Saturday, January 3, 2026

even now By Keith Pearson


she flickers

thru my mind 

a drive-in movie

from 1975.
 

remembering her voice

like an am radio

sweet soul music

glowing in the dark.

 

bare summer skin

warm as cake

water dripping down

like diamonds.

 

everything was borrowed

except what i kept.






keith pearson was born and raised in new hampshire and works at a local high school in the math department.



 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

New Year By Jake St. John


I'm at the pool hall

and just finished prepping 

for the inclement weather. 


I’m reading some poems 

while the bikers 

hit on the barely legal bartender.


I got the last beer 

from the keg 

before it kicked.


It appears 

I’m starting the year

getting lucky.





Jake St. John lives in the woods on the edge of the Salmon River. He is the author of several collections of poetry including Lips Leave Scars (with Jenn Knickerbocker, Whiskey City Press, 2023) Ring of Fog (Holy and Intoxicated Publications, 2022), Night Full of Diamonds (Whiskey City Press, 2021), and Lost City Highway (A Jabber Publication, 2019). He is the editor of Elephant and is considered an original member of the New London School of poetry. His poems have appeared in print and online journals around the world."


His current book, The 13th Round is published through Six Ft. Swells Press and is available everywhere please pick yourself up a copy today.

https://www.amazon.com/13th-Round-Jake-St-John/dp/B0F2KBGR8M

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Can you hear the sleighbells ring? By Keith Gorman


It’s time to hang the holly out. And because I

thought that I might sing and make this a cutesy

Christmas poem, I’d like to get a few things straight

before the holidays throttle us toward extinction:

 

No one’s helping to garnish the tree. As a matter of fact,

the heavy boxes in the basement must be hauled

up the stairs, step by narrow step, on a strong, steady

back. However, the stairs are steep, and loosening

 

tree limbs requires patience, not to mention

hanging all those glitzy reindeer and making damn sure

the lights all work; there are always a few bulbs

broken, loose, or in dire need of replacement, so I turn

 

to you and ask: If this Christmas Day is your very last,

and from this year on, the sleighbells will all be gone,

do you still have the balls to hang balls on a tree?

Let’s have a beer and start that conversation. 




Keith Gorman is a retired Appalachian poet who resides with his two cats, Iggy and Ozzy, near the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Eastern Tennessee. He is a scholarship recipient and graduate of The Sherwood Conservatory of Music in Chicago, Illinois. Currently, he divides his time between writing and hiking the slopes. His poetry appears in various journals, including I-70 Review, Chiron Review, Slipstream, Broadriver Review, Delta Poetry Review, Salvation South, and Naugatuck River Review.

Monday, December 29, 2025

Broken Yet Whole By Lily Mae


Shattering slowly, day by day,

becoming collateral damage

of a world that feeds on pain.


I lie a doormat on foundations

laid with vile words

spewed from the darkness

that hides behind the faces

of those who dare to say they love you.


Conniving, twisted souls

lost in their own mass destruction,

blowing counterfeit sunshine

up the proverbial asses

of the vulnerable,

the already broken.


Feed or die…

the self-imposed banner they wear.

Bloodied feet cross broken glass,

licked clean by forked tongues

as the shadow swells.


I saw you.

Believed in you.

Waited for the awakening.

The wait is over.


Delicacy pushed to the edge

should strike fear

in all who witness,

yet the blind remain in awe.


I rise slowly now,

a power unseen by the masses.

Retribution begins its quiet work

slow, methodical,

coiling the spine,

slicing ego

as decimation takes root.


Hunger for the death of illusion

ignites me.

One strike

sinking fangs tasting life force, 

rage completes its circle.


The corpse is shoved aside.

I light one up in celebration,

glass shattered into a kaleidoscope of color.


Broken

yet whole.








Lily Mae 

Is a northern Michigan poet and writer who's work can be read at Hello Poetry, Writers Café and also at Facebook under Lily Mae Poetry .

Friday, December 26, 2025

Grip By David R. DiSarro


A tiny hand clutching the cord

wrapped around a stillborn

sibling, the survivor’s grip

eventually pulling at pant legs 

in the front parlor, or

pirouetting fingers into fists 

for the school yard. His parents 

spoke in ghost-quiet whispers

around him, soaked themselves 

with whiskey, and sang sweet 

obscenities to each other,

undercover, trying to conceive

of something they had lost.




David R. DiSarro is currently an Associate Professor of English at Endicott College in Beverly, MA. His work has previously appeared in Neologism Poetry Journal, Bending Genres, The Rome Review, The Hawaii Pacific Review, among others. David's first chapbook, I Used to Play in Bands, was published by Finishing Line Press. He currently lives on the North Shore of Massachusetts with his wife, Riley, five children, and two rambunctious dogs.

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Last Night, Again By Heather Kays


If I say it was the last time

enough times,

maybe one of them

will be true.


I swear I’ll put down the glass,

walk away from the edge,

stop chasing the fire

that burns me whole.


But the night calls with familiar voices,

a siren song of smoke and shadows,

and I’m drawn back

to the place I promised myself I’d leave.


Last night was the last night,

I told myself—

but the morning never listens.


And one night folds into the next 

and into the next 

and into oblivion. 


Regret, shame, repeat. 

Regret, shame, repeat. 

Regret, shame, repeat. 


I wonder if I will ever be clean. 

I've stopped apologizing to myself... 

Because I know without changed behavior 

It's just pretty lies and lip service. 


And here I am again,

in the wreckage of promises,

counting ash instead of stars,

waiting for the next last time.




Heather Kays is a St. Louis-based poet and author passionate about writing since age 7. Her memoir, Pieces of Us, dissects her mother’s struggles with alcoholism and addiction. Her YA novel, Lila’s Letters, focuses on healing through unsent letters. She runs The Alchemists, an online writing group, and enjoys discussing creativity and complex narratives.



Monday, December 22, 2025

Past Life Regression By Doug Holder


Sorry to tell you

I wasn't a king

A prince

that kind of thing.


I didn't fall from grace

I had none in the first place.


I saw my head


In a hangman's noose 


I dug latrines


In some ancient war


I was the groom of the stool


For many a holy fool.


I was a tosher


Looking for gold --


Redemption---


In a London sewer.



I ate the moldy bread

Off the chest

Of many a dead sinner

Yes....


That was


my dinner...





Doug Holder is on the board of the New England Poetry Club and teaches creative writing at Endicott College. His latest poetry collection is " I ain't gonna wait for Godot, no more" ( Wilderness House Press)


Co-President of the New England Poetry Club
Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene   http://dougholder.blogspot.com

Ibbetson Street Press  http://www.ibbetsonpress.com

Poet to Poet/Writer to Writer  http://www.poettopoetwritertowriter.blogspot.com

Doug Holder CV http://www.dougholderresume.blogspot.com

Doug Holder's Columns in The Somerville Times

https://www.thesomervilletimes.com/?s=%22Doug+Holder%22&x=0&y=0
Doug Holder's collection at the Internet Archive   https://archive.org/details/@dougholder





even now By Keith Pearson

she flickers thru my mind  a drive-in movie from 1975.   remembering her voice like an am radio sweet soul music glowing in the dark.   bare...