13 MILES FROM CLEVELAND                                                                                                                                                                    

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                

                                                                                                                                                                                                           

           Volume 2, Number 2  2009   

          

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                             Previous Issue 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          Archives 

 

 Contributors 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     T.M. Göttl

 

 

 

                                                                      

                                                                                       BLADE OF THE KNIFE

 

                       

                                                                                      On the day when we lost

                                                                                      the battle for the trees,

                                                                                      the man in the bank teller window

                                                                                      removed his sunglasses,

                                                                                      and I saw the children born of sand and glass,

                                                                                      caged inside his irises.

                                                                                      He passed me a knife and a lit cigarette,

                                                                                      and dismissed me in the language

                                                                                      of volcanic ash.

 

                                                                                      On the day when we lost

                                                                                      the battle for the waterfowl,

                                                                                      I smoked that cigarette,

                                                                                      waiting for the bus.  Amid the orchids and

                                                                                      the fractured yellow sundresses,

                                                                                      pigmented characters crawled across my hands,

                                                                                      telling me

                                                                                      that I could see the future.

 

                                                                                      On the day when we lost

                                                                                      the battle for the wheel,

                                                                                      I sat in the wooden corner of a courtroom pew,

                                                                                      discerning the future in the blade

                                                                                      of the knife.

                                                                                      A sepia-toned girl,

                                                                                      wearing a jumper and pale gray eyes,

                                                                                      had stolen something from me, smuggled

                                                                                      under her jacket, and she ran, laughing.

 

                                                                                      On the day when we lost

                                                                                      the battle for the rivers,

                                                                                      I shared the railroad tracks

                                                                                      with two stray dogs, named after Viking gods;

                                                                                      black and white, my forestep and my shadow.

                                                                                      Barefoot now, my shoes long since pawned

                                                                                      for icons and faerie tales, I faced the west

                                                                                      and the cooling sun, waiting for the final train

                                                                                      to the settlements. The knife

                                                                                      fell from my pocket, shattering

                                                                                      into one hundred silver windows,

                                                                                      the many-colored eyes

                                                                                      of presidents and refugees.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      CHALLENGE

 

 

                                                                                      Black water, axes, corroded circuits—

                                                                                      I’m an invalid, watching streetlamps melt a

                                                                                      limping incandescence

                                                                                      across the asphalt,

                                                                                      tracing my finger along purple contours—

                                                                                      horizon, workplace, pregnant clouds.

 

                                                                                      Hail Mary, full of grace,

                                                                                      the Lord is with thee.

 

                                                                                      The jazz organist rolls his upright piano

                                                                                      across the intersection,

                                                                                      singing for the broken,

                                                                                      singing for the unconfirmed,

                                                                                      singing before the harbor announcing

                                                                                      our severed city,

                                                                                      scratching out stories

                                                                                      of the plaster ghost haunting the tower,

                                                                                      and the children at war, always the children

                                                                                      at war.

 

                                                                                      Blessed art thou amongst women,

                                                                                      and blessed is the fruit of thy womb.

 

                                                                                      Buttonholes unravel, and black corsages

                                                                                      kneel in the road, with the

                                                                                      dirt and the blood and the money.

                                                                                      The psychology generals intercept

                                                                                      oaken doors, hiding

                                                                                      in their picture book warehouses,

                                                                                      initialing contracts to Shanghai and Luzern.

                                                                                      With darkened ears, they can’t remember

                                                                                      autumn or stale bread

                                                                                      or pushing the upright from

                                                                                      the decks of ships.

 

                                                                                      Holy Mary, Mother of God,

                                                                                      pray for us, sinners,

 

                                                                                      Seeking answers from storms at noon

                                                                                      and a five-piece quartet,

                                                                                      I replace icons with gypsy moths, knowing

                                                                                      that the elect, those who carve tattoos

                                                                                      across their arms and shoulder blades,

                                                                                      illustrating their unchallenged certainty,

                                                                                      have never really met God.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      T.M. Göttl is a member of the Buffalo ZEF creative community, which published her poetry collection,

                                                  Stretching the Window, in 2008.  Her work has appeared in such publications as The Mill, Deep Cleveland,

                                                  The Poet's Haven, and The Hessler Street Fair Anthologies.  She lives in Brunswick, Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Mary Ellen Derwis

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                 Eclipse

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  Mary Ellen Derwis is the coauthor of JOMA--online, an online gallery of concrete poetry and photography.  Her work

                                                  has appeared in such publications as Otoliths, Oregon Literary Review, Bosphorus Art Project Ouarterly, and Unlikely 2.0.

                                                  She lives in Brecksville, Ohio.  "Eclipse" first appeared in Otoliths.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Henry Hart

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      RETURN TO THE CHURCH OF THE HOLY VIRGIN

 

 

                                                                                      1.

                                                                                      When my fiancé didn’t come home from the bar,

                                                                                      St. Sebastian stepped from an icon on the mantel,

                                                                                      wrote a note with an arrow about Houdini’s artistry:

 

                                                                                      You must swallow the hairpin, throw it up quick

                                                                                      to pick the padlocks before you drown.

                                                                                      The day’s blue ink will erase him from the pantheon.

 

                                                                                      Most nights I could hardly swallow a sleeping pill.

                                                                                      My fingers shivered around tea cups,

                                                                                      stiffened to quills that couldn’t write.

 

                                                                                      The day he left, he muttered: “I’m sick of living

                                                                                      with chilblains and cabbages on this dead-end street.”

                                                                                      His lover’s car idled in the street.  It was Christmas Eve.

 

                                                                                      Stars jutted like nail heads above the church. 

                                                                                      An electric angel flickered on the crèche,

                                                                                      shadowing the plaster sheep and ass.

 

 

                                                                                      2.

                                                                                      Tonight I circle back like hands on the bar clock,

                                                                                      brush snow from paint scars of my former name

                                                                                      on the mailbox by the house we rebuilt together.

 

                                                                                      The church hasn’t changed.  Candle flames

                                                                                      shudder in the same warped windows.

                                                                                      Plaster animals slump around the same dim crèche.

 

                                                                                      Leaning into wind, arms weighted with exotic gifts,

                                                                                      the wise men look as exhausted as before.

                                                                                      A gust scatters Christmas hymns over their heads.

 

                                                                                      It’s hard to know what Mary thinks—

                                                                                      her hands crossed over her breasts,

                                                                                      her eyes invisible under her white hood.

 

                                                                                      The electric angel illuminates the child

                                                                                      who looks up wildly at stars

                                                                                      glittering like compass needles in the night.

 

 

                                                                                      LYME DISEASE HALLUCINATION IN ST. FRANCIS HOSPITAL

 

                                                                                      After the blue-gowned man creaked by with his walker,

                                                                                      after the woman stopped moaning Baptist hymns to her dead petunias,

                                                                                      after snowflakes played their soft tattoo against my window,

 

                                                                                      the steel fang in my arm soothed me,

                                                                                      hunters with red torches galloped through a snowy field,

                                                                                      chasing deer toward a cliff the color of stars.

 

                                                                                      The ocean below caught them in rocks.

                                                                                      Waves tugged them toward the moon’s red ring

                                                                                      that incinerated their antlers like brush.

 

                                                                                      I stood on the cliff, wind scorching my tongue with salt and ash. 

                                                                                      Behind me, snow thickened on swaybacked barns,

                                                                                      snapped ridgepoles over empty stalls.

 

                                                                                      An unsold cow shivered in corn stubble,

                                                                                      its hide a soiled sheet pulled tight around its ribs,

                                                                                      its breaths drifting into frost like gray feathers.

 

                                                                                      Three crows squawked on orange surveyor stakes.

                                                                                      A bulldozer choked, sinking its blade into gravel.

                                                                                      Skeletons rose from craters, bone by hammered bone. 

 

                                                                                      When chainsaws sputtered, ghost deer slipped

                                                                                      through barbed wire rotting on gray fence posts.

                                                                                      Their teeth whittled our Christmas trees to spines.

 

                                                                                      By dawn, my pillow was thawed sod.

                                                                                      Inside my joints, the spirochetes of deer ticks

                                                                                      kept twisting like rusted corkscrews.

 

 

 

                                     Henry Hart is the Mildred and J.B Hickman Professor of Humanities at the College of William and Mary.  His poems

                                                 have appeared in such publications as The New Yorker, Poetry, The Southern Review, The Gettysburg Review,

                                                 New Kenyon Review, and Best American Poetry.  He lives in Williamsburg, Virginia. 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

                                     David Chorlton

 

 

 

  

                                                                                     

                                                                                     TODAY

 

                                                                                     

                                                                                      Little of note has occurred since the towhee

                                                                                      called from our neighbour’s tree

                                                                                      to attract attention to his silhouette

                                                                                      on the slender branch that holds him

                                                                                      every day against the sky

                                                                                      as it brightens, unless

 

                                                                                      we count the helicopters that hang

                                                                                      desperately over Madison

                                                                                      and only disappear after a gunman

                                                                                      is apprehended. The nights

 

                                                                                      have been peaceful lately, except

                                                                                      for the single shot we heard

                                                                                      just before eleven

                                                                                      as we said Goodnight

                                                                                      and turned over into darkness. It sounded close

                                                                                      but we concluded it was

                                                                                      someone else’s business out there where late

 

                                                                                      bleeds into later

                                                                                      and all the doors are locked. No mention

                                                                                      of an incident close to us came on

                                                                                      the early news, just the usual altercations

                                                                                      leaving casualties at dawn

                                                                                      in various deserted parking lots. We listen

 

                                                                                      daily to the plaintive notes some people drive

                                                                                      a thousand miles to hear. They say

                                                                                      there’s a truce; its daylight.

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      AN EAR FOR THE TRUTH

 

 

                                                                                      That a man would cut off his ear and give it away

                                                                                      was not questioned for a century

                                                                                      considering the unstable state of his mind

                                                                                      but after believing this version for so long

                                                                                      it comes as a shock to be told

                                                                                      that Vincent van Gogh’s friend Gauguin

                                                                                      most likely took the lobe with a stroke of his sword

                                                                                      in an argument’s heat. It wasn’t much of a story

                                                                                      to begin with, this account of making a gift

                                                                                      for a prostitute who seemed happy to accept currency.

                                                                                      The news lands in our midst like a sack

                                                                                      of potatoes on a peasant table, startles crows

                                                                                      out of a cornfield and causes stars to spiral

                                                                                      in the sky. Our challenge now is deciding what to do

                                                                                      about correcting the books on library shelves, in home

                                                                                      collections, kept as references in museums

                                                                                      or passed around a school class, not to mention movie

                                                                                      remakes or the jokes that don’t sound funny any more.

                                                                                      In time self mutilation may appear as unlikely

                                                                                      a theory as virgin birth or resurrection

                                                                                      although many will continue to discuss the artist’s

                                                                                      most irrational act as a significant moment

                                                                                      in painting history the way some Russians

                                                                                      still march for Stalin in Red Square on May Day,

                                                                                      holding his portrait and their fading banner

                                                                                      high because he represents a time their country was strong

                                                                                      or fundamentalists cling to a notion of the world

                                                                                      being created in a week or German soccer fans

                                                                                      say Hurst’s shot never crossed

                                                                                      the goal line in the 1966 game against England.

                                                                                      We all need something to hold on to;

                                                                                      sometimes a dictator is all there is. And if God

                                                                                      made the world it was for us to do with as we please.

                                                                                      As for that goal, it went in, I was there

                                                                                      and didn’t have to read the final score in all the papers.

                                                                                      Van Gogh could do what he wanted with his own ear,

                                                                                      he was never my favourite,

                                                                                      but let anyone say a bad word about Cezanne

                                                                                      and I’ll deny it even if I have to climb

                                                                                      Mont Saint Victoire and shout from its peak.

 

 

 

 

                                     David Chorlton lives in Phoenix , Arizona.  His work has been published widely in such publications as Cumberland Poetry Review,

                                                 Hawaii Review, Mississippi Mud, and Poet Lore.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  Marina Rubin

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      LEAVING NEW DELHI

 

                                                         

                                                                                      among mascaras and lipsticks, powders and make-up brushes, two airport

 

                                                                                      security officers found my grandmother's eyebrow tweezers. i refused to give

 

                                                                                      them up, said i am a white woman traveling with an american passport, do you

 

                                                                                      think i plan to stab the pilot with a pair of tweezers? they stood with stern faces

 

                                                                                      of pakistani freedom fighters, pointing to the airport-issued lethal weapons chart.

 

                                                                                      i tried my best girlish giggle - these are the only tweezers that don't hurt; a crowd

 

                                                                                      of barefoot passengers behind me, complaining. just when i thought forget the

 

                                                                                      stupid tweezers, i saw the boxes of confiscated tubes of toothpaste, nail files and

 

                                                                                      pocket scissors, i remembered my grandmother in the sunlight of her coney island

 

                                                                                      bedroom with a magnifying glass, plucking her eyebrows into a thin slightly surprised

 

                                                                                      line. in this graveyard of utensils, three months after her funeral, i cried my first real

 

                                                                                      tears of grief; a tired sikh security director put the tweezers back into my bag,

 

                                                                                      motioned to the others to let the crazy lady through.

 

 

 

 

                                    

                                     Marina Rubin lives in New York, New York.  Her writing has appeared in such publications as Asheville Poetry Review, Poet Lore,

                                                 Urban Spaghetti, and The Amherst Review.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     Walter Bargen

 

 

 

 

                                                                                     THE JINGLES

 

 

                                                                                      Some claim to hear little brass bells

                                                                                      shaking loose thin vertical slopes

                                                                                      of air.  They see a match, protected

                                                                                      by cupped hands, struck

                                                                                      on a distant ridge on a windy night.

 

                                                                                      It’s all the guidance they need

                                                                                      when the time comes, if there is

                                                                                      time at all, and not just winter’s white

                                                                                      cracking across endless fields.

                                                                                      If time can’t be separated from caring,

 

                                                                                      it will be dragged kicking

                                                                                      out of the drugstore, thrown

                                                                                      into the back seat of an old Ford,

                                                                                      face rubbed in the snow,

                                                                                      hair cut in rough handfuls,

 

                                                                                      pants torn on the back fence,

                                                                                      running away.  When the time comes

                                                                                      a widow jumps between flat gray stones

                                                                                      in the military cemetery.  She lays

                                                                                      a prisoner-made blanket over

 

                                                                                      a soldier’s fading wars and still keeps

                                                                                      her shoes out of the mud.  Rash rain

                                                                                      carries away others’ newly turned earth.

                                                                                      When the time comes, seated

                                                                                      by the bed as a machine

 

                                                                                      methodically measures and pumps

                                                                                      a seamless ocean, a shriveled arm floats

                                                                                      away wrapped in tubes as evening

                                                                                      clings to the sooted, pigeon-tracked sill

                                                                                      of the painted-shut fifth floor window

                                                                                      where the last rings of light peal.

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Teodoru Badiu

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                           

                                                                                                          

                                                                                                                     Invoke

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  Teodoru Badiu is a Freelance Artist and Creative Media Designer based in Vienna, Austria.  His work has appeared in

                                                  magazines, websites and books such as Computer Arts, PSD Magazine, and New Masters of Photoshop: Volume 2.

 

 

 

 

 

                                                 

                                     Walter Bargen

 

 

                                                  

 

 

                                                                                      WINGED LIFE

 

 

                                                                                      Breathless altitude, touch of vertigo above visions

                                                                                      of cirrus and cumulus, the metal wing

                                                                                      an acute angle with the horizon, a triangulation,

                                                                                      its center an aquamarine afterglow.  

                                                                                      Another world, longing for tales

                                                                                      of those who return alien and astonished.

 

                                                                                      My father’s fluid-choked lungs succumb

                                                                                      for a third time this day to what his body

                                                                                      could no longer resist, a sinking flight

                                                                                      beyond a hospital bed.  From the fourth story

                                                                                      window, reading another chapter to the tops of trees

                                                                                      feathering with evening light as across the highway

                                                                                      above the bloody bracelets of braking rush hour traffic,

                                                                                      the hurry and wait the weight we carry

                                                                                      up steep slopes of darkening five o’clock skies.

                                                                                      In the doorway, the nurse waits, wanting to know.

 

                                                                                      I bend over his shriveled body that hadn’t responded

                                                                                      in days, and more slowly than a distant plane plummeting

                                                                                      seven miles back to earth, he moved his head once

                                                                                      side to side. The nurse left the room as I held his hand,

                                                                                      and after the final release, his hand back at his side,

                                                                                      I turned away and was again looking down at Wyoming,

                                                                                      at Idaho, at Washington, perched on the edge of night.

 


 

 

 

 

                                     Walter Bargen has published thirteen books of poetry and two chapbooks of poetry.  His poems have recently appeared

                                                  in the Beloit Poetry Journal, Poetry East, River Styx, Seattle Review, and New Letters.  In 2008, he was appointed to be the

                                                  the first poet laureate of Missouri.  He lives in Ashland, Missouri.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     Tim Kahl

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      DELIVERY

 

 

                                                                                      Half the gray sky has burned off, the delivery

                                                                                      trucks begin to gather at the stoplights.

                                                                                      The drivers on espresso, their work shoes on

                                                                                      the gas pedal, comfortable. The morning

                                                                                      is shaping up like a long line of customers

                                                                                      who expect to get some service for their money.

                                                                                      Another ordinary day at the marathon with

                                                                                      paper napkins on the passenger’s seat for company.

                                                                                      Eyes read the vehicle in front, the mind juggling

                                                                                      the license plate numbers, every car a possible

                                                                                      lotto winner. The fast pass on the left. The slow

                                                                                      keep moving, maybe wave to someone they don't

                                                                                      know, but this could be dangerous unless it

                                                                                      already happened once before in a movie.

 

                                                                                      Maybe the car by the side of the road isn’t

                                                                                      really stranded, just somebody who thinks

                                                                                      the road signs are the scenery and got out to

                                                                                      take a picture. Maybe throwing a penny

                                                                                      out the window is really a divination. If it

                                                                                      lands on a guardrail or gravel, the future will

                                                                                      differ. If it bounces, this is how many

                                                                                      strangers will try to keep pace with you.

 

                                                                                      Suddenly, the day which was way out in front

                                                                                      has slipped behind. It is the drive home and minds

                                                                                      are numbing unless it is summer, Friday, four o’ clock.

                                                                                      Then, everybody is going somewhere, taking  items

                                                                                      with them—delivery as a state of being ready.

 

                                                                                      Eventually the weekend will arrive

                                                                                      and the truckers will no longer belong to each other.

                                                                                      No revving engines. No signatures gathered.

                                                                                      No routes rehearsed over and over.

                                                                                      But the highway will have burrowed itself

                                                                                      into the memory of those who drive for a living,

                                                                                      who drive to be delivered into a blank future

                                                                                      where half the gray sky has escaped its purpose

                                                                                      and the other half presses on like a sermon.

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                       LEBENSRAUM IN THE WILD WEST

 

 

                                                                                                                                             for Stephen Cook

 

                                                                                       A man in a tan Chevy displays

                                                                                       a house flyer in his passenger side window.

                                                                                       Does he really think I’ll call him about

                                                                                       a real estate deal while I’m driving 70 MPH?

                                                                                       Is there an attic? Hey, what’s the

                                                                                       square footage of the garage?

                                                                                       He thinks I’m as desperate to find a house where

                                                                                       I can store my crap as he is to move his inventory.

                                                                                       Four houses on my street up for sale too,

                                                                                       prices softening. It’s like the last two months

                                                                                       the Comanches have been picking off my neighbors,

                                                                                       and I’m the stubborn homesteader on the frontier,

                                                                                       keeping vigil until some mortgage brokers turn up

                                                                                       dead in the streets. I think the banks

                                                                                       should retrieve the bodies, but they can’t even

                                                                                       cut the grass for the two-story on the corner.

                                                                                       I watch the lawn turn brown, rip out

                                                                                       the thistles growing up through the grevillea,

                                                                                       throw the clippings on the piled-up trash.

                                                                                       I want to know if I can give my invoice

                                                                                       to the repo man who comes for your car

                                                                                       in the night. So come on over and drive me

                                                                                       to the last row of houses going up on

                                                                                       the edge of town. There I think I hear the sound

                                                                                       of California’s hide cracking. And yes, yes,

                                                                                       I admit I can’t stop the thrill of fitting

                                                                                       the profile of buyer, buyer, buyer.

                                                                                       Everywhere everything’s for sale

                                                                                       along the highway. I can feel the man

                                                                                       in the tan Chevy coming for the soul

                                                                                       I’ve buried deep in my wallet.

                                                                                       He’s coming to give me the deal of my life,

                                                                                       but I can’t hand my life over to him.

                                                                                       Pieces of it are still on loan from

                                                                                       a movie I once saw about the West.

 

 

 

 

                                     Tim Kahl lives in Elk Grove, California.  His work has appeared in such publications as Berkeley Poetry Review, Prairie Schooner,

                                                  Indiana Review, South Dakota Quarterly, and The Texas Review.  He is the author of Possessing Yourself  (Word Tech Press, 2009).

                                                  He grew up in Massillon, Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     Gabriel A. Levicky

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                            

                                                     

                                                                                                                       Your Future Is Served Now

 

 

 

 

          

                                                 

                                            

                                                  Gabriel A. Levicky is a writer and artist who is originally from the former Czechoslovakia.  He calls his collage work

                                                  "gablevages."  He lives in New York, New York.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     J. Bradley

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      THE BROKEN CONDOM ON CAREER DAY

                                                                                     

 
                                                                                      Half of you here should thank me
                                                                                      for your parents' irresponsibility,
                                                                                      the vigor and haplessness it took
                                                                                      to conceive you.  To call you all
                                                                                      "accidents" would be cruel.

                                                                                      It's grueling to shoulder blame
                                                                                      like a crucifix, whirl mistakes
                                                                                      out of torn latex and errant
                                                                                      spermatozoa, be a barrel of fish
                                                                                      for pointing fingers.

                                                                                      When this happens, I crochet
                                                                                       linger into baby booties, cloth
                                                                                       rosaries, moral compass cozies,
                                                                                       the forearms of foster parents;
                                                                                       it doesn't have to be this way.

                                                                                       Tie off your lust with God.
                                                                                       Call your hands "Bathsheba",
                                                                                       his mouth a safe word.
                                                                                       Her cleavage heaves like
                                                                                       a collapsing mineshaft

                                                                                       if you ask nicely.  May
                                                                                       I never visit your doorstep
                                                                                       like a clumsy knife salesman;
                                                                                       I will only sell you rust
                                                                                       and wounds.

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      J. Bradley lives in Orlando, Florida.  His work has appeared in such publications as Kill Author, Danse Macabre, Lung Poetry Journal, and PANK Magazine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                           

 

 

                                     Leonard Kress

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      THE JOYS OF MEDIEVAL SEX

 

 

                                                                                      It is the 12th century and you just got married.

                                                                                      She is your beloved, and this is your wedding night.

                                                                                      Everyone’s full of advice—is she menstruating?

                                                                                      Yes, stop it’s a sin.  Is she pregnant?  Yes, stop a sin.

                                                                                      Is it Lent?  Yes, stop it’s a sin.  Is it Easter week?

                                                                                      Yes, a sin.  Is it a feast day?  Yes, stop it’s a sin.

                                                                                      Is it Sunday?  Yes, stop it’s a sin.  Is it Friday?

                                                                                      Yes, it’s a sin.  Is it Saturday?  Yes, stop a sin.

                                                                                      Is it daylight?  Yes, stop, it’s a sin.  Are you naked?

                                                                                      Yes, a sin.  Do you want children?  No, stop a sin.

                                                                                      And no fondling, no lewd kisses, no oral sex, and

                                                                                      no strange positions.  Do it only once, and try not

                                                                                      to enjoy it.  And make sure that you wash afterwards.

 

 

 

 

                                                                                       THE COAST OF MAINE

 

 

                                                                                       That night we stepped outside into the northern lights--

                                                                                       Pulsating, spiraling web of shimmer, which should have

                                                                                       been the experience of a lifetime, but wasn’t,

                                                                                       because earlier that day we’d sprung loose down the side

                                                                                       of a blackberry barren, shuttled past some beavers

                                                                                       constructing their damn, then—panting--mounted a hillock

                                                                                       overlooking Belfast and Camden and the cuspate

                                                                                       inlets of the Atlantic with our new married friends,

                                                                                       a guilt-riddled playwright and his voodoo-initiate

                                                                                       painter wife, who screamed her night-terrors into our sleep,

                                                                                       while he hugged her to reassurance and jotted down

                                                                                       her fears and nightmares in a pocket spiral notebook

                                                                                       that became the gist of his plays after they split up.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Leonard Kress teaches religion and philosophy at Owens College in northwest Ohio.  His work has appeared in such publications

                                                  as Massachusetts Review, Iowa Review, Crab Orchard Review, and Missouri Review.  He lives in Perrysburg, Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Kyle Hemmings

 

 

 

 

                                                                                       YOU'RE ONLY PRETTY IN THE MORNING



                                                                                       Hey mr. pretty boy, she says under 
                                                                                       the caress of the hotel's lemon-scented
                                                                                       downy-softened sheets, I have to go 
                                                                                       to work. Last night, she told me 
                                                                                       her name was Olga and between us
                                                                                       is a river, a volga of faces we 
                                                                                       could have loved if only we had
                                                                                       tried harder or looked a little closer.
                                                                                       The fingers of her hands are snaking armies
                                                                                       holding my lower flank in check,
                                                                                       her knuckles hard as doorknobs
                                                                                       and beyond those doors I can hear
                                                                                       the march of soldiers crippled 
                                                                                       by an early spring, deceived by
                                                                                       an early morning glory. March
                                                                                       or die, shouts a dystopian dictator
                                                                                       perhaps my faith or hers in question.
                                                                                       It's going to be a deadly winter for Napoleon, 
                                                                                       Moscow a white ambush, the long trek home, 
                                                                                       without prisoners, the memory of bayonets
                                                                                       piercing starving ghosts.

                                                                                       Flicking the remote, she loves watching 
                                                                                       reruns of Green Acres in Mountain time,
                                                                                       loves the funny little accents. 
                                                                                       I reach for a pack of Parliments, 
                                                                                       which never last beyond five wishful puffs. 
                                                                                       When will I see you again, 
                                                                                       I say in a wisp of surrender. 
                                                                                       My erection hard as a chess piece, 
                                                                                       my knight wishing to overtake her queen,
                                                                                       as she rises from the bed, naked and elusive
                                                                                       as a messenger pigeon gone astray. 
                                                                                       She's smoking one of my Parliments
                                                                                       saying how she hates the filters.
                                                                                       Standing at the window she's exposing 
                                                                                       her rear guard which could be a deception.

                                                                                       She turns, smiles, slips into the bed. 
                                                                                       Ask no questions, she says without words,
                                                                                       my mercenary heart so sloppy in retreat. 



 



                                                                                       TUSK



                                                                                       The sky hangs over you in an endless tusk 
                                                                                       ivory is being traded at five cents per share 
                                                                                       a real bargain in a bull market 
                                                                                       while your wife moans that she can no longer 
                                                                                       play Chopsticks at the piano keys 
                                                                                       except when you both make love absent-mindedly, 
                                                                                       which means you silently call each other 
                                                                                       different names in the afterglow 
                                                                                       that‘s hard as dentin. 
                                                                                       Your children are becoming more unrecognizable, 
                                                                                       day by day, growing sideways and distracted, 
                                                                                       the way you wished never to grow, 
                                                                                       their words dissolving into a mist 
                                                                                       that never quite leaves the living room, 
                                                                                       furniture reminding you of bare trees, 
                                                                                       giant teeth of marked narwhal. 
                                                                                       You think: Somebody once lived there or here, 
                                                                                       Central Africa or the suburb, 
                                                                                       the prairie she wears on her white lily face. 
                                                                                       While back at the office, 
                                                                                       the boss's secretary 
                                                                                       with an aperitif of excuses for lateness,
                                                                                       your mistress with the loose tooth
                                                                                       and inadequate dental coverage,
                                                                                       on a first name basis with all the spineless Toms,
                                                                                       and hairless aquaphobics, 
                                                                                       will look to even the score. 
                                                                                       At home, your wife hints again about an oasis
                                                                                       an early retirement abroad,
                                                                                       but you're more concerned about 
                                                                                       your faint heartbeat, its growing irregularity, 
                                                                                       a dysrhythmia you conceal from strangers 
                                                                                       with white helmets and white spongy lies. 
                                                                                       The best you can hope for 
                                                                                       is to spring yourself from this life 
                                                                                       that is quicksand and slow death, 
                                                                                       you, wedged to your elbows, 
                                                                                       struggling in blind, delirious backstrokes 

                                                                                       like in the hooker‘s bed last night 
                                                                                       where you swam 
                                                                                       through un-demarcated rain forests 
                                                                                       performing amazing feats of mammalian stamina; 
                                                                                       tagua is for lovers of natural substitutes 
                                                                                       isn't that what she said? 
                                                                                       You'll tell your wife all about her someday: 
                                                                                       her tattoos and her perfect teeth 
                                                                                       and your favorite proverbial position, 
                                                                                       when the time is ripe, 
                                                                                       when the parachutes fail to open, 
                                                                                       when it rains elephants from the sky 
                                                                                       a trader’s run on pure ivory. 

 

 

 

 

 



 

                                      Kyle Hemmings lives and works in New Jersey.  His work has appeared in such publications as Bent Pin Quarterly,

                                                   Literary Tonic, Breadcrumb Sins and Why Vandalism?

 

 

 

 

 



        
 

 

                                  

                                       John Moore Williams

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                             

 

                                                                                                                                        lIIght

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                             

 

                                                                                                                                       whOle

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  John Moore Williams is a visual and verbal poet who has published in numerous journals and several anthologies.  He is the author

                                                  of three chapbooks of lexical poetry and was one third of the trio that created [+!] a full-length collection of words and imagery from

                                                  Calliope Nerve.  He lives in Oakland, California.

 

 

                                                                   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     Mary E. Weems

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                       WORRY

                                                                                                     

 

                                                                                       He looks for a job everyday

                                                                                       even Sundays. At first always

                                                                                       alone in the kitchen cause he beats

                                                                                       me out the bed in the morning

                                                                                       cooks our daughter's breakfast, then ours,

                                                                                       washes the dishes, wanting me to know.

                                                                                       I try to be with him without making myself

                                                                                       obvious, quiet as a shadow,  the shame he feels

                                                                                       for reasons I can't understand  leans

                                                                                       in the room like a weight.

                                                                                       It's been six months and each visit to the unemployment

                                                                                       office takes longer. I don't ask where he

                                                                                       was when he walks in sober after midnight,

                                                                                       he does not stop me each morning when I get

                                                                                       dressed to go out to earn a living I don't feel.

 

 

 

                                                                                       BLOW

 

                                                                                       I used to think Lena Horne

                                                                                       wished she was white.

                                                                                       Not because she was light,

                                                                                       because I couldn't figure out why

                                                                                       she was in all these movies

                                                                                       not being a maid, not being

                                                                                       poor, not being the latest version

                                                                                       of Aunt Jemima, because all the women

                                                                                       in my family didn't live like her, and a few

                                                                                       of them were just as bright, because

                                                                                       Lena Horne talked like a white woman

                                                                                       on television, kept  the southern

                                                                                       drawl  she could switch to quiet as its kept

                                                                                       for when she was  not in public.

                                                                                       I heard Lena Horne say once that she married

                                                                                       a white man because he could give her the kind of life

                                                                                       a Colored man couldn't--I keep remembering that.

 

 

 

                                     Mary  E. Weems teaches in the English and Education departments at John Carroll University.  Her work has appeared in such publications

                                                 as An Anthology of African American Poetry, Pearl Magazine, African American Review, and Obsidian.  She lives in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  Jason Floyd Williams

 

 

 

                                                                                        termites of conversation.

 

 

                                                                                        My ol man was telling me

                                                                                        about Yankee’s bar having

                                                                                        the “Girls Gone Wild “ van

                                                                                        parked out front, & how

                                                                                        there weren’t any bare tits

                                                                                        or naked chicks going nuts.

                                                                                        No one was having any luck

                                                                                        except one fellow, an AA biker

                                                                                        named Pig—an ogre-ish motorcycle

                                                                                        trash villain from whatever dime-store,

                                                                                        Fabio-covered, romantic Fantasy novel—

                                                                                        had the Midas touch in spanking

                                                                                        women or getting spanked.

                                                                                        Pig was a good student, though, I’m told.

                                                                                        I told the ol man that

                                                                                        the idea of manufacturing

                                                                                        girls to go crazy seemed

                                                                                        artificial—like a zoo.

                                                                                        It’s a Zen thing, I said.

                                                                                        You never know when it’ll happen.

                                                                                        I had more to say.

                                                                                        I wanted to bring up grizzly bears

                                                                                        & compare them to girls organically

                                                                                        losing their panties, but there was

                                                                                        a freight-train derailment

                                                                                        in subject matter.

                                                                                        My dad started, immediately, talking

                                                                                        about running the tar kettles years back

                                                                                        & taking half-a-dozen Darvons a day

                                                                                        because of the smell.

 

                                                                                        This led, naturally, to

                                                                                        the pharmaceutical cost of Darvon,

                                                                                        & the prices of other pills

                                                                                        he was taking.

 

                                                                                        Then insurance. Then politics.

                                                                                        Then his wife losing her job.

                                                                                        Then the sister-in-law living

                                                                                        w/ them, trying to get work.

                                                                                        Then the stepson getting

                                                                                        a disillusionment from his wife.

 

                                                                                        I mentioned, during a crevice

                                                                                        in the talk, that I had an asthma

                                                                                        attack the other day.

 

                                                                                        “Maybe it was the mold or mildew

                                                                                        from the abandoned diner next

                                                                                        to our new store, or the termites

                                                                                        still in the floor, but I—“

 

                                                                                        As if the mention of termites

                                                                                        was the stopped Rolodex reminder

                                                                                        for him—a frayed bookmark holding

                                                                                        the spot in the cerebral catalog, waiting

                                                                                        to be remembered—to tell this story:

 

                                                                                        “Back when you were a baby,

                                                                                        before the Perrysville place, we

                                                                                        looked at a house with new wood

                                                                                        butted against the walls.

                                                                                        Granddad says, ‘Bob, this place

                                                                                        has termites. Leave it alone.’

                                                                                        So we went to the other houses…”

                                                                                        The story lasted years.

 

 

 

 

                                     Jason Floyd Williams lives in Cleveland Heights, Ohio.  His poetry has appeared in such publications as My Favorite Bullet,

                                                 The City, Nerve Cowboy, Cherry Bleeds, and Opium 2.0.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                      Richard Garcia

 

 

 

                                                                                        POSTCARD FROM PINK

 

                                                                                        You would like Lily.  She wears a wig of straight, coal-black hair.  She

                                                                                        has three wig-mannequins on her dresser. Each is wearing a version

                                                                                        of the same wig.  There are light bulbs edging her mirror.  It is hard to

                                                                                        tell how old she is.  She must have been a stripper way back when. 

                                                                                        She wears white pedal-pushers.  She has a great body.  Her

                                                                                        bedroom is done in pink and white. Her Lhasa Apso wears a pink

                                                                                        collar.  I am only here because I am painting her bathroom. Pink.

                                                                                        She chews bubblegum but does not make bubbles.  I imagine she

                                                                                        has a benefactor.  I imagine she has a boyfriend.  He is a private

                                                                                        detective.  A former Secret Service man.  He was one of the men

                                                                                        who were supposed to protect President Kennedy.  But the night

                                                                                        before the assassination all the Secret Service men partied hard. He

                                                                                        was hungover the next day and had his eyes closed behind his dark

                                                                                        glasses when the shooting started. Lily ignores me.  And why not.  I

                                                                                        am not a provider or a protector. I am but the applicator of pink.  I

                                                                                        am writing to you from inside a conch shell. The sound of the paint

                                                                                        roller against the wall of the shell is a single note of pink.  When I

                                                                                        close my eyes I hear the ocean.  Sunset, pink sky.  Pink froth of waves. 

                                                                                        Papal pink. Pink smoke. Pink mist. Sniper pink.

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                        FALLING PATTERN

 

 

                                                                                        Thoughts are falling,

                                                                                        intergalactic thoughts,

                                                                                        falling through the roof

                                                                                        into our bodies.

                                                                                        They don’t make noise

                                                                                        so we think they are

                                                                                        our own thoughts.

                                                                                        They stand inside our bodies

                                                                                        and borrow our vision,

                                                                                        peering out of our eyes.

                                                                                        That is the only way

                                                                                        they can see what we call

                                                                                        the world. They are intrigued

                                                                                        since they know nothing of time

                                                                                        or happenstance.

                                                                                        Katherine, I say to you

                                                                                        although your name is Linda,

                                                                                        What are you thinking?

                                                                                        Nothing you say

                                                                                        because right now a thought

                                                                                        is inside you

                                                                                        peering out of the amber

                                                                                        kaleidoscope of your eyes.

                                                                                        Katherine of the steppes,

                                                                                        of the plateau rising out of

                                                                                        a jungle where no man

                                                                                        has set foot. Katherine

                                                                                        who says we are floating.

                                                                                        We’re falling I say,

                                                                                        falling in a pattern

                                                                                        just like the dust motes,

                                                                                        some of which

                                                                                        are extra-terrestrial,

                                                                                        really, suspended,

                                                                                        spiraling down

                                                                                        invisible stairways

                                                                                        of light.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  Richard Garcia lives on James Island, South Carolina.  His poetry has appeared in such publications as Ploughshares, Colorado Review,

                                                  Cortland Review, Blackbird, and Notre Dame Review.  His collections of poetry include Chickenhead, The Persistence of Objects,

                                                  Rancho Notorious, and The Flying Garcias.

                                   

 

 


 

 

                                      David-Baptiste Chirot

 

 

 

                                     

 

 

 

                                                                            

 

 

 

 

 

                               

                                     David-Baptise Chirot lives in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  His work has been published extensively.

                                                 This image is from a series entitled "No Accident."

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                 Richard Stevenson

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                   "LOW PRIORITY"

 

 

                                                                                       Because she lives in Surrey

                                                                                       in a low-rent motel;

                                                                                       because both her parents

                                                                                       are currently unemployed;

                                                                                       because she's a tom boy

                                                                                       and talks to strangers,

                                                                                       including men in the motel;

                                                                                       because she's precocious

                                                                                                                    for a twelve-year old.

 

                                                                                       Because she has already been

                                                                                       busted for shoplifting;

                                                                                       because she didn't return

                                                                                       her friend's shiny new ten-speed

                                                                                       when she said she would;

                                                                                       because she didn't turn

                                                                                       up for school the very next day;

                                                                                       because she was customarily

                                                                                       foot loose and fancy free ...

 

                                                                                       Because Mr. Walker isn't

                                                                                       a blood relative and can't

                                                                                       file a missing persons report;

                                                                                       because her parents hadn't either,

                                                                                       assuming she was staying

                                                                                       with her friend Clive Walker

                                                                                       who had lent her the bike

                                                                                       so she wouldn't be late for dinner ... .

 

                                                                                       Never mind that Mr. Walker

                                                                                       knows she's not staying with them;

                                                                                       never mind that it's been a week;

                                                                                       never mind that a known

                                                                                       sex offender lived in the neighbourhood,

                                                                                       that Clive's bike was eventually found

                                                                                       abandoned behind the neighbourhood Vet's,

                                                                                       that it was parked without a scratch;

                                                                                       never mind that Clifford Olson's

                                                                                       apartment was right across the street;

                                                                                       never mind that he was a perpetual liar;

                                                                                       never mind that Child Welfare

                                                                                       office officials stood corrected

                                                                                       when they said she was in a foster home.

 

                                                                                       The kid roams.  The kid wants

                                                                                       to keep out of her father's face

                                                                                       and not get under foot in the

                                                                                       Weller's cramped motel room.

                                                                                       Her father was angry a lot

                                                                                       of the time, but "forgot"

                                                                                       to call in the missing person's

                                                                                       report.  She probably just took off --

                                                                                       and, besides, reports of her squatting

                                                                                       in a refuse pit behind a burger joint

                                                                                       didn't check out.  She'll turn up

                                                                                       when she's hungry and contrite

                                                                                       and has no more piss and vinegar

                                                                                       in her.  Trust us: she's just a runaway.

 

                                                                                       A runaway with eighteen stab wounds

                                                                                       tossed like refuse on waste ground

                                                                                       next to the dike in Richmond,

                                                                                       the fancy, high-rent municipality

                                                                                       next door.  She's just the girl next door.

                                                                                                                    There are hundreds like her who

                                                                                       disappear every day.  Most of them

                                                                                       are runaways.  Most know better

                                                                                       than to get in cars with strangers.

                                                                                       Most of them turn up eventually.

                                                                                       We're sorry to have to tell you

                                                                                       that your daughter has been found

                                                                                       by a jogger.  We're sure it's her this time.

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                   

                                      Richard Stevenson has read to audiences across Canada and is the author of 23 full-length books and 7 chapbooks, including, most recently,

                                                  Hot Flashes: Maiduguri Haiku, Senru, and Tanka, Parrot With Tourette's, A Charm of Finches, and Wiser Pills.  He also occasionally performs

                                                  with the rock/poetry group Sasquatch.  He regularly reviews poetry and fiction, and periodically runs adult and young adult workshops.  He

                                                  holds degrees in English and Creative Writing from The University of Victoria and University of British Columbia and teaches Canadian

                                                  Literature, Creative Writing, Children's Literature, and Business Communication at Lethbridge College in southern Alberta, Canada.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

                                     Ed Pavlic

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      “IN HIS HANDS   AN INVISIBLE OBJECT” : STENOGRAPHER’S ERROR:

                                                                                      ANONYMOUS TESTIMONY

                                                                                      REMEMBERED BY EVERYONE   HOWEVER   NONE

                                                                                      RECALL HAVING HEARD   OR FROM WHOM   OR WHEN

 

                                                                                      said : if these hardly heavy gray

                                                                                      hands happen here   again  

                                                                                      well that’d prove he stood up stone

                                                                                      on stair-steps above   how hi   & alone over steel

                                                                                      fortresses held upside down

                                                                                         winds caught in icicles off the edge

                                                                                      of the bright-bald slaughterer’s roof   forget tousled

                                                                                      hair at union scale   three months or thirty years

                                                                                      in & out thru Tintoretto & Giotto : mutiny on the Sahara

                                                                                      dune of a cheek bone : a thousand sittings & “I’ve never

 

                                                                                      seen you before”   he lied about the inside   & how hard he loved

                                                                                      to rage to himself   he lied about a world that insists on hands

                                                                                      as if fingers fit thru liquid   he lied about the color

                                                                                      of the fortress & denied he knew the temperature

                                                                                      that changes wind to ice   lied about the color

                                                                                      of blood frozen into steel  

                                                                                      Exhibit A : he brought a charcoal sketch   contempt

                                                                                      to the oath   swore to the fact   that a fact

                                                                                      darkens like clear water under its own

                                                                                      weight   said : go on & call it pressure   & that

                                                                                      shadows of liquid displace nothing

                                                                                      therefore sink thru us all & slip forth without

                                                                                      the rotten ties of motion   seams   swore : if it’s seams that

                                                                                      move you   then swear an oath to such as

                                                                                      you’ll find   if not   look away from death-scars  

                                                                                      on these hands under my liquid

                                                                                      hands   how could they happen?   again & again

                                                                                      here   in the violence now   in front of us all  

                                                                                      that leaves no trail   an event of absolutely no rhythm  

                                                                                      a trace   therefore   impossible

                                                                                      to elude   her wet face   an object   perfectly

                                                                                      without attribute   a steel beam holds the bloom

                                                                                      of smoke & a dance explodes   room to room

  

                                                                                      seamless as an ace dropped on the wood

                                                                                      the way our shadows sharpened

 

                                                                                      themselves &

                                                                                      knelt down to pearls   as if we never cut whispers

 

                                                                                      in rooms above   other rooms 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     Ed Pavlic is professor of English and director of the MFA/PhD program in Creative Writing at the University of Georgia.

                                                His poetry has appeared in such publications as Indiana Review, Agni, The Cortland Review, Ploughshares, and Jubilat.

                                                His latest books of poems are Winners Yet to be Announced: A Song for Donny Hathaway and ...but here are small clear refractions.

                                                His book Paraph of Bone & Other Kinds of Blue, won the American Poetry Review/Honickman First Book Prize. 

                                                He lives in Athens, Georgia.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                    John M. Bennett / C. Mehrl Bennett / Jim Leftwich

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                  

                                                                                                                                                      DA DA chin sopping the leg 

 

 

                                                                           

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    

                                  

                                                  John M. Bennett is a poet and artist who has been published widely.  He lives in Columbus, Ohio.

                                                  C. Mehrl Bennett is an artist and poet.  Many of her images are imbedded with text.  She often creates

                                                  her art in collaboration with other artists.

                                                  Jim Leftwich has collaborated with many writers and artists.  He lives in Roanoke, Virginia.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                          

                                      Tim Hawkins

 

   

                                                                     

                                                                                      TASK FORCE

 

                                                                                      I am taken aback that so many seem

                                                                                      to become so energized by this process

                                                                                      of producing a plan to produce a plan

                                                                                      that has less and less to do with trees and concrete

                                                                                      and more and more to do with a fractured agenda

                                                                                      and the sound of words strung together

                                                                                      by the force of the human voice, so unlike

                                                                                      the sound of poetry or even prose.

                                                                                      I would suggest that some are still running

                                                                                      for class president of the seventh grade

                                                                                      if I wasn’t so busy hanging out

                                                                                      by the water fountain looking cool,

                                                                                      and scribbling these marginal notes.

                                                                                      I will concede that there is plenty of direction

                                                                                      in this document, and there are more

                                                                                      than a few data. However, given

                                                                                      the absence of consensus, I would motion

                                                                                      that we adjourn from this sound-proof room

                                                                                      out into the bright afternoon, to get ourselves

                                                                                      back on track, to commit some tasks, with force,

                                                                                      the way a child might envision our mandate.

                                                                                      We might also just clasp hands in silence

                                                                                      in a huddled mass on the carpeted floor

                                                                                      to escape this maelstrom of discourse

                                                                                      devoid of perspective, context and common sense,

                                                                                      to remember the way things were before we came in here,

                                                                                      and the way things are outside so many rooms.

                                                                                      Or, barring these unlikely eventualities,

                                                                                      might I suggest, that we make certain, at the very least

                                                                                      to peruse the support materials, these

                                                                                      lovely, leather-clad briefing books

                                                                                      that someone has so kindly assembled for our edification,

                                                                                      before next week’s penultimate session.

 

 

 

 

            

                                                 Tim Hawkins lives in Grand Rapids, Michigan.  His work has appeared in such publications as The Literary Bohemian,

                                                 Umbrella: A Journal of Poetry and Kindred Prose, BluePrintReview, and Underground Voices.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                     R.T. Castleberry

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                      SEE ME LATER

 

 

                                                                                      I'm cell phone mad, passively mobile--

                                                                                      less interested in methods of consecration

                                                                                      than my neighborhood brothel, Methodist devotionals,

                                                                                      discourtesies of creditors and the alcoholic dead.

                                                                                      I wake to music,

                                                                                      talking bootlegs and Alabama boogie,

                                                                                      Sam Cooke's church recordings,

                                                                                      Van Morrison's TB Sheets.

                                                                                       I have a hundred haiku memorized,

                                                                                       57 songs in B flat.

                                                                                       I circulate 3 lines of chatter--

                                                                                       salesman, cynic or stooge.

                                                                                       I manage the major holidays--

                                                                                       Christmas cognac, Easter chocolate,

                                                                                       the slaying of a lamb for Leonard Cohen's birthday.

                                                                                       There's a suicide guess at every luncheon,

                                                                                       winter country ruins passed in an open touring car.

                                                                                       Sharecroppers starve on the move.

                                                                                       Railroad ties are soaked and smoking in kerosene clouds.

                                                                                       I'm sick, a little dizzy.

                                                                                       New medications float through my chest,

                                                                                       cause my head to fall into my hands,

                                                                                       cradle senseless on the reading table.

                                                                                       I hear a busker with a 12 string

                                                                                       snatching at "Tin Cross Blues."

                                                                                       This is how I manage my distractions:

                                                                                       the darker seasons drain me

                                                                                       and it's convenient not to care.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                          R.T. Castleberry lives in Houston, Texas.  His work has appeared in such publications as Paterson Literary Review,

                                                 Silk Road, Comstock Review, and Argestes.

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                  

                                                                                                                                                                                         

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Volume 2, Number 2  2009  (top of page) 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              Volume2, Number 1  2009 

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      Archives     

 

 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Home Page    

 

                            13 MILES FROM CLEVELAND

                             Edited by Joe Balaz

 

                             Joe Balaz lives in northeast Ohio in the Greater Cleveland area.   He edited Ramrod--A Literary and Art Journal of Hawai'i and was also

                                      the editor of Ho'omanoa: An Anthology of Contemporary Hawaiian Literature.

 

                                     

                                      All works appearing in 13 Miles from Cleveland are the sole property of their respective authors and artists

                                      and may not be reproduced in any way or form without their permission.   ©  2009