find more of her work and words at her website emilielygren.com and on Instagram @emlygren.

Bryan Vale

overgrown

gripping the fence tightly
with itself, the berry
bush shakes in the warm breeze,
consumes the slivers of
wood that break off beneath
its sharp leafy branches.

thorns like barbed wire
protrude above the fence’s
top — it was never meant
to be a harsh barrier,
just a marker, yet with
joy the fence succumbs
to the chlorophyll and strength
of vines and blackberries,
made sweeter and sharper
by the surrender.

Bryan Vale is a writer based in the San Francisco Bay Area. His fiction and poetry have appeared in several journals, including Quibble, Loft, Trash to Treasure Lit, Unstamatic Magazine, and The Viridian Door. Learn more at www.bryanvalewriter.com, or follow Bryan on Twitter and Instagram @bryanvalewriter.

Joe Dahut

Scratches

There are these scratches on my truck
that I don’t bother to buff or lick
my thumb and scrub like all the old men do
when something new catches their eye
at the supermarket, parking next to the carts
in their corrals, pondering aloud:
now just when the hell did that get there?
twirling their keys around a ring finger
as they squint at the scratch again,
arched like a mountain top
or a smile, depending how you
look at it. There is this scratch
on the side of my truck from some wreck
before I drove it, and the hood flutters
when the wind blows, like an eyelash
stuck on your cheekbone tempted to fly
away at any moment. I often wonder
what will come of us when we die —
when it becomes food for the landfill
on some distant island where a flock
of gulls will perch on that hood
and squalor in the fragility of life.
I sometimes think about what will happen
when that engine finally shorts,
when the key won’t turn over. So
as I pull into the third parking spot
at the grocery store and frantically
blink the headlights in the daytime, just know
I am not checking the resilience of the lights.
I am calling out; searching for my pulse.

Joe Dahut is a poet, essayist, and teacher living and writing in the Florida Keys. Prior to that, he was a collegiate pitcher at Drew University, where he earned his BA in English, and a fly fishing guide in Kodiak, Alaska. He earned his MFA in Poetry from New York University, where he taught creative writing. His work is available at www.joedahut.com.

GJ Gillespie

If You Could Read My Mind

GJ Gillespie is a collage artist living in a 1928 Tudor Revival farmhouse overlooking Oak Harbor on Whidbey Island (north of Seattle). In addition to natural beauty, he is inspired by art history — especially mid-century abstract expressionism. The “Northwest Mystics” who produced haunting images from this region 60 years ago are favorites.

Dana Kinsey

Fall Out

Pretty please don’t fall out of this bucking boat
                               this high-speed rail careening around curves
                                              this roller coaster flipside-downing us
                                                             our bed as you head toward the edge

Hold on!
Buckle up!
Don’t lean!
Check your safety bar!

Barring any unforeseen fall out
                                                             everything could have fallen into place

Did I fall from grace?
among thieves?
like Troy who fell for the Trojan Horse?

Mon chéri, we have fallen out of fashion
                                                                           démodé
                                                                                          tres passé

The Perseids fall out from night’s dusky pocket
                                                             plunging too fast to catch my wish
Maybe the bookmark fell out of our romance
                                                             end leaped to the middle?

On the cover is you
waving from hot air
balloon floating
&
me careening
through clouds

with only a canyon

to catch me

Dana Kinsey is an actor and teacher published in Fledgling Rag, Drunk Monkeys, ONE ART, On the Seawall, Sledgehammer Lit, West Trestle Review, Autumn Sky Poetry Daily, Better Than Starbucks, Red Ogre Review, Half and One, MacQueen’s Quinterly, Prometheus Dreaming, and Prose Online. Dana’s play WaterRise was produced at the Gene Frankel Theatre. Her chapbook Mixtape Venus is published by I. Giraffe Press. Website: www.wordsbydk.com.

Jodi Balas

How to Be Less Earth & More Sky

The house across the
street is eating itself

and rotting back into
the loose earth. Blue

paint pulling apart
from the skin of its

walls — blue, expanding
the sky encompassing —

blue and heavy. Eating
and eating until it consumes

everything it surrounds.
The body bends into the

word hazard each time I
walk by   it shifts into a

mirror — it cries out notice
me   its mouth, already

an elegy for the girls who
carry scar tissue on the

back of their skulls.
Windows half broken —

half-open, resting on an
invitation for repair.

Sometimes when the light
dims, I could hear it calling

to the trees: don’t leave me,
please don’t leave me.

Sometimes when the sun
is too much sun, I break

out in fever and blister
into what was once

heat & memory & sweat
& mercy & grace and all

the things that were once
alive     I can remember

when I couldn’t quite yet
grasp the severity of what

exodus meant or how the
color blue was a synonym

for apathy. I didn’t care
about becoming an island.

There is no life here
but there was once life here.

My bones are still learning
how to defrost & not shatter,

how to be less earth & more sky.

Based out of NEPA, Jodi Balas is an “always developing” neurodiverse poet who uses a variety of methods to expand her craft and is searching for innovative ways on how poetry could be evolved and cultivated. Currently she is working on her first chapbook, titled The Art of Molting, where she draws inspiration from Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’ stages of grief to center the book’s theme. Jodi has work published in Ghost City Review, The Willawaw Journal, Grand Little Things, and The Times Leader, and is a contributor of the PA Bards.

Glenda Goodrich

Wild Muse

Coyote Wild

It was while traveling with my friend Jim along a highway outside of Taos, New Mexico, that I first caught a glimpse of him out the passenger side window. “Stop!” I yelled. “Turn around. Go back. There’s something I want to see.”

“What is it?” Jim asked, easing back on the gas, the car slowing. Jim, ten years older than I and in good physical shape, did most of the driving on our annual hiking adventure trips. I was grateful for the chance to sit back and take in all the scenery.

“I’m not sure…but it’s worth turning around. I promise.”

Jim circled around and drove back to a fence line along the east side of the two-lane road. The car stopped. I got out and sidestepped my way down into a five-foot ditch, up the other side, and through knee-high brush for a closer look. I heard Jim get out and follow behind me. The body shape-shifted, first into a deer, then into a wolf, then into itself. Coyote. He was big for his breed, thick-furred and healthy looking. There he hung, folded in two, his back haunch draped over one side of the barbed wire, the rest of his body—gut, chest, and head—folded down over the other side, hanging free, his nose six inches from the ground, tongue lopped over his lower lip in a caricature death scene. I bent down and looked into his golden-brown eyes. I saw only a lifeless, blank stare. It was quiet carnage with no sign of a struggle. A bloody pool beneath his nose had soaked into the dirt and left a red oxide stain. Dried crimson splotches dotted over yellow blooms of rabbit brush. His lush fur lay in rich waves of color over his back and down onto his tail, paws clean, black toe pads round and plump. It was like a taxidermy scene replicated to illustrate the dangerous life of a coyote.

I reached out and touched him. I felt like I was touching something sacred, but it also felt blasphemous, like reaching for something holy and wild that shouldn’t be disturbed. My finger met with furry rigor. Solid. He had been dead for a while. No bullet holes, no sign of any struggle. He was just hanging there, lifeless. I imagined how it had gone. At dusk he had left his den and trotted along through bristled thicket, stirring up sage, nose hovering low, picking up scent. He had not eaten for days. On the other side of the ravine, he caught sight of the hare. He crouched down and eased in for the kill. In a burst of dust, the rabbit leaped up, shot across the dirt, and zigzagged through the sagebrush. The coyote launched into full pursuit and the chase was on, first north through the thick sage, then west toward the highway. He’d seen the fence at the last minute, made a leap to clear it, but the barbed wire had done its job, and he was caught at the hip—the underside of vital organs, the back of his long strong body snapped to a stop, hind legs pawing with no purchase to free himself. The more he struggled, the deeper the wire pierced his tender parts. He must have died quickly, his spine snapping in two from trajectory force.

“Ready to get going?” Jim asked.

I jumped at the sound of his voice. I’d forgotten he was behind me. “No, wait a second,” I said. “I want to check him out some more.”

“It’s a dead coyote, GG,” he said, “there’s nothing you can do.”

“No, it’s more than that. I don’t know…”

Jim started walking back to the car, but I couldn’t turn away. I inspected the hairy fur, light tawny brown with deep brown tips. Behind the ears and over the forearms, the color changed to the red brown of the New Mexico landscape. The underside of his body was creamy white, the tip of the tail carbon black, all designed for camouflage to disappear into the variegated terrain. It was the paws that got to me. One crossed over the other in a peaceful gesture, anthropomorphic in a dead man’s pose. For a moment I wanted to cut off his tail, turn it into artwork as a keepsake of the find, but I couldn’t bring myself to disturb the beauty. He was too perfect, so Christ-like in his hip belt of thorns. Christ on the cross. Coyote on the fence.

This was his territory to run free and mark with scat on downed barbed wire fences. How could he have known a landowner had set a trap to thwart his rabbit chase, a barrier barely visible in the dim evening light? Doing what comes naturally, he got caught in a gut snare. The whole scene was horrific, tragic, captivating, and exhilarating—exquisite wildness stopped in midstride and hung up on the fence to die. It felt good to revere something, love something, hurt for it. It was the same love and hurt I felt for my own wild spirit. My life had become tame and conventional, and so predictable. Retirement had brought welcomed free time, but what had I filled it with? Routine. Gym workouts on Monday and Thursday. Laundry on Tuesday. Grocery shopping on Friday. Planning and teaching art classes most weekends. And way too much time in front of my laptop. Even the annual hiking trips with Jim were carefully planned out. I craved out of control, impulsive spontaneity. Where was that little girl who named herself “Warrior Princess” and smeared mud on her face and arms in the ravine across the street; the one who spent hours catching frogs and peering into their shiny, protruding, globular eyes? Was my wildness dead, too?

Over the next few nights, the coyote came to me in my dreams three times. In the first dream, I floated toward him, my feet not touching the ground. I poked at him, and he came to life, finished his jump over the fence, and ran away free. It felt exhilarating. In the second, I stood perplexed in front of a painting of a dead coyote on the fence that hung at an art gallery, wondering how someone had painted the exact same scene. In the third, I stood at the fence, and this time he turned his head, eyes riveted on me, and spoke in a low, haunting whisper: “Do you get it?”

 

Weeks later, back home in Oregon after the New Mexico vacation, the memory of the coyote had stayed with me. I sat in a dining room chair at breakfast, closed my eyes and felt emotions rise like an ocean wave. I wanted to shake things up and coax the animal inside me out into the meadow before it got sacrificed in a barbed wire trap of conventional limitation. The summer before, I could have worn feathers in my hair and joined ecstatic dance in the drum tower at the Oregon Country Fair. The rhythm filled my body, but I held back, reined it in, afraid I’d look like a silly old woman, afraid I would embarrass my kids, myself. Could have. But didn’t. Once, while painting on a giant canvas in an art class, I wanted to take off my clothes, cover my body in paint, then lie down and roll around on the canvas. I could have been that eccentric old lady who stripped down and used her body as a paintbrush in art class. Could have. But wasn’t. Not yet anyway.

 

A few months later, on a warm August day, I went down to my local art store and purchased a giant roll of canvas and six jars of tempera paint: blue, green, red, yellow, purple, and orange. I invited two artist friends to my studio, spread the canvas out on the floor, wall to wall. I opened the paints, placed a fat brush in each jar, then we slipped off our clothes and started in.

Glenda Goodrich (“GG”) is an artist, art doula, writer and SoulCollage® facilitator. Her book, Solo Passage: 13 Quests, 13 Questions, will be published by She Writes Press in Fall 2023. Her practice of isolation, fasting and prayer in the wilderness over the last 20 years has deepened her relationship to herself and wild places. Her writing reveals the healing and restorative power of the natural world. GG lives in Salem, Oregon and spends her time creating and teaching art, writing, hiking, gardening, and spending time alone in the wild. Website: www.glendagoodrich.com / Instagram @glendagoodrich

Christine Weeber

Heart Match

Can she see her reflection
    in my kitchen window,
  only inches from it
bookended by her mother’s
    massive body
  warm, unhurried
   cloven hooves fastened
to decomposed granite
  under feet of sculpted snow

Their shadows merging
      cast still as I up in the night
    stand feet from mother and baby moose
   the three-paned glass nothing
above the white sink

I think I know love
    but this foreign thing, her waiting,
the young one infinitely paused,
    Mother not nudging,
rushing,
   cajoling
  holding millennia; one might
say a “Taoist’s non-doing” but
   of course
we have no language
     but this non-motion

   while the moon drops, shadows elongate
Ruby sprawls at my feet
      not needing to be awake as
I in stillness
     a new way

Christine Weeber is the author of two poetry chapbooks, In the Understory of Her Being (in English and Spanish) and Sastrugi. Her poetry and prose have appeared in Wild Roof Journal, Kyoto Journal, The Fourth River, Solo: On Her Own Adventure, and other publications. Christine is the poetry editor and copy editor at SAPIENS, a digital magazine that illuminates the world of anthropology for a general audience.

Emily Griffin

Maenads

We’ll leave staying grounded to you
and the other partners living in servitude
Looking up late summer recipes
while the world burns

Staring at your feet
because you think I’m crazy
Wishing we would shut up
fall in line like you

Smile your saw-toothed smiles
You’re just dust to the people you
set your own happiness aside for
We refuse to be ground down

We don’t smother our beasts
to make others happy
We serve a king who demands
nothing but the velvet slap of wine

He helped us become experts
on the visceral whipcrack of impulse
We tear our teeth into the next big idea
without the bother of proprieties

He doesn’t have to recruit
Frustration brings us to him
and liberation keeps us close
to his firm hand

Living feral seems less extreme
once you realize spouse and baby
would draw milk from you
until you dropped down hollow

We found a new tranquility
dancing in time with our sisters
No more clean floors and casseroles
No more contracts signed in sweat and tears

We see it’s not your time yet
but our king will be there when you’re ready
with nothing between the moon and your heart
Then he’ll gently draw you into our circle

Emily Griffin is a librarian, poet, and food enthusiast from Brooklyn, NY who aims to capture life’s most visceral experiences using interesting, accessible language with techniques from both surrealist and confessional poetry traditions. Her work has appeared in Abandoned Mine, High Shelf Press, The Closed Eye Open, and others. She earned her BFA from Emerson College and her MLS from St. John’s University.

DS Maolalai

Michelangelo’s prisoners

the muscle comes out
of the rock — how he did it
and how he abandoned it.
an arm and a slab. what
an agony. reaching —
a body and stone. as if
someone had paused at
a door between being
and not. an irish goodbye
in the real sense and not
the american — standing, that is,
with another drink talking
for 20 more minutes. one
arm in the foyer,
some chest and a leg.
I saw them in florence.
they hit hard — he was
very good.

DS Maolalai has been nominated eleven times for Best of the Net, eight for the Pushcart Prize and once for the Forward Prize. His poetry has been released in three collections, most recently Sad Havoc Among the Birds (Turas Press, 2019) and Noble Rot (Turas Press, 2022).

Jocelyn Ulevicus

Gevonden Madeliefen

Giants

First point of interest:
I am happy for you,

and second: I can
hear differently with my
eyes closed, the liminal
space between violet & blue,

even without any feathers.

In order to hear me correctly,
put your fingers into my mouth,

without mirrors, I rely on my gut.

Do you remember the waitress
kept dropping things: first a
fork, then a menu, and later
a spoon—And I hugged her,
held her together,

& for a moment,
neither wing was missing?

But really, all healing happens
in the ankles, I think.

Any girl can be a giant.

Touch my hair, put me into focus.
Fire my heart with the wind.

Jocelyn Ulevicus is an American artist, writer, and poet. In her visual work, you’ll encounter colorful & energetic floral arrangements, while in her writing, she more closely explores her experiences of being a woman growing through and beyond loss and trauma. Her work is either forthcoming or published in magazines such as SWWIM Every Day, The Free State Review, Blue Mesa Review, and Humana Obscura, amongst others. In addition, Ulevicus is a Best New Poets 2022 nominee and a 2020 Pushcart Prize nominee, and her in-progress memoir The Birth of a Tree was shortlisted for the 2019 Santa Fe Literary Award Program. She is currently in Amsterdam, finalizing her first collection of poems.

Laurie Kuntz

North of Sorrow

What can save us from turning
a life into an ash of regret?
When words no longer work to meaning
and the ear tunes to a screech, pitch and wail
every soundbite, one that reminds us
not of the whisper of breeze
billowing sheets drying in the sun,
but the entrapment of the twist
and entanglement of those same sheets
wet and caught in a wringing wind.
Everyone waits for hope
to blow through the open window
for all that is on the outside
can enter a home, a heart, a memory,
and north of sorrow
are the lit borders,
which we can cross.

Laurie Kuntz is an award-winning poet and film producer. She has published two poetry collections (The Moon Over My Mother’s House, Finishing Line Press and Somewhere in the Telling, Mellen Press), and three chapbooks (Talking Me Off the Roof, Kelsay Books, Simple Gestures, Texas Review Press and Women at the Onsen, Blue Light Press), as well as an ESL reader (The New Arrival, Books 1 & 2, Prentice Hall Publishers). Her poetry has been nominated for three Pushcart Prizes and one Best of the Net. Of her chapbooks, Simple Gestures won the Texas Review Poetry Chapbook Contest and Women at the Onsen won the Blue Light Press Chapbook Contest. Happily retired, she lives in an endless summer state of mind. Website: www.lauriekuntz.myportfolio.com

Nicole Farmer

vanish

wind in my face and we are all endangered
smell of night blooming jasmine, astronauts float as

we race down the dirty highways of extinction
sunlight filtered through green leaves on absent black rhinos

no longer in dreams and fiction foretold
ghosts of rustling book pages adored by their readers

the future is here, howling at our doors, claws of scorching heat —
Sinú parakeet falls, islands sink, skyscrapers tumble like Jenga sticks

head bowed, I write you this letter on sheets of toilet paper
dying El Valle golden frogs, blue dotted gecko, best of all the black bat flower

struck dumb as if I had lost my mother
in a blip of time on this spinning orb, we will vanish

Nicole Farmer is a reading tutor living in Asheville, NC. Her poems have been published in The Closed Eye Open, Peregrine, Poetry South, The Amistad, Quillkeepers Press, Haunted Waters Press, Adelaide Magazine, Sheepshead Review, Wild Roof Journal, Bacopa Literary Review, Great Smokies Review, Kakalak Review, 86 Logic, Inlandia Review and others. Nicole was awarded First Prize in Prose Poetry from the Bacopa Literary Review in 2020. Her chapbook entitled Wet Underbelly Wind was published in 2022. Her book Honest Sonnets: memories from an unorthodox upbringing in verse will be published by Kelsay Books in 2023. Way back in 1990 she graduated from The Juilliard School of Drama. Website: www.nicolefarmerpoetry.com

Leigh Parsons

[void]

Push the pull away
in the twilight, sail to me
not on a comet
or a shooting star
magic carpet
or proud unicorn

but on the bones of hummingbirds
draped in a cape woven with shadows
bathed in blood red moonlight

use your might
extinguish my bad dream
on repeat

make believe

               sleep over me

Leigh Parsons is an emerging poet based in Michigan. She is currently working on her debut poetry collection. Her poetry is tailored to the daydreamers and twilight thinkers, weaving a relatable narrative crafted to shed light on the challenges of the human experience. Her poetry has been featured in Stick Figure Poetry and Oddball Magazine, and she was selected as Poet of the Week by the Poetry Super Highway.

J.I. Kleinberg

An artist, poet, and freelance writer, J.I. Kleinberg lives in Bellingham, WA. Her visual poems have been published in print and online journals worldwide, including Atlas & Alice, Diagram, Explorations in Media Ecology, Full Bleed, The Indianapolis Review, and Otoliths. In 2022, her visual poems were featured in a solo exhibit, orchestrated light, at Peter Miller Books in Seattle, Washington, and displayed at the Skagit River Poetry Festival. In April 2023, she was featured in The Cutting Edge: Art of Collage in Asheville, North Carolina. Instagram @jikleinberg

Vivia Barron

Winnefred Bay

Vivia Barron is a mother, an immigrant, an advocate, and a painter. Raised in Jamaica, Barron immigrated to Florida and now lives and works in St. Petersburg, FL. She creates original acrylic on canvas pieces in an impressionist, folk art style. Her work has been in multiple solo and group exhibitions. Her work is part of private and corporate collections throughout the US including the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, Tampa.

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