Kaitlyn Owens

Vanishing

I wish I didn’t cry at creeping vines

forming on bungalows, at bus station

lost and found receipts and forgotten gloves.

At the 60s spirits smoking Pall Malls

in my living room on Sundays evenings

in February when the heat kicks on.

Old dogs and moth-bitten baby photos,

worn-in recliners and class reunions

and lightning bugs in clear jars with the tops

punched out, a useless extension of life.

 

At the fire breather and the firefighter

holding hands on the Zipper at the county fair.

At stamps collections and scrapbooks at the Goodwill

and the certainty of sunflowers, heads seeking

what scorches them, their devotion unwavering

even after the evening sky dims to navy.

 

These weren’t my riddle to solve but they weren’t clues either,

just Faberge eggs behind glass at a museum,

public presents originating from a Russian tsar

who also fell victim to a vivacious magician

performing sleight-of-hand tricks with white rabbits and quarters.

 

At the tsar and rabbits and quarters.

At how they disappeared.

 

Kaitlyn Owens

Kaitlyn Owens writes poetry about the inheritances we carry—family patterns unseen on medical forms yet shaping us deeply. Her work has appeared in Fjords Review and Novus Literary Arts Journal, and she has received an International Merit Award from The Atlanta Review. A product manager by day and a restorer of old things by night, she believes in naming truths, however complicated. Visit her at www.kaitlynowens.squarespace.com.

Karen Kilcup, Featured Author

Tract Housing, 1950s

My father pushes a red mower

with swirling blades he sharpens

first, scraping a black stone over

every spiral edge. His grass is precisely

one inch high from top

to bottom.

 

I roll in the neat cut, stubble pricks

my cheek. Sneeze. Face down

damp ground, green spears pierce

near wormholes, miniature mountains,

volcanoes spewed by ridged wriggles,

dark pink, tubular, timid.

 

One Sunday morning he rents

a boat, rows us into the harbor

to drop hooks. Our bait is night

crawlers. They’re bigger than

regular worms and try harder

to escape, and you can dig

them only after dark.

They bite and squirm when

he stabs them with the hook,

jams them down till the insides

ooze out. We catch three flat

flounder.  A bottom feeder

now it’s old, one has two eyes

on its back, none on the white

belly. He slits them open,

scrapes out the guts, slices off

the head. That night, we bite

white flesh on white

plates, wield engraved

silver forks and knives.

I know he doesn’t like me

flattening the grass, but

I can’t help myself.

 

Karen Kilcup

Raised in the area the Abenaki people called Quascacunquen, Karen Kilcup is the Elizabeth Rosenthal Excellence Professor Emerita at UNC Greensboro. She is a past president of the Society for the Study of American Women Writers and the Robert Frost Society. Her academic books include Fallen Forests: Emotion, Embodiment, and Ethics in American Women’s Environmental Writing, 1781-1924, which was supported by a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship and was named a Choice magazine Outstanding Academic Title, as was her Who Killed American Poetry?: From National Obsession to Elite Possession. Since 2020, Kilcup has focused on writing poetry and has published in numerous anthologies and journals, including Poetry EastMinnesota Review, and Poet Lore. Her book The Art of Restoration (2023) was awarded the 2021 Winter Goose Poetry Prize, and her chapbook, Red Appetite (2023), received the 2022 Helen Kay Poetry Chapbook Prize. A Pushcart Prize nominee, she has a second chapbook, Black Nebula (2023). The title poem from her second full-length collection, Feathers and Wedges (2024), was awarded the 2022 Julia Peterkin Literary Award for Poetry. She lives in the seacoast of New Hampshire with her partner Alan, in the company of skunks, bobcats, coyotes, foxes, otters, fishers, and bears.

Don Farrell

thieves and murderers

 

she gently sacrificed the sparrow

eggs under a strawberry moon

to a mother and her baby raccoons.

just cells in shells, nothing

breathing or eating. it had to be

hard for her. so soft,

her critter loving soul will be haunted

until wrens return to nesting

where sparrows strangled their young.

a simple repair, a smaller hole,

there will be wren babies

eating inch worms and slugs,

beetles and bugs.

imagination, her merciless gift

will see them seize the eggs,

hear them crack the shells and lick

clean every crumb with tiny raccoon tongues.

invasives, she knows, those

house sparrows, but they’re birds,

not yet birds, but on the way to be

someday with pumping hearts and mating

calls, sunwarmed feathers and puddle baths.

maybe if they ate the wrens

to survive like hawks, not just to steal a nest

like soldiers.

Don Farrell

Don Farrell lives in Cambridge, MN with 3 sons, 2 dogs and other critters where land transitions from forest to prairie. He holds a monthly open mic at The ARC Retreat Center in Stanchfield, MN and a bi-weekly zoom poetry critique group. He has a full-length book accepted for publication by Fernwood Press. He has poems in Bodega Magazine, Thimble Literary Magazine, Exist Otherwise, Shoegaze Literary, Brushfire Literary Journal, Five Fleas, The Orchard Poetry Journal, Suisun Valley Review, Men Matters Journal, Willows Wept Review, Harrow House Journal, Mason Jar Press, and New Square of Sancho Panza Poetry. He hopes to leave this planet without getting what he deserves.

Pete Follansbee

Why Thinking About Taxis Makes Me Sad

I could never trust an Uber or a Lyft,

and I have my own car anyhow.

But should I have the need, I’d prefer

a taxi with bright colors or checkers

and the wide, bulbous car body, as if

other car bodies or frames are underneath,

so the taxi can shed one, like a cicada does,

and move on to its next destination or passenger,

someone waiting streetside and almost desperate

for a ride and to get somewhere safely

in a city where the passenger knows nobody

and needs to get somewhere that may look like

a home for one or two nights and where

there may be the potential for a face that

might make softer the darkness and the unknown

of an unfamiliar city or maybe even someplace

in the country where without a full moon or any

moonlight, the darkness feels like a seal of wax

on the back of an envelope that will never be

cracked by anyone I know or love but only by

a stranger in the night behind a desk with keys

hanging on hooks on the wall and he can’t or won’t

find mine, so I keep walking in the dark

in some cold warehouse district like those

on TV where they find the dead or barely

alive bodies in an old tractor trailer, or

in some cornfield just beyond the edge of the lights

on the highway where the arms of those I love

have become the stubble left long

after the harvest, and the sun

has gone down on my life.

 

Buzz Lightyear Won’t Forgive You,

nor will the ceramic cat

with the Felix tick-tock eyes.

It’s the people far down

on the street that matter, those

we can barely see for our being

so far up in this silver skyscraper

that makes us forget and not care

about who’s below.

 

But we can get close again, and the people

can get large, so we don’t forget who and what

they are, so they don’t have to flee

when the hammer drops and the sparks fly.

 

Doug Funnie we know

is your hero, so quiet and unassuming.

He knows what’s important: the weave

of the living room rug, the fine-enough cotton

sheets that make up your bed, the doctor

who once made house calls and popped

the cork at your wedding.

 

These are the people who call

your name, who will pat your shoulder

when you need it, who know that magna tiles

gather even more color in the late morning

sun on the porch floor where toys tell

the stories, where playtime is the

supreme value that we should talk about

in church and political speeches,

so we never forget what it’s like

to be pushed on a swing, to have the touch

on the back that keeps us going,

so we don’t forget that hand and those

fingers when we let go and throw ourselves

into the air, assured of the balance

the arms will find and gather

to stick the landing and make sure

the heart is everywhere

the blood flows and may want or think

to go.

 

Pete Follansbee

Pete Follansbee likes writing in the early morning dark and lives in Richmond, Virginia, a good place to survive climate change and political uncertainty. This summer, Pete’s poems have appeared online in Humana Obscura, the Rockvale Review, and Autumn Sky Poetry Daily. In the past, Pete’s poems have been finalists in contests and have found publication in The North American Review, Barrow Street, The New Guard, About Place, New Millenium Writings, and elsewhere. An MFA graduate of the University of Iowa’s Writers’ Workshop, Pete was a T.A. for poet Tim Seibles at the summer 2017 edition of The Writer’s Hotel and a Faculty Assistant for their 2021 Virtual Poetry Weekend. And this coming June 2026, Pete looks forward to being a Director’s Assistant at The Writer’s Hotel in Maine. Pete has a website of his published poems at petefollansbee.com.

Nicholas Haines

Walking Beds

Not in any particular direction.

But somehow in concert

with the other furniture.

Me as a boy says to me

“Why don’t you stop them?”

“The days go by,” I say,

praying that this is weighty,

meaningful. But I know

me as a boy knows

that it means as much

as karaoke lyrics that flash

on the screen and never

get sung. “Straight up now

tell me,” me as a boy whispers.

“Do you love me?” Once again,

I am dumbstruck. I have no answer.

I can only pretend that the beds

have slept as well as us, slept

through both of our lives,

waking only in fits of temptation.

I flop down. I believe I know

where the bed is. But my elbow

folds and smarts. Sudden impact

feels unusual, lighting the mind

like a flashing screen. The bed must have

been walking again. I knew

where it was yesterday. “My memory

is distinct,” I wheeze to me

as a boy, trying to put myself back together,

knowing parts of me have been knocked

loose and remain on the floor. “I know,”

says me as a boy, “But still I don’t

believe you.” Precocious little fucker.

But his life will be precarious,

never knowing what to confront

when he wakes, or how awake

he’ll be, like the way he imagines

the consciousness of a daffodil

he watches grow in stop-motion.

 

Nicholas Haines

Nicholas Haines is a writer, teacher, and musician from New York’s Hudson Valley. His work has previously appeared in the Shawangunk Review and Chronogram.

Deron Eckert

A J. G. Ballard Kind of Gone

 after Patti Smith

 

The first cool dawn following the unwavering

humidity Kentucky summers are known for, a layer

of mist containing upwards of a century of morning

 

dew rises eye level from the farm, like fallen soldiers

discharging their specters all at the same time

to face this particular day long past the echoes

 

of each shot they never heard from their neighbors

who planted them down here in this field, as if

the dead were waiting for appropriate weather

 

conditions to properly chill the living to the bone,

but driving in my car, windows up, heat half on,

could safely say I feel as warm as the day before

 

if not for the fact my arms are goose pimpled

just from looking out the driver’s side window,

wondering if I stood out there in the thick of it—

 

if I could even bring myself to step out of my car

and march forward into the mist—would I

hear a soldier cry for help or my dog yelp

 

or Nana whisper something blood-curdling,

along the lines of why did you let me go?

                                                        

All it is is cold.

 

In Dreams Return Memories

after Maggie Millner

 

Often, I dreamt

that [s]he and I

were back together.

Pathetic how much I found

in the black of night

with my eyes closed,

my brain turned off,

the projections of what was

offered up in a trough

I was expected to wade around in

to find only the sweet remnants

bobbing before me,

robbing me of reason,

the knowledge the giblets

removed with the kill

were still floating somewhere,

souring the sweet,

muddying the water,

turning the sweetest soup

into unsavory stew,

beet red in color

reminiscent of blood

pooling below

the hanging carcass

of a prized deer

so tremendous in life,

so reduced once sliced

from ass to breast,

when there’s still some

heat coming off the fresh corpse

in the November cold.

Could be these sweet dreams

are meant to remind me

what was warm once—

old to me now

but unadulterated in youth

so apparent with life

I could see only the prize,

blind to anything pooling below,

leaking out, slipping away,

distracted by eyes

so green and wide

that I never wanted

to see them cry,

let alone ever be the reason.

Then, I’d wake up

in my lonesome bed

and recall how

I was just that this season.

At least there are the dreams

where everything is still good,

we are still good.

At least somewhere still exist

where our love remains

constant, understood.

 

Deron Eckert

Deron Eckert is a poet and writer who lives in Lexington, Kentucky. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Atlanta Review, Blue Mountain Review, Appalachian Journal, Rattle, Stanchion, Beaver Magazine, The Fourth River, and elsewhere. He can be found on Instagram at deroneckert.