by Patrycja Humienik

i keep close the intonation of my name
spoken in my mother’s voice. there was a time
i let people mispronounce it. i don’t

remember the sound of my grandfather’s voice. i’ve lost
the word for the flower i could be, impatient
blossom, used to never wear lipstick, now i smear

shades of azalea on my lips, i kiss everything, i leave
a mark. invocation. as in: a prayer i want
to repeat. the physicality of it: prayer, kissing, echoes

of a younger me. trying to be approved of.
i’m not saying i am better now. i look up how to say
anchor in my first language. once i didn’t need

to search. kotwica. my mama gave birth to me
a month after my parents arrived in the states.
nie mówiła wtedy po angielsku. it was

her first time on a plane. i know nothing
of ground, of letting the ship sleep.
i fly for hours to visit. if i could

bind myself to a place, put cut flowers in a vase,
i would thank my mother that way. instead
i pour the petals out.


*This poem won Third Place in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Patrycja Humienik, daughter of Polish immigrants, is a writer & performer based in Seattle, WA. Her poetry is featured/forthcoming in BOAAT, Passages North, Poetry Northwest, Hobart, Four Way Review, The Boiler, Sporklet, and elsewhere. Patrycja is a 2021 Jack Straw Fellow, and was a fall 2020 Brooklyn Poets Fellow. Find her on twitter @jej_sen.


by Richelle Buccilli



The crackling of fire? No,
acorns that sound like footsteps,

animals in the trees. The other world
from which we stay grounded.

My son sifts through leaves
and sand, a yellow shovel

in his hand. What kind of thoughts
must he have? The kind of life

inside, behind trees? The maple
in our backyard, her strong bark

as we looked, searching for birds
or a squirrel, then the wind as if

moving my thoughts, an acorn
breaks the skin of my right hand:

how it mirrors the bumped
lines and bruising of the bark,

that tender layer, which, according
to my mother, can tell a lot about

a person, what kind of work they
do, how smooth or cracked, if

anything delicate is left—
Please tell me about mine.

I can’t distinguish from what’s both
a new gentleness and a brutal tolerance for love.


*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Richelle Buccilli holds a BA in Creative Writing from Seton Hill University and her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Sweet Tree Review, Yes Poetry, The Main Street Rag, Rogue Agent, Wicked Alice, and elsewhere. She lives in Pittsburgh with her husband and son.

by Robbi Nester


to Richard



We start by laying out the tiles,
the deluxe set your mother bought
one Christmas long ago, the one
with off-white tiles, like teeth, matching
brackets to lay out the words, metal pegs
to tote up points. Best of all, a board
that we could spin to face us, each
in turn. We couldn’t wait to pick out
letters, ponder combinations, gnawing
on your mother’s peanut butter cookies
till the board stuck to the table and the
buttermilk was gone. The others hated
playing us. We always won. Now, it’s you
and me, the kid grown up and moved away.
Worthy partners and opponents, curators
of words, we challenge one another.
You lose a turn, then I do. I’m stuck
with the x; too many vowels. You find
a clever way to use the Q. There’s no one
here but us. It hardly matters that some
tiles are missing. We don’t mind the gaps,
forget for just a moment empty streets
and dire statistics. Let’s make it last.
We’re pondering the choices we still have.
Everyone we ever played stays in the game.


*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________


Robbi Nester is the author of four books of poetry, a chapbook, Balance (White Violet, 2012) and three collections: A Likely Story (Moon Tide, 2014), Other-Wise (Kelsay, 2017), and Narrow Bridge (Main Street Rag, 2019). She has also edited three anthologies--The Liberal Media Made Me Do It! (Nine Toes, 2014), Over the Moon: Birds, Beasts, and Trees (published as a special issue of Poemeleon Poetry Journal in 2017), and a new one that hasn't yet found a home. She is an elected member of the Academy of American Poets, and her work has appeared widely in journals and anthologies.

by Heidi Seaborn


O fat
and dumb
and white—

O precious tickets
to a carnival.
Cotton candy.
Disneyland Matterhorn
roller coaster.

O show stealers—
main stage act,
I’m your back-up singer.

O tricksters—
how dare you
pretend
to guard a heart.


*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Heidi Seaborn is Executive Editor of The Adroit Journal and author of the award-winning debut collection Give a Girl Chaos (C&R Press/Mastodon Books, 2019) and two chapbooks. Since Heidi returned to writing in 2016, she’s won or been shortlisted for over two dozen awards and her poetry has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies such as American Poetry Journal, Frontier, Greensboro Review, The Missouri Review, Mississippi Review, Penn Review and as the daily poem in The Slowdown and SWWIM. She holds an MFA in Poetry from NYU. www.heidiseabornpoet.com

by Alexis Rhone Fancher

You Ferrari baby. You Lotus Elan. You dream man. Smooth moves, always some sleek bitch on your arm, and me side-kickin’, just afterthought. So I shoot you, replicate you in oversized prints spread out on my be d like facsimile. Those blown-up biceps, fine-tuned torso, face up on my pillow, your perfect pores. How the camera loves you, baby, those smoldering, Billy Dee shots aimed straight at a woman’s vulnerability. How you juice them, seduce them, your voice dropping an octave when a woman calls. And you get all Barry White. You’ve kept up the upkeep. Changed the oil. Sleek. Toned. You Alfa and Romeo, baby. You candy apple. You metal fleck. The wind buffs glitter all around you. That night at my studio after one too many Hennessy, we stand toe to toe, and I turn my lips to yours, ask, why not me? You grab my ass with two hands, squeeze, and shrug. Baby got no back. And I flash to that chorus line of sloe-eyed beauties you’ve bedded, each one bottom-heavy, riper than I could ever be. As if derrière were the measure of a woman. Let’s get back to work, you say. You rev up your engine. I flick on the lights. Oh, baby, you shimmer, you gleam. Stand up, I tell you. Pull the shirt above your head. Now you can’t see me for real. You, who can’t see the Beemers for the beaters. You, who wouldn’t know love if it bit you on the ass.


*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

Photo Credit: Photo of C.W. by Alexis Rhone Fancher, 2016
________________________________________________________________

Alexis Rhone Fancher is published in Best American Poetry, Rattle, Poetry East, Hobart, VerseDaily, American Journal of Poetry, Duende, SWWIM, Plume, Diode, PedestalMagazine, Wide Awake: Poets of Los Angeles, and elsewhere. She’s authored five published poetry collections, most recently, Junkie Wife (Moon Tide Press, 2018), and The Dead Kid Poems (KYSO Flash Press, 2019). EROTIC: New & Selected, from New York Quarterly, and another full-length collection (in Italian) by Edizioni Ensemble, Italia, will both be published in early 2021. Her photographs are published worldwide, including River Styx, and the covers of Pithead Chapel, Heyday and Witness. A multiple Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net nominee, Alexis is poetry editor of Cultural Weekly. www.alexisrhonefancher.com

by Janice Northerns

Red Jello in the ice box—a constant—
no dimpled copper mold, but the Pyrex

dish, clear oblong glass shimmering
with the cheap glow of sugar, gelatin,

and red dye #40. In her shirtwaist
and crisp apron, she opened that white

enameled door, where sustenance shone
in iced light, glossy housewife’s magazine

ad, animal sacrifice in fine print:
gelatin from collagen of boiled bones

and hide, ground down to magic powder,
instant 1950s sheen. She bought it

by the box. She gobbled it by the bowl.
In place of pearls around her neck, she strung

holes she’d dug in the dirt where she’d buried
her words. In place of high heels, she inked

Bible verses on the soles of her feet,
trailing smeary hope and admonition

as she walked across the damp linoleum
of her just-mopped floor. Want congealed

under her tongue and rotted, along
with teeth—all false by 1964.

After years of gnawing with a porcelain
smile she’d been told was good as a real one,

her jawbone worn thin as their bank account,
she could no longer chew the bread of life.

Behind that shining white portal—the blood
and the body, the ruby sacrament.

She rose in the night, her longing so faint
all it took to fill it was a bowl of sweet lies.



*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Janice Northerns is the author of Some Electric Hum (Lamar University Literary Press, 2020). Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in many journals, including Ploughshares, The Laurel Review, descant, The Chariton Review, and Southwestern American Literature. Awards include a Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts residency, a Sewanee Writers’ Conference scholarship, and the Robert S. Newton Creative Writing Award. The author grew up on a farm in rural West Texas and holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Texas Tech University. She and her husband live in southwest Kansas. Read more at www.janicenortherns.com or follow her on Twitter and Instagram @JaniceNortherns

by Sarah Stockton

*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

After various stints as both staff and adjunct professor in urban universities, raising two kids, and years of freelancing in the online world of editing and writing, Sarah Stockton, MA now lives in the Pacific Northwest and is the editor of River Mouth Review. Sarah's poems have appeared in Glass Poetry, Rise Up Review, The Shallow Ends, SWIMM, Kissing Dynamite, and Crab Creek Review, among others. Her debut chapbook is Time's Apprentice (dancing girl press, 2021).

by Dion O'Reilly

From the baselines in Big Sister’s
bedroom, from the longhairs
necking with her
in the backseat of the Lincoln,
or stuck together
like dolphins in the deep end,
I knew something of sex,
but I suffered
a nervy pulse I couldn’t decipher.
Wires crossed and fizzed.
Their crux flickered
a teensy bulb, center front
of my hairless cleft.
Crowning bitty head
in a wimply fold.
Tight whorl that needed
soothing. Clenchy itch,
which pressed me to straddle
the edge of my third-grade chair.
glide side to side
on a hidden pin.
Mommy’s lip curled
with what looked like desire.
She pronounced me Dirty. Swarming.
Big Sister and her boyfriends
snickered and scorned.
Still, as I sipped my tea in bone
china with bloody roses,
as I looked at the naked
ceiling pulse, I pushed
my center fire.
Poked and poked to keep it quiet.
When I lay down, it grew louder.


*This poem was a Finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________

Dion O’Reilly's first book, Ghost Dogs, was published in February 2020 by Terrapin Books. Her work appears in Cincinnati Review, Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, Narrative, The New Ohio Review, The Massachusetts Review, New Letters, Sugar House Review, Rattle, The Sun, and other literary journals and anthologies. Her poetry has been nominated for several Pushcarts and been shortlisted for a variety of prizes. She is a member of The Hive Poetry Collective, which produces podcasts and events, and she teaches ongoing workshops on a farm in the Santa Cruz Mountains--now on Zoom.

by Rita Maria Martinez


These hands ache from composing.
These hands are imperfect and arthritic.
These hands are dipped in hot paraffin wax.
These hands soak in pools of ice water.
Right now they seek warmth in the pockets
of my jeans. Sandwiched between
someone else’s hands they seek shelter.
They explore. They dive into fleecy banks of hair.
They have a masochistic desire to return
to Sister Joyce’s sixth-grade English class
jotting what seemed like worthless vocab,
ink spilling from a Bic like bird droppings.
These hands want to inscribe the name
of my first love across the sole of my shoes,
to pry his mouth open and graffiti his tongue.
These are praying hands. These are worshipping hands.
They skim the smooth surface of rosary beads before bed.
These are working hands. These are writing hands.
They enjoy the luxury of a thick pen with cushy padding
where thumb, index and middle finger rest.
These hands produce squiggles burdened by meaning,
as there’s meaning in each small hand that stopped growing
after middle school, each ring finger measuring
a meager 4.5, same size as Abuela Gloria’s withered
hands inside the coffin at Rivero Funeral Home
where a thoughtless mortician wrapped a plastic rosary
around her dead digits instead of the family approved one
from Spain that smelled of roses. I almost screamed
when Mami tried to swap rosaries and untangle the stubborn
string of cheap beads that clung to Abuela’s wrinkled hands
the way the wrinkled roots of the orchid adhered
to the bark of her avocado tree, like a needy lover.
The first poem I wrote was about Gloria’s bulging
nose and wild gray hair giving the impression
she was a witch as she drew in her white notepad,
fruit trees branching from her hands as words branch
from mine, hatch from a discomforting feeling
akin to butterflies, which prompts me to stare at my hands,
fumbling hands that can’t catch a football or open
wine bottles, struggling hands, forgetful hands that lose
car keys, misplace eye glasses somewhere in the house,
beneath the bed perhaps, and it’s just a question of time
before I find them, before I spot the elusive snakeskin
silver clutch, the riddle of sentences revolving in my head,
parts of speech kickboxing past clutter and dust,
words discovered in an old letter I found rummaging
for postage stamps in my father’s desk: I want to pass
the G.E.D. to make my twelve-year-old daughter proud
.
Papi wanted to become an agronomist, but repaired
typewriters and vacuums at Sears for thirty-five years.
Washing dishes was his first Miami job. I’ve contemplated
how soap suds felt between his fingers on forsaken stacks
of china as the moon bathed the restaurant with its fractured light.
He now owns a pool maintenance business.
While typing I smell the chlorine on my father’s hands,
disinfectant on mother’s as she clutches a paper towel
to clean the kitchen counter and anything else
because her cleaning, like my writing, is compulsive,
because she dusts to extract sense from a senseless world,
because she is sixty and set in her ways,
though I’d like to see her kneeling in the garden,
dirt trapped beneath fingernails where it belongs,
soil smudged across those hands that pinched
my side and ears, parted and braided hair,
tied shoelaces and held my own,
hands that stroked her swollen belly
before I was born.


*This poem was a semi-finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.


_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Rita Maria Martinez loves all things Jane Eyre. Her poetry collection—The Jane and Bertha in Me (Kelsay Books)—is inspired by Charlotte Brontë’s fiery governess and infamous madwoman. The poet's work has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize and appears in publications like the Notre Dame Review, Ploughshares, and The Best American Poetry Blog. Her poetry also appears in the textbook Three Genres: The Writing of Fiction/Literary Nonfiction Poetry and Drama; in the anthology Caña Quemada: Contemporary Cuban Poetry in English and Spanish; and in the anthology Grabbed: Poets and Writers on Sexual Assault, Empowerment, and Healing. Martinez’s recent poetry raises awareness about the challenges and triumphs inherent in navigating life with chronic daily headaches and migraines. Martinez lives in Florida and earned an MFA in Creative Writing from FIU. Visit Rita's website at comeonhome.org/ritamartinez, follow her on Twitter @cubanbronteite, or on Instragram @rita.maria.martinez.poet

by Kyle Potvin

Brave the tundra, where species cling to life.
Brave infusions that chemical a vein.

Brave a city blackout with its window-shatter,
and lightning igniting a forest away.

Brave scoldings and finger-pointing.
Voices louder than yours.

Brave your sad past, your afraid past.
All that is to come.

Brave the horizon of gray.
Brave the whimper of years.

Brave these trees, first maple, then oak,
losing their familiars, one by one.

Breathe again and again.
Brave again.




*This poem was a semi-finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Kyle Potvin’s chapbook, Sound Travels on Water, won the Jean Pedrick Chapbook Award. She is a two-time finalist for the Howard Nemerov Sonnet Award. Her poems have appeared in Bellevue Literary Review, Whale Road Review, Tar River Poetry, Ecotone, The New York Times, and others. Her poetry collection, Loosen, is coming from Hobblebush Books in January 2021. Kyle lives in southern New Hampshire.

by Michelle Bitting


Oh Unadilla, Nebraska, I think of you,
old homestead to the women
in my family, your cows and cornfields
and bank foreclosures, your broken
banisters and cellars lined with jars
of slippery fruit suspended in the dark,
of great grandma left with all those children
to feed, cleaning latrines on trains
full of businessmen and cons. Thank
God for prohibition and the stove-savvy
females we turned out to be, the cooking
and scrubbing whores, sucking it up
like kitchen sinks, slick as coffee cans
full of grease. If anyone could make
the moon shine in a tub it was us. Who else
was going to feed them? Babies in their hand-
me-down dungarees, crooked teeth
and braids with siblings left to fill in
for who went missing, left to spoon
meal onto hungry tots’ tongues, landing
the grainy lumps like lopsided planes
in abandoned fields, mouths that swallowed,
stayed stuck. Then the runtiest ordered
to sit on porcelain plinths with timers
and firm instructions not to budge until buzzers
signaled a turd gone swimming. All this
so mama could make fire somewhere else
out of what she yanked from the earth, mashing
it to burnt liquid. What's deemed wicked.
What people will pay for when they’re dying for it.




*This poem was a semi-finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Michelle Bitting was short-listed for the 2020 Montreal International Poetry Prize, won the 2018 Fischer Poetry Prize, Quarter After Eight’s 2018 Robert J. DeMott Short Prose Contest, and a fourth collection of poetry, Broken Kingdom won the 2018 Catamaran Prize and was named to Kirkus Reviews’ Best of 2018. She has poems published in The American Poetry Review, Narrative, The Los Angeles Review, Vinyl Poetry, The Paris-American, SWWIM, Love's Executive Order, The Raleigh Review, Green Mountains Review, Plume, Tupelo Quarterly, and others. Recently, she was a finalist in both the 2019 Sonora Review and New Millennium Flash Prose contests. Michelle holds an MFA in Poetry and a PhD in Mythological Studies. She is a Lecturer in Poetry and Creative Writing at Loyola Marymount University and Film Studies at Ashford U. www.michellebitting.com

by Hilary King


The day my 10-year-old daughter started taking Prozac,
I go full baggallini. Cry-walk into my local gift shop,
stationery in the back, greeting cards up front,
in between bath salts, travel alarms, fuzzy socks.
This was my mother’s store. Not mine. Not

yet. Please not yet the need for socks both fuzzy
and slip-proof. Couldn’t I still trust where I tread
in the world? Until my daughter needed a pill
to push through her clouds, I kept my dreams loose,
tossed into whatever I carried with me every day.

I was ambitious and Christ my shoulder hurt, carrying
a bag full of notebooks,books, pens, lipstick,
another notebook, another book.
If an hour or an idea appeared, I was ready.
Now, therapists and teacher conferences later,

I wanted a separate pocket each for
grief, for anger, for courage.
What I needed to be ready for now
had to be packed precisely and worn throughout the body,
right across the heart.


*TBT contest winner! This poem won First Place in the “Poetry for Purses” Competition in honor of Kate Spade and suicide prevention.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Hilary King won SWIMM’s 2019 Kate Spade “Purses for Poetry” Contest, although she claims not to be a purse person. Her poems have appeared in Minerva Rising, Fourth River, Belletrist, PANK, Blue Fifth Review, Cortland Review and other publications. She is the author of the book of poems The Maid’s Car. Originally from Virginia, she now lives in the San Francisco Bay Area of California.

by Millie Tullis


Once you said I was cold
enough to freeze the cock

off of Satan. I’ve imagined
my body the way you saw it

in that moment— marble
tough. Exhaling a mean

winter wind. The devil
is a man broken

down to a hunk of ice. Thick
and dead in my hand. I like

to think I was happiest
in a real house. Argentina

lasted long enough for chickens
eggs milk the goat—a little stove.

Here you’ll call me
liar. I did like

the running when we were
running. My small heart

a pot crying to boil over.
And for a while I liked what came

after the running. That wet
loosening of bodies. But

didn’t I love Cholila?
Wasn’t I happy that time?

You were the one who wanted
surprise. The surprise of your skin

in my sleep. I woke my dress yanked
to my belly. You already

half inside wanting
the breath half out of me

and still the shock of your weight
in my dreams. Do you remember

winning the puppy at
the St. Louis World’s Fair?

Of course we couldn’t
take him on the boat

—the thing started to shit
and cry on day two—

but I remember your face
moving towards me. Darling

half throttled quiet
behind your back. Your

massive hands
like red dirt.

Something about
the way you loved

me. My pretty talent
for silently taking

in your
gifts.


*This poem was a semi-finalist in the SWWIM For-the-Fun-of-It Contest.

____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Millie Tullis is an MFA poetry candidate at George Mason University. Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Sugar House Review, Rock & Sling, Cimarron Review, Ninth Letter, Juked, and elsewhere. She serves as the Assistant Editor for Best of the Net and Poetry Editor and Social Media Manager for Phoebe. She also reads for Poetry Daily. You can find her on twitter @millie_tullis.

It's Winter Break!

We’re taking a two-week publishing hiatus to visit with our families, eat too many cookies, wrap and unwrap things, read piles of books we’ve been meaning to get to— and, since we’re in Miami, go to the beach.

Although we’ll be on break, submissions will remain open. Our response time may be a bit delayed, but rest assured we cannot wait to read your work!

Thank you for reading, writing, and supporting SWWIM! We love our community of writers: we love sharing your work, promoting your work, and shouting from the virtual rooftops to amplify your voices.

Wishing you all lots of peace, love, and poetry this holiday season and always!

See you in 2021!

by Sara Dallmayr


The nurse
pushed a needle into the twist

of cobalt currents under my skin.
In nervous solidarity I blurted out

Bifurcate: to divide into two parts,
a divergence
.”

The three-eyed light above the bed
settled a vacant stare. The light had

a name: Infinity. Of course. But the vein
blew its universal pulse on the sheet,

spilling its ceaseless rhetoric.
I said because like the pattern

of veins the words pumped dumbly:
“Two veins diverged in a yellow wood, and I,

I took the vein less traveled by,
” except
the nurse didn’t laugh since he had blown

the second attempt and the vein itself.
Robert said he wasn’t the type

who did things twice, even though he admitted
he liked bifurcated veins. Nestled deep, a twinge.

Inside me, two ovaries diverged, one swollen
and the other unremarkable except in medical

terms unremarkable denotes perfection in shape
and function so in this empty, aging infinite tree

with its lowly eyes and teeth and prominent left
branch of irregular leaves, the light with

three immeasurable eyes, I forgot my mask
with its two loops. The truth

only breathing breeds inescapable focus.
And the needle slid through a place we

weren’t even looking, not even on the path
but on the bend of my left shoulder,

some silent angel
or a forgotten wing.

_______________________________________________________________

Sara Dallmayr is originally from Kalamazoo, Michigan. She received a BA in English from Western Michigan University. Dallmayr is currently a rural mail carrier in South Bend, Indiana, where she cohabitates with her husband and two cats, Olga and Hermione. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Esthetic Apostle, 3Elements, Write Launch, High Shelf Press, Third Coast, and Texas Review.

by Jules Jacob


I was gifted an eastern red columbine.
What more could I ask of a volunteer plant releasing
hydrogen cyanide than one with hermaphrodite
flowers pollinated by bumblebees & hummingbirds.

I was gifted a bird I’d never seen.
Russet-gold feathers, white-specked underbelly, eyes
to the hot pepper suet, claws the swaying cable line.
He sang his presence the previous evening.

I was gifted a quick-stepped intruder.
A devotee to chain link fences who softened
the fall of a latch. Brown thrasher, I cherish
your willingness to draw blood defending your own.

Brown thrasher, the Audubon Guide to North
American Birds says your numbers dwindle.
Describes a leaf-tossing mimic capable
of singing a thousand songs as common.

________________________________________________________________

Jules Jacob is a writer and child advocate living in Southwest Missouri whose work appears in journals and anthologies including SWWIM Every Day, Plume Anthology 8, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, Rust + Moth, and elsewhere. She’s the author of The Glass Sponge (Finishing Line Press) and a recipient of the Virginia Center for the Creative Art’s fellowship in Auvillar, France. Learn more at julesjacob.com


by Meg Yardley

“The rovers were designed to last for 90 days on the martian surface.”
- NASA website, Mars Exploration Rovers


See red: read heat
even as cold cracks the glass
face of the apparatus.

Although there is no scientific consensus on how
to measure absence or the history of absence,
send vapor samples from craters for testing.

Collect soil under the unmathematical rumble
of volcanoes, intervals of thick ash,
table mountains interred in winter.

Searching for liquid, find it all frozen
at the poles. What a relief –
to cease flowing, to calcify, to become
unmoved. To wash hands with ice.

Down cliff sides, with spiral radials
absorbing shock from spokes,
with cleats for traction, roll
over butterscotch terrain and rust,
magnetic dust, chaos in the canyons.

Drill where you can, until
the sand traps your wheels. Then

you're on your own.

_______________________________________________________________

Meg Yardley lives in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in publications including SWWIM, Bodega Magazine, Cagibi, Glass: A Journal of Poetry, and the Women’s Review of Books.


by Leah Umansky


Once you hear it all, once you dream past or burn through

the techniques, the torture, those emotional blizzards

of heartbreak, the great guided guttural pain and

their responses, they are merely barren, simply vacant. Simply put: a desert

of want. And the response is to always have a spare, or a back-up, and to bear any heat

as to keep it running over, running under, and running across

the page, and the mind. Who’s to say at least you and got yours? Please. All torrents

would tell you otherwise. A flood is more than a flood; it is a pouring through,

past what is natural, past baselines, fallacies and logic. It is a narrow

belief of boundaries and delicacies. These imaginary lines you draw get you started;
everything else just passes.


_______________________________________________________________

Leah Umansky is the author of two full length collections, The Barbarous Century, and Domestic Uncertainties among others. She earned her MFA in Poetry at Sarah Lawrence College and is the curator and host of The COUPLET Reading Series in NYC. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in such places as Thrush Poetry Journal, Glass Poetry Journal, The New York Times, POETRY, Guernica, The Bennington Review, The Academy of American Poets' Poem-A-Day, Rhino, and Pleiades. She is resisting the tyrant with her every move. She can be found at www.leahumansky.com or @leah.umansky on IG.

by Amy Pence

Time deforms, both endless and too fast.
My daughter, hours from me, arrives by car.

Hours to drive, my daughter departs by car.
Red traces the map, a field fraught with poppies.

Contact tracing shoots maps with red like poppies.
Another week like a month, though months fly.

Weak in the mouth, months fray now and fly.
Invincibles ignore contagion, unmask.

Invincibility becomes contagious, a mask.
Without roots to ground us, time comes apart.

Without time to hold us, we space apart.
Goodbyes arrive too quickly, could be our last.

Goodbyes alarm me, who might be last?
Time deforms: both endless and too fast.

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Amy Pence authored two poetry collections, the hybrid book [It] Incandescent, and two chapbooks, including 2019’s Your Posthumous Dress: Remnants from the Alexander McQueen Collection (dancing girl press). Poems and fiction have appeared in Denver Quarterly, The Oxford American, Juked, and WSQ. A full-time tutor in Atlanta, she teaches poetry-writing at Emory University and in other workshop settings. Links to other work: www.amypence.com

by Didi Jackson


With the leisure of the snow
falling like a Rothko silence

over the morning, I am astonished.
Although chic-a-dee and titmouse flurry

to the feeder, they do so as timid as winter light
which daily asks for a little more patience

in order to emerge from the frigid night.
The flakes tumble as slow as prophecy,

occasionally buoyant on an invisible breath.
I do not suffer insomnia. I prefer to beat

the dawn; but this I shouldn’t have to explain:
for the morning is naked and beautiful

and yawns many times before turning
on the light. I am there

to see. The birds drop in and out
like lures in a dark ocean littered

with loitering stars. What a drowsy way
to start the day with the silence of God.

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Didi Jackson is the author of Moon Jar (Red Hen Press, 2020). Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, New England Review, Ploughshares, Kenyon Review, and the Academy of American Poets' Poem-a-day. After having lived in Florida and Vermont teaching art history and creative writing, she will soon join the faculty of Vanderbilt University in Spring 2021 teaching creative writing.