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Showing posts from June, 2020

CL Bledsoe and Michael Gushue

January January stumbles in with a pained whisper, hungover mornings and cold feet on hardwood. It's not the failure of good intentions we look forward to. It’s the steady reminder of dust falling on the tongue. This year, I'm going to get in shape so I can break every heart that ever broke mine, get rich and buy the bank that owns me, find the volcano with the elevator that goes to the center of the Earth, where the giant ants live. They have the best coffee and sweet rolls.  Everyone knows that. When the sky falls, it's easy to find malleable chickens under all the rubble  and hope that they've learned something useful  from the pressure. Until then, it’s a matter of waiting  for the splinters to attack, when all the tweezers  have gone dingo. What’s that ahead? Desert,  then jungle, then more desert, then a rest area  in the shape of a pumpkin that only sells plastic  daffodils that smell like your mother before she died. At

Brian Rihlmann

We, The Feeble Minded Just so you know we already feel useless like shriveled acorns dropped on the sidewalk even before you grind us under your heel before you scream at us— “take root... and grow already!” even in rich soil we’d be stunted maladapted growing along the ground huddled from the wind it’s a good thing not too many of us have kids to fuck up the gene pool, right? we’re doing you all a favor by making ourselves extinct like tribal elders who walk out into winter storms as the food supply dwindles call it compassion you’re welcome Brian Rihlmann was born in New Jersey and currently resides in Reno, Nevada. He writes free verse poetry, and has been published in The Blue Nib, The American Journal of Poetry, Cajun Mutt Press, The Rye Whiskey Review, and others. His first poetry collection, “Ordinary Trauma,” (2019) was published by Alien Buddha Press.

Nathan Graziano

Born on Good Friday I skipped the noontime mass on Ash Wednesday, my forehead unblemished by the priest’s thumbprint. I ate seven meatball subs for each day of Holy Week while any good Catholic would’ve been fasting, snuggling up with their hunger pains, constipated. Instead, I held The Last Supper in my own kitchen. Judas was drinking my beer and belching his prayers while Paul lost at solitaire, aching for a corndog. A commercial for Catholics Come Home came on   the television between innings of the Sox game. A clean-cut Christian guy, sober and fat, attested to reconnecting with Christ, like a Facebook friend, and it changed his life. Meanwhile, in a still-frame beside him, there was a picture of a slovenly man, thinner with mustard on his shirt—the former heathen   with bloodshot eyes and hair like weeds around a crucifix. “There he is,” I said to Peter, who was strictly a pothead. “He’s our thirteenth apostle, and he’s bringi

Gabriel Ricard

Liberation at South Vanderton Beach There’s no shame in going to the beach with a potential loved one, and trusting them enough to bury you up to your neck in the sand, and leave you there overnight. It’s only a problem if you keep doing it, and keep acting absolutely stunned that it keeps going down in the exact same way. If she bites off the more stressed-out parts of your forehead and eyebrows, tells you to strongly consider praying for a sudden oceanside hurricane, and leaves with your wallet, you need to decide then and there if this is really the best way to find someone who can guide your heart, without wrapping theirs up in cheap scotch tape. Do you really think so? Then go ahead, and keep your weekends free through the duration of the longest endless summer any of us have ever known. Just try to act like that stupid look on your face is something you’re working on for yet another one man show about yet another aging