Veronica Scharf Garcia

Verano II, artwork

Verano II

Veronica Scharf Garcia

Veronica Scharf Garcia has exhibited extensively in South Florida, California, New Jersey, and Peru. She was awarded four residencies as an associate artist at the Atlantic Center for the Arts, New Smyrna, Florida, and the Deering Estate in Miami, Florida. She was also selected as a member artist at Oolite Art Center, Lincoln Road, Miami Beach, and the Bakehouse, Miami. She currently lives in Europe.

Marcy Rae Henry

francis bacon’s black mouths: a love poem

painted over and over because he wanted

to perfect blackness in different states of mouthness

the black before the scream

i’ve printed ‘em to put over the bed

folded into origami orgasms

as if doing squats over a speed bump

onery alley critters—! no two sound alike

no matter what you say

more is less in the long run

oak-aged ale

and opium

but love—

looks like a pot pie looks like love in the mouth

my love—i’ll pump your heart empirically

kill ‘em with kindness and expectorants

spewing from my black mouth

mouth i love pot or pies or periodontal surgeons

kneeling in front of a frontrunner

never felt so god

gnawing on truthisms with jagged little teeth

jam perhaps blackberries jammed into the mouth

to replace the fist

i’ve iodine stains

henna-like investments

and : i of the tiger

pronounce you wooed

under dark lights casting a cast-iron shadow

i’ll continue to woowoo with my juju

detail the mouth going south

going black where it doesn’t belong

at times bleached and iron-clad

that after-heat black

that passion in the bedroom

the courtroom

manslaughter of the mouth

a mouth in blackness

plague-eaten and purple taken into account

the glistening shrieking wetness

that scream to a whisper

that mouth open and black for more

 

Marcy Rae Henry

Marcy Rae Henry is a multidisciplinary Xicana artist from the Borderlands who’s had motorcycle crashes in Mexican-America, Turkey, and Nepal. She is the author of the body is where it all begins (Querencia Press), dream life of night owls (Open Country Press), and We Are Primary Colors (DoubleCross Press). Her poetry collection, death is a mariachi, won the May Sarton NH Poetry Prize and will be published in spring 2025. Her work has received a Chicago Community Arts Assistance Grant, an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship, a Pushcart nomination, first prize in Suburbia’s Novel Excerpt Contest, and Kaveh Akbar recently chose her fiction collection as a finalist for the George Garrett Fiction Prize. MRae is a professor of English, literature, and creative writing at Wright College, Chicago, a Hispanic Serving Institution, where she serves as Coordinator of the Latin American Latino/x Studies Program and received Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society’s 2023-2024 Outstanding Educator Award. She is a digital minimalist with no social media accounts. marcyraehenry.com

Louis Faber

This is Kansas, Toto

There is a two-headed man

living just outside Topeka

who rarely goes into town.

On Friday nights quite late

he’ll wander into the roadhouse

and order two Heinekens.

He’ll draw the odd stare, but

as long as he puts a twenty on the bar

the drinks will keep arriving.

There’s usually at least one

drunk in the corner who will stare,

so potted he sees a single head

on each of two men, with hair

shifting from black to bleached

blond and back again.

Most of the patrons, by last

call, see him and smile, totter

home and tell their wives

of the strange man with

two heads who lives somewhere

outside of town, near, their wives

assume, the twins, who stumble

home each Friday night, arm in arm.

 

Louis Faber

Louis Faber is a poet and writer. His work has appeared in MacGuffin, Cantos, Alchemy Spoon (UK), Meniscus and Arena Magazine (Australia) New Feathers Anthology, Dreich (Scotland), Prosetrics, Erothanatos (Greece), Defenestration, Atlanta Review, Glimpse, Rattle, Cold Mountain Review, Eureka Literary Magazine, Borderlands: the Texas Poetry Review, Midnight Mind, Pearl, Midstream, European Judaism, The South Carolina Review and Worcester Review, among many others, and has been twice nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His new book of poetry, Free of the Shadow, was recently published by Plain View Press.