Spring on Ripley Road
By Dawn Potter
Five o’clock, first week of daylight savings.
Sunshine doggedly pursues night.
BEST OF THE NET 2023; Essay in THE BEST AMERICAN ESSAYS 2018;
(cited in BAE 2015, 2016, 2020, 2022); PUSHCART poetry finalist
By Dawn Potter
Five o’clock, first week of daylight savings.
Sunshine doggedly pursues night.
By Leslie Ullman
There is the moon, its silver hum
filling the valley. There are the wings
By Leslie Ullman
In the prolonged swathe of color…
By Helena Minton
A tall thin girl singing at the pulpit
stopped being herself, unable to drive to work…
By Jina Ortiz
Before the thonged bodysuit and heels,
there were fan-flairs, feathered tail skirts…
By Dzvinia Orlowsky
Mother promised her gift to my sister and me was no matter if we wanted her to or not, right after she’d die…
By Dzvinia Orlowsky
Even in China, the fans no longer
give a damn about Deep Purple’s last world…
By May Nou Chang
Memory tells me my parents rose like early morning mists
in split-second stillness, then gone, and that the sun never dropped lower…
By Robert Lietz
No poem intrudes — but the ponies breakfasting
and geese seem unconcerned — discovering…
By Emily Van Duyne
I wish I was an anti-type, but, I’m dull, I’m over
hyped. Today,
By Emily Van Duyne
Will, I wither straight
to you, from Atlantic City’s glitz, whatever sin
By Andrea Walls
Who would miss it if it wasn’t gone?
By Deborah DeNicola
She knows who I am. She even knows when I wonder
if she knows
By Deborah DeNicola
The walls of the two towers pick up their plaster and dust sucking upwards into blue.
By Helena Minton
Bad habits persist:
The nail biting, the bickering.
Beside the sand trap
like a bull fighter’s cape . . .
By Dennis Hinrichsen
The food is cold and so his mind drifts
a blue fin angling toward deeper water
By Dennis Hinrichsen
It was the watches I wanted, those radium dials
Glowing like bomb sights
By Laban Hill
Twenty right arms, sometimes together, but mostly not,
arc cutlasses in wide, irregular swings, nearly throwing themselves
By Betsy Sholl
If the doctor’s new machine is right, my eyes
are turning into old window glass, warped . . .
By Betsy Sholl
It’s always winter when I think of him,
gray skies, fog seeping up from the harbor . . .
By Theodore Deppe
Driving at dusk to the hospital to sit up with my mother,
I paused at the crossroads where half a century ago . . .
By Theodore Deppe
That particular part of the trip—the journey’s beginning—
he hadn’t figured out. Large hills terrified him,
and the train was climbing the north slopes of the Alps.
By Sandi Johnson
I take my required smoke break during the hours the sun is most reluctant to wake.
I relax on the edge of my Buick and extend my feet to the red hood of my mom’s Sunfire . . .
By Ben Berman
Whenever Marwizi would put down his beer and start winking at those heavy-set ladies of the night, I’d try to slip him a condom before he slipped to the back of the bar. Who has the time? he’d say. I’m practically on fire. The closest my loins ever came to . . .
By Ben Berman
When, as guests of honor in Vietnam,
we were served dog penis and the testicles
sat on our plates like Venn Diagrams . . .
By Kathleen Aguero
Hope springs eternal
but I couldn’t imagine how hope,
before it gets to that bubbling place,
forces itself through miles of dirt packed hard . . .
By Jina Ortiz
Mon Guadalupe,
I left you with my patriotic
sash around my waist…
By Richard Hoffman
That spring after my brother’s
death I worked in an orchard . . .
By Kurt Brown
It’s a little like Gulliver, pinned down by Lilliputians—
the whole planet woven back and forth with invisible bonds of electricity…
By Kathleen Aguero
All winter I drove to work Oh, what a beautiful morning!
singing in my head as if I believed in the power
of positive thinking…
By Kathleen Aguero
Voices fade then roar. Figures shifting
in and out of focus unbind his hands and feet…
Lazarus shoves them aside…
By Dzvinia Orlowsky
Every Friday my father’s voice, drunk
on plum Slivovitz, rose from our basement…
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