The Rye Whiskey Review
We're the Ezine dedicated to all things barroom. We are slightly off what others consider the norm and always the last to close the bar. If you prefer the local dive bar to the glitz of some overpriced club then you're our kind of people. So welcome grab a drink and enjoy.
Tuesday, July 14, 2026
ROADS By Dr. Roger Singer
Sunday, July 12, 2026
Artemis By Shannon O’Connor
When I was young, my family had
a 3-D image of the Apollo 11 landing
on top of the ledge of the doorway,
the first man on the moon.
I asked my father why the craft was named
Apollo,
not Artemis,
since she was the goddess of the moon,
and Apollo, the god of the sun.
He didn’t have a good answer,
I think he muttered the sun reflects
on the moon, and that’s where its
light comes from.
I didn’t buy it.
I believe the ship was named
Apollo because he was a man,
and Artemis, a woman.
Even in space, men made the rules.
Fast forward to now.
Artemis 2 went around the moon.
Was she named
Artemis
because all the little girls like me had
the same question? Because the ship that goes
to the moon should be named
after the goddess of the moon.
We are living in a time where human beings have gone where
no one has gone before, and it’s bewildering to think
the world still turns, we have the same
issues, not everyone has enough,
people die senselessly every day,
are born every minute,
some have no purpose and want
to end their lives, wars rage and children
are murdered,
but the Earth still floats
in space
It will continue until no more humans are here.
But we could go out there.
To see if we’re alone, to possibly
find a magnanimous culture to smack some
sense into the beings on this planet
to tell us we deserve the peace
universally sought,
to dream a dream
of the goddess of the moon,
going further and further,
than anyone else in the history
of this planet we call home.
Shannon O'Connor lives in the Boston area where she works and writes. She travels when she can, in order to find inspiration and worlds outside her sphere. She is the chairperson of the Boston Chapter of the National Writers Union. She can be found on her Substack, Ms. Hen's World.
Saturday, July 11, 2026
No Right in This Passage By Ken Gierke
driven by a need for acceptance
fueled by a desire for an identity
too young to know the difference
too old to be excused for his folly
swept up in the urgency of the moment
grasping the one solid object in his possession
he enters the store, gun drawn
too young no more
too old, too soon
fueled by the power at his command
driven by the fear of discovery
taking the life held in his hand
gathering his meager bounty
he flees from the scene
once a warmth in his hand
now a burning in his mind
this cold realization
life taken from another
does not add to his own
a life of little prospect
stares him in the face
sixteen, sitting on a curb
beneath a streetlight
bottle unopened by his side
not worth the price
gun lying at his feet
head held in his hands
wrong turn in this rite of passage
Ken Gierke is retired and lives in Missouri. His poetry has been published or is forthcoming both in print and online in such places as The Rye Whiskey Review, Poetry Breakfast, Amethyst Review, Silver Birch Press, Rusty Truck, Trailer Park Quarterly, The Gasconade Review, and River Dog Zine. He is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and his poetry collections, Glass Awash in 2022, Heron Spirit in 2024, Random Riffs in 2025, and The Long Haul in 2026 have been published by Spartan Press. His website: https://rivrvlogr.com/
Friday, July 10, 2026
if you really must know by keith pearson
without asking i know
it is the solitude
i remember most.
after a good meal.
after a storm had passed.
after our argument
about the poetry
of wallace stevens.
after sex.
and how the solitude
born in the intensity
of the moment
ran down like some
antique clock wound tight
and put aside to slowly
tick the quiet moments down.
to when words became
necessary again whether
we wanted to speak them
or not or even needed to.
but they were just words
and meant nothing.
why else are they the thing
i cannot remember.
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Drink Together By Paul Moore
The sun dips low,
a syrupy amber.
We're down here,
swimming lazy laps
in the sweet liquor
of a shared dream.
The bottle curves,
our world a tight embrace.
You exhale bubbles of laughter,
I chase them with my eyes.
Each sip from the top
pulls us closer,
warmer,
we understand
that this tiny, bottled ocean
is big enough
for just us.
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
It's Never Magic By John Patrick Robbins
Only a craft I forged through sacrifice.
Sustained is the note until perfection, leaving little regard for the host,
whose hands bleed to remain largely unheard, as is the way of art.
Empty as love and twice as destructive.
Pain is a consequence of masked intentions.
A devilish smile is the wolf's allure.
Please ignore the scars if they do so bother you, my dear.
I sold it eagerly, only to come to the realization.
Empty truths and false promises are but the nature of the beast.
I have evolved with loss
and disregarded my humanity along the way.
May I make you bleed to view what it is to once again feel?
Do you desire something in return?
Please allow me to poison your dreams so we may cast nightmares together.
Please, my love, just welcome my chaos within.
For once you have embraced this damnation's splendor,
you will realize there is no turning back.
All demons once knew light,
as in your death or your acceptance.
I once knew you.
JPR, is a Southern Gothic writer.
His work has appeared in Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Cold Rambler, A Thin Slice Of Anxiety, Spill The Words Press, Fixator Press, Disturb The Universe, Horror Sleaze Trash and The Dope Fiend Daily.
His work is often dark and always unfiltered.
Monday, July 6, 2026
It’s All Kinda Blue By Renee Williams
Prussian blue, deep and dark, is desired
but if the image comes through
even a lighter blue makes my heart dance.
As I wash the cyanotype beneath the shower,
tiger stripes in my photo sneak through
in blue, blue, glorious blue!
I dream in blue
get lost in blue
find myself in blue
blue days become blue nights
blue ocean waves wash away
the blues that will not leave me
blue skies illuminate horses
blue clouds brood above the dunes
blue on the beach is better
than the Blue Ridge Mountains.
My art moved to blue
reflected the blue inside me
the blues, the blues, the blues
the blame, the blame, the blame,
You’re becoming more Catholic
every day, my husband tells me.
My father’s eyes were light blue,
aqua blue, sparking blue, twinkling blue
but his eyes are shut now forever.
I still hear him, talk to him more now
that he’s dead than when he was alive.
This house, soon to be sided midnight blue,
like sea water, coastal waves.
The ocean calls to me, wants me home,
and I want to be there
and go to the Blue Crab Tavern,
best dive bar on the beach,
where nobody knows
the blues I run from.
Renee Williams is a retired English instructor, who has written for ONE Art, Alien Buddha Press and Pine Mountain Sand and Gravel.
ROADS By Dr. Roger Singer
traveling this place and the next feeling lost while running out of shadows in the chest of night remembering unfinished fires and tattooed ...
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lemonade hair dead and deflated thin like a bleached ghost; mascara rings fat as a star pitcher’s eyeblack; she cracked her broken finger ba...
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Once he spoke the indirect speech of men, as if making bar bets after third drinks that become sincere, become angry, mean. Just his half jo...
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Diamond hair Bathe in bourbon and butter You are my Sunday prayer You are everything You are all You are life Rita S. Spalding has had poem...


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