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.
Friday, April 10, 2026
Reunion By Mike Casetta
Thursday, April 9, 2026
THE ENCOUNTER By Michael Minassian
A woman sits next to me
at the bar, and glances
at my pint of ale.
I hear her say, the same,
then I turn to her
to say good choice.
But she points to the clock,
you have 30 seconds to recognize me.
Running through several scenarios
from my past, I wonder
if I slept with her,
or brushed up against her poetry.
One-night stands less embarrassing
than workshop frictions,
collaborative writing,
or open readings.
When I glance in the mirror,
the woman is gone,
her empty glass on the bar.
I never find out who she is.
My past crowded with characters
in the topography of memory,
uncertain landscapes
that belong to someone else.
MICHAEL MINASSIAN is a Contributing Editor for Verse-Virtual, an online poetry journal. His poetry collections Time is Not a River, Morning Calm, A Matter of Timing and Jack Pays a Visit, are all available on Amazon. His collection 1000 Pieces of Time was released October, 2025 by Sheila-Na-Gig, Inc. For more information: https://michaelminassian.com
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
The Geometry of Retraction By Joe Garvey
The porch holds smoke.
Not a room. A line.
Neighbors on the rail.
Shoulders set. No give.
Sailors kick the Atlantic
off their boots.
Salt hits wood. Stays there.
Chains strike hull.
Iron on iron.
A buoy rings once.
Fog takes it.
The dock hums.
Low and constant.
Tide pulls back.
Mud shows.
Black.
Wet.
Holding what it took.
Rot. Salt.
Old weight.
Salt keeps the record.
In the grain. In the throat.
Poets in the corner.
Hands marked.
Match flare.
Paper burns down.
A bottle passes.
No label left.
Whiskey sits heavy.
Does not ask questions.
Diesel in the lungs.
Smoke layered on smoke.
Coffee gone cold hours ago.
Still on the table.
Engines tick as they cool.
Metal pulling in on itself.
The radio leaks static.
A voice almost there.
No one turns it.
No one talks.
Boots on planks.
Weight carried forward.
Day shuts without asking.
Neighbors.
Sailors.
Smokers.
Up the incline.
Breath in.
Burn.
Breath out.
Less of it.
Grit set deep.
The air keeps moving.
Does not need a body.
It goes.
They follow.
I stay a moment longer.
Hand on the rail.
Feeling the wood hold the score.
Then I go too.
Same as them.
Nothing said.
Everything carried.
Joe Garvey is an American poet from Worcester, Massachusetts who lives in Narragansett, Rhode Island. A former linebacker at Hofstra University and later an actor in film and television, he writes about labor, salt air, endurance, and the quiet machinery of modern life. His work has appeared in Expat Press, Mad Swirl, Aethlon: The Journal of Sport Literature, and The Rye Whiskey Review. His writing can also be found at https://poetking.substack.com
Monday, April 6, 2026
Cher at the Casino By Paula Hayes
The sequins made her seventy year old something body look forty something.
I am talking about Cher.
Yes, the Gypsies, Thieves and Tramps, Cher.
Just walking through the casino like nothing. Displaced with a glass of something cool with a cherry swimming inside it.
Her hair, still an impossible black. Vampire maroon blush across impossibly high cheekbones constructing an architecture like a Klimt painting.
Absolutely no one is looking her way. She is pushing her tongue up against the back of her teeth.
A restless mass of worshippers are gathered just a few feet away with their phones lifted above their heads making an offering to their goddess.
And at the center of it all is another Cher.
A drag queen in a sheer illusion of a gown, nothing but shimmering silver dripping. The wig is enormous, cascading, theatrical, and everything you would imagine it to be. Voice, a lower register. Eyeliner drawn more like Elizabath Taylor in Cleopatra than Sonny’s Cher. Bombastically she is calling out to the crowd: I got you, babe, as her false eyelashes snapped in a wink.
A table covered in red linen. A Sharpie. Stacks of glossy photographs. The line coils.
Someone squeals, “Oh my God, you look exactly like her.”
Someone else whispers, “This is better than the real thing.”
The drag queen signs the glossies with a flourish. There is a large gap in between her front teeth.
“Oh girl, if you only knew how fucking hot it is underneath all this synthetic hair. I think the devil himself may be coming for me, or maybe I am just in menopause. It must be a hot flash!” The drag queen breathes in and tugs at her equally synthetic breasts. She lets out a husky giggle.
A security guard walks straight past the real Cher never looking at her. A woman brushes against her shoulder and murmurs “sorry” without looking up. Perfume and liquor molecules stir throughout the room like awkward men at a mixer. Cher takes a step forward but just then the crowd surges and starts closing around the table where the drag queen is seated.
“Umm hmmm,” Cher clears her throat as she rattles the ice around in her glass watching the scene. Even her “Umm hmmm” was a perfect pitch.
A sudden explosive applause breaks out. The drag queen flips her hair back and makes a raunchy joke about her breasts being bigger than the real Cher’s.
Someone shouts, “We love you, Cher!” The drag queen presses a hand to her chest in mock astonishment.
“I love you more,” she says, in a voice rich and buttery this time.
A hundred phones flash like fireflies on a summer night.
The real Cher looks like a sequined mannequin crumpled onto the floor that someone forgot to undress. Her long black hair spills forward covering her face. One long, still rather toned, leg is folded under her. Her ass is sticking straight up in the air. The cherry has rolled out of the glass and onto the floor.
A woman steps backward, nearly onto her hand, laughing, adjusting herself for a selfie. The corner of her shoe grazes Cher’s sleeve. She moves and squishes the cherry instead.
The drag queen is posing now with her arms stretched out wide.
“Am I Cher or Jesus? Who do you say I am?”
“We don’t care who you are!”
“Turn this way!”
“Do the hair flip!”
“Say it again—say I got you, babe!”
She does. They scream.
Cher pushes herself up and leans herself on one arm. Half-sitting her gaze moves across their faces, noticing their round eyes and their curved mouths. How open and hungry they all look.
Paula Hayes is a would-be-poet in Memphis where the ghost of Elvis still roams around at the Arcade. Whatever that feeling of existential aloneness is in the fiction of Raymond Carver and the paintings of Edward Hopper and the fascination with eccentrics found in Flannery O'Connor, that is the feeling she keeps trying to capture, but it is too damn elusive to be held down too long in words.
Thursday, April 2, 2026
Exhausted Hotel Rooms By Trish Saunders
The sound of your shoes dropping,
thwack!
and another thwack!
tells me our careful trestle has collapsed,
our lunchtime détente, over.
Never mind, this is the reason for a bag of books,
why I dump out Heaney, Hemingway, Joyce, Gluck,
and read madly under the monkeypod tree.
And still your silence stays with me;
only thing to do is swim to the pier,
return to find a plover pecking
at the flyleaf picture of
James Joyce.
We will learn to tolerate.
Become happy.
Eventually, news of each other’s deaths
will not trouble us.
But just now
you were watching from our hotel window,
I saw your muscled back
retreating.
Trish Saunders has poems published or forthcoming in Right Hand Pointing, Gargoyle Magazine, Chiron Review, and Open Arts Forum, among other places. She lives in Seattle.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
TOOTHACHE By Dan Flore III
I am
in agony
fumbling
through tubes
in the bathroom
looking for
the topical pain killer
I can’t find
it
so I throw
wart cream against
the wall
and when it hits
so does another
sudden rush of pain
AAARGHHH!
I scream
and decide
to go get drunk
Dan Flore III’s writings have appeared in many publications. He is the author of several books, the latest being EVERYTHING MUST GO. (Cajun Mutt Press)
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Then There Was the Bad Weather By Jeff Weddle
I was with Curtis at High on Rose
on a stormy afternoon.
We were on maybe our fourth pitcher,
maybe our fifth.
“Holy shit!” Curtis said,
pointing out the window.
“That car just fell through the road!”
“You’re drunk,” I said.
“Yes, but that car still fell through the road.”
I swiveled and saw a small foreign number
with its left front tire
swallowed by the street.
“Well, shit,” I said.
Of course we went outside.
Maybe we went to help, maybe to gawk,
but there we were.
A woman sat behind the wheel.
She might have been thirty,
a little chubby, a lot pissed.
“My fucking car fell through the road,”
she said.
“That’s what I told my friend,”
Curtis answered.
“He didn’t believe me.”
“Well, let’s fix this.” I said,
embarrassed at being a nonbeliever.
We made the chubby woman
get out of the car.
She wore jeans and a white cotton shirt
that quickly became transparent
with the rain. Nothing underneath.
That didn’t bother her
and it didn’t bother us.
Curtis and I crouched down
and put our backs into it.
In no time at all, the car was free.
The chubby woman in the transparent shirt
said “Thanks” and drove away.
“That was a hell of a thing,” Curtis said.
“A hell of a thing,” I echoed.
We went back inside
and finished our fourth pitcher,
or maybe our fifth.
Then I guess we had one more.
Some days are for peaceful drinking
and some days are for cars
falling through the road
in front in the bar.
This was that first kind of day
until it became the second.
The hole is long since filled
and Curtis is recently dead.
That’s the whole story, but I wonder
sometimes if the woman told it
over the years, and if she did,
what she had to say about us,
her wet shirt,
and the providence of chance.
Maybe we became heroes
to people we never knew,
our story, a legend.
Maybe we were just
a couple of drunks
Jeff Weddle is the Alabama Beat Poet Laureate (2024-2026). His latest book is Letter to Xhevdet Bajraj (Uncollected Press, 2025). His work has appeared in Albanian and Spanish translation
Reunion By Mike Casetta
A treasured friend since our high school days, back when Vietnam was percolating & a draft was coming & civil rights was brutally ...
-
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...
-
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...
-
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...




