Do You Think About the Sea?

Ava Patel


I think about trees. I think about seeing a tree,
being a tree. I think about holding, bursting.

I think about being a little seed waiting for spring
and being small enough to fit in a closed palm.

I hate vastness. I won’t live long enough
to forget it. And no, I don’t think about the sea.


Ava Patel won Prole Magazine’s 2021 pamphlet competition with her debut pamphlet ‘Dusk in Bloom’.  She’s been published in webzines (London Grip; Ink, Sweat and Tears; Atrium; Porridge) and magazines (South Bank Poetry; Orbis; SOUTH; Dream Catcher; New Welsh Reader, The Seventh Quarry, DREICH).

Rehearsal

Fiona Ritchie Walker


That first summer in the cabin,
my flat belly, you too new

to be fluttering like the wings
in the eaves above us, ready to swirl

en masse across the moonlit sky,
this next generation,

Pipistrelle bats learning to fly.
Night after night I sat, reading, pretending

I wasn’t watching the clock,
wasn’t listening for the last one home.


Fiona Ritchie Walker is a Scottish writer, now based in Bournville, Birmingham. Her poetry and short fiction has been published widely in collections and anthologies, most recently in Amsterdam QuarterlyPostbox Magazine and Magma’s Islands issue.

You Are Not Your Death

Sarah Dickenson Snyder


I wish someone had said when I dived
into that well of fear. Where were those
Buddhist monks when I didn’t use the blue sink
in the upstairs bathroom for years after
a thermometer shattered and left numberless
glass slivers and tiny balls of mercury—Death,
a clinging partner, making me walk downstairs
to brush my teeth & stay up all night sometimes
alone with the darkness.


Sarah Dickenson Snyder’s collections include The Human Contract (2017), Notes from a Nomad (nominated for the Massachusetts Book Awards 2018), With a Polaroid Camera (2019), and Now These Three Remain (2023). She’s had Best of Net and Pushcart Prize nominations. Recent work is in RattleLily Poetry Review, and RHINO. See more.

Summer Night / Desperation

Hana Damon-Tollenaere


I think it might be
Too hot to bake cookies but
Let’s try something else let’s
Try taking the night off or
Building a pillow fort or
Unraveling
Thread by thread
The ways our stories might
Have overlapped had
Things gone differently


Hana Damon-Tollenaere was shortlisted in the Briefly Write Poetry Prize 2023.

Intercostal

Thomas Mixon


There was nothing. On the walk
I unfolded both my arms, but
not a single leaf would touch
my greedy floating ribs. I knew
I carried needs they were against.
I carried needs. They were against
my greedy floating ribs I knew
not a single leaf would touch.
I unfolded both my arms, but
there was nothing on the walk.


Thomas Mixon has poems in miniskirt magazineRattleRadon Journal, and elsewhere. He’s a Pushcart and Best of the Net nominee.

It’s

Devaki Devay


World bee day, it’s mother’s day,
It’s a blue moon, it’s boba day, it’s national turtle day, it’s a Friday, it’s our anniversary, it’s the day we met, it’s your birthday, it’s your birthday again, it’s twenty years ago
On this day, a picture
On your phone: You were celebrating – God knows what. But still,
Thank God you were.


Devaki Devay is a writer of poetry, fiction, and creative non-fiction. Their work can be found in several literary magazines, including Barren Magazine and Peatsmoke Journal, and has been included in Best Small Fictions 2023. Their debut poetry chapbook, LOOKING IN LIGHT, is out with Bottlecap Press.

Spring

Alice Louise Lannon


Today I saw baby geese
and a body

face down on the street.
All the way home I thought

about being lonely. I said
hello to the old man in the lobby;

he told me my legs were lovely,
that my husband had better

watch out.


Alice Louise Lannon is Scottish poet and writer of creative non-fiction, currently living in Vancouver, Canada. She holds an MLitt in Creative Writing from The University of Glasgow. Her publication credits include: Wet GrainFrom Glasgow to Saturn, Querencia and Last Stanza Poetry Journal. At the moment, she is working on a book about the sea & storytelling & women’s narratives.

now, where was I

Begüm


in a search of arms, I found pebbles along the way:
unwanted truths that I threw back to the water

you are lonely

or maybe I misheard.
How deep in the forest are we again?
the clouds have gone green since, and the mud,
perpendicular.


Begüm is an aspiring psychologist, who has been writing poetry for a few years now but only recently started to publicise her work. Most of her pieces are inspired by people she loves. She is now working on getting her first poetry book published. 

My Daughter Asks Me If I Was Happy

Sherre Vernon


Hinge of the fridge, fingernail. Trace
sand & a dancing dress. Hair up. Last
dance—burgundy crushed on velvet,
smiling. First dance—white at the mid-
night thighs, borrowed fit. My mouth
a row—clavicles bare, pins. Cat back
in. Thumbs tack in. Pebbles tracked
in. & grandmother curls—blue, black, silver.


Sherre Vernon (she/her/hers) is the author of two award-winning chapbooks: Green Ink Wings and The Name is Perilous. Sherre has been published in journals such as TAB and The Chestnut Review, nominated for Best of the Net, and anthologized in several collections including Fat & Queer and Best Small Fictions. Flame Nebula, Bright Nova, her full-length poetry collection, is available at Main Street Rag.

sapling

Laura Theis


this sprouting acorn is a little ragamuffin
who’s never been to nursery

she’s never met her mother
she raised herself in bitter rain-soaked earth

but one day she’ll grow up to be
an illustrious oak of renown

she will show them all
she will outgrow them all


Laura Theis‘ work is widely anthologised and appears in Poetry, Mslexia, Rattle, Aesthetica, etc. Her Elgin-Award-nominated debut ‘how to extricate yourself’, an Oxford Poetry Library Book-of-the-Month, won the Brian Dempsey Memorial Prize. A current Women Poets’ Prize finalist, she received the AM Heath Prize, Oxford Brookes Poetry Prize, Mogford Prize, Hammond House International Literary Award, and a 2022 Forward Prize nomination.