SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.
Minus a uterus the pelvic floor is rugose, a desert waiting for the driest weather of age to collapse the roof of its house.
It’s about gravity, the lawyer explains to the empaneled men who put their belongings on the edge of the jury box not believing that the pen the pad the paper cup (hot & full of coffee) will fall to the courtroom floor.
Cecille Marcato (she/her) is a poet and cartoonist in Austin. Her work has appeared or is upcoming in Leon, South Florida Poetry Journal, Free State Review, Naugatuck River Review, Husk, Solstice, and Slipstream. She holds degrees in literature and design and graduated from the Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers.
My entire life, I have learned to subsist on love that was not whole, that was piecemeal, that was not made for me to begin with. That kind of love makes you think you were
born wrong, a villain invading the crib. My adoptive mom did not love me in a way I could understand, so I learned to live in the hollow. I learned to love the mother that birthed me,
loved what I made her: a quiet, bookish woman who played piano. When she was not who I wanted, I learned to love who she was. I searched any approximation of her name, and learned to love
the errors. Did you mean: Sarah Walsh? Did you mean: Sarah Welch? I learned to love the woe. I learned to love her demons. I learned to love her refuse. I have a face only my mother could love. I have some
secrets only my mother could forgive. I say all this to say: my mother left me to the wolves and I still loved her. Do you understand? The weight we give daughters to carry? Like a fruit tree, I spawn good
children. Each poem sparkling and juicy. It takes a therapist one session to name “abandonment.” The search engine says, did you mean: absence? Did you mean: abscess? Did you mean: abstract? Did you mean: abet?
Dani Janae is a poet and journalist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Her work has been published by Longleaf Review, SWWIM Every Day, Palette Poetry, South Florida Poetry Journal, and others. Her debut collection of poetry, Hound Triptych, will be published by Sundress Publications in Spring 2026. She lives in South Carolina.
Kimberly Reyes is an award-winning poet, essayist, pop culture critic, and visual culture scholar. Her work has earned honors from The Poetry Foundation, The Fulbright Program, the Academy of American Poets, CantoMundo, Cave Canem, Tin House, the Arts Council of Ireland, Culture Ireland, and many other institutions across the world. She is the author of the new poetry collection Bloodletting (Omnidawn, 2025), vanishing point. (Omnidawn, 2023)—featuring the award-winning poetry film We Are All Drowned Out— and Running to Stand Still (Omnidawn, 2019), a finalist for the 2020 Milt Kessler Poetry Book Award. She is also the author of Warning Coloration (dancing girl press, 2018), finalist for the Two Sylvias Press 2017 Chapbook Competition, and Life During Wartime (Fourteen Hills, 2019), winner of the 2018 Michael Rubin Chapbook Award. A recent Ph.D. graduate, Dr. Reyes recently joined the Creative Writing faculty at the University of Miami as Assistant Professor of Creative Writing—Poetry.
A cardinal in a lilac beside the parking lot snapped its insistent note. The air was damp. My brother settled a box of half-eaten pies into the back of his dark blue SUV, laughing at something someone nearby had said. We’d come out of the community center, all of us, family, friends, some we hadn’t seen since 1973, full of pie and remembrances of our father, and my brother would drive his long drive home, nothing anywhere on the calendar ever to bring us together again. He would have driven off without saying goodbye—just as my stepmother and stepsister had done— a blunt clapping closed, a locking up. But I insisted and hugged him, not a hug of care or even of sadness, a simple shuttering, as if a light rain had begun or as if a middle-aged man had passed pushing a wheelbarrow of manure. Something had to be protected. Dignity, perhaps. The cardinal had flown. The air was damp with the smell of lilacs.
Athena Kildegaard is the author of six books of poetry, most recently Prairie Midden (Tinderbox Editions), winner of the 2023 WILLA Literary Award for poetry. She teaches at the University of Minnesota Morris.
A simple sky beams into the afternoon, 34-degree bank sign blinking overhead. I’m waiting for the light to change, mid-October, out on a corner, a thousand fingerprints on the silver signal walk button in front of me. At home the socks sit in separate piles. Your old record albums stacked separately. My winter coats in their own separate closet. We’ve always come together best in argument, our emotional forte, the dark ash of thrown books and shoes. It took hardly any time at all for us to learn the value of my body, its intonations. Its pitch. At the curb, transgressions mound in a thick paste of early snow.
Crosswalk signal bleating walk, walk, walk I do what it says
Karen Elizabeth Sharpe is a poetry editor at The Worcester Review and author of Prayer Can Be Anything (Finishing Line Press, 2023). Her poems have or will soon appear in On the Seawall, The MacGuffin, SWWIM Everyday, Split Rock Review, Mom Egg Review, and Halfway Down the Stairs, among others.
Giant is the film where Rock Hudson is upstaged by a piece of rope. He sits behind a big desk while James Dean sits before him, waiting to see if he’ll be fired—for what, I’ve forgotten. There are lots of things that can go wrong on a ranch in West Texas. Hudson owns this ranch. Dean lives in a shack the size of an ice cream truck. In this scene he holds a piece of rope 15 or 20 inches long. He drapes it across his palm, pulls it slowly off. He winds it loosely around his wrist, slips it off. Actors cite this scene as a masterclass in presence. Dean has the dirty-blond hair of the man I once saw at a funeral home, wearing a shirt from the local hockey team: bright green, a white number. He waited in line with the rest of us, and when finally he stood near the casket, he held the hand of the widow between his cupped palms, as if he were holding a bird.
Suzanne Cleary’s fifth book, The Odds (New York Quarterly Books 2025) was selected by Jan Beatty as winner of the 2024 Laura Boss Narrative Poetry Award. Recipient of two Pushcart Prizes, her poems appear in Best American Poetry and journals including The Atlantic, Southern Review, and Poetry London. She is Core Faculty in the MFA in Creative Writing Program of Converse University.