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, February 17, 2026
The Residuals By Joe Garvey
Monday, February 16, 2026
SCENES FROM THE FITZ By John Grey
She’s the last of her kind
in this bar that’s the last of its kind.
She smokes one cigarette after another,
lighting the next while the current one
is still lodged between her lips,
puffing smoke through her nose,
the side of her mouth,
while ash drops on the counter,
lipsticked butts fill up the tray.
And the grizzled guy is the last of his kind,
a World War II vet, pushing ninety,
downing shots while,
shouting at the TV news,
until the liquor takes him out
just like the Germans could not,
and his head bumps the bar,
shakes up the woman’s ashtray.
Everyone else
from the woman licking
the cherry off her cocktail sword
to the two young guys arguing sports
over beers from the tap,
are just more of many,
not the first
and certainly not the last.
And then there’s the bartender.
He’s seen it all.
And yet he’s still seeing more of it.
Friday, February 13, 2026
Alleles By Heather Kays
We don’t choose the deck —
it’s a goddamn dice roll,
spinning through the hands of gods too drunk to care.
My mother’s poison—vodka-stained veins—
passed down like a fist in the dark,
a genetic lottery where you’re either lucky
or bleeding out on the floor before breakfast.
I taste the bitterness of broken promises
in every sip of whiskey,
the silent scream of DNA
folded tight like a loaded gun
in the pocket of a man too scared to shoot.
It’s not blood that makes us—
it’s the scars that twist beneath,
the alleles of rage and tenderness
locked in a cage fight,
and me?
I’m the bastard child of luck and collapsed myth.
Some nights I wear my flaws like a second skin—
rough and ragged,
a map of every bad decision
etched deep into my flesh.
Evolution is a happy accident—
random mutations in every direction.
That’s the science of survival.
That’s nature. That’s chaos.
This life?
It’s a goddamn gamble,
and I’ve been dealt a hand full of bruises,
but I’m still here,
still throwing the dice,
still betting on the chaos
to make me whole.
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.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Traditional By Joe Couture
The dive down the street’s caged road sign reads
TRAD TIONAL NITE. The blue building’s
paint is well into peeling season
yet, it’s turning green, compliments of
north winds and the bog across the byway.
A sagging deck hangs off the building
umbrellas peek past pesto-hued lattice
the whole scene provokes an internal
inquiry of inspectors’ credentials.
I hear the night in question features
fiddling, discount draught, fried fish dinners—
but someone’s misinformed—I’m sure it means
shouts after shooting McGillicuddy's,
sighs over pool shots, ogling the waitress,
getting handsy, getting cut-off,
spitting at the bar man, driving home drunk,
a woman with a headache dabbing
concealer on purple orbitals, then
he’ll claim amnesia, peck her, blame the booze
she’ll fetch him breakfast, Advil, and G2.
Joe Couture is a writer living in rural Nova Scotia. He writes for his health. If you want to connect with him, try here: @rjcouture.bsky.social
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Divorce Song By Manny Grimaldi
Today we filed for divorce at court
as if we were preparing to identify a body.
There is no blame.
I accept you, I accept that
you are not who I say you are. I accept
while Earth turns with the clock
you run counter as the Great Red Spot—
else, I would never have loved you.
And there is no blame
our voices are free—
nudity dries up the fear of death,
the fear of bird flocks in cages,
skittering.
My voice is free.
I choose to follow rules.
But does it makes a difference
what I think?
I look forward
to our severance.
There is nothing like a day when we reach Everest,
unable to remember base camp.
Manny Grimaldi served as co-founder and editor of Yearling Poetry Journal from 2021-2026.
He attends Spalding University as an MFA candidate in Poetry beginning this year.
Pretty much, the goal is to teach and write, and spoil exotic pets.
Manny published with Whiskey City Press in 2025 “Finding a Word to Describe You”
and has some publishing credits to his name otherwise. His book is available at Amazon,
using this link https://a.co/d/2CLIpGd
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
BAR down the side By Susan Isla Tepper
Under the blankets all day
Mom nursing her bottle sings
snips of Irish tunes
When school is out
I go see Dad at his local
a brick joint the neon
down the side
B
A
R
He’s rough with me
hands me a crumpled tenner
for food, turns away, says
Go home, boy.
Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty year writer in all genres. Her most recent book, a Novel titled Hair Of A Fallen Angel, came out in the fall from Spuyten Duyvil Books, NYC. Tepper has also written 7 stage plays. Her third play titled EVA & ADAMO will present at The Tank, NYC, early fall. www.susantepper.com
Monday, February 9, 2026
Loss of youth By Alyssa Trivett
If you never made a paper football,
flicked it across a gum covered desk,
as your friend stuffed a Zero skateboard in a locker or
had magazine tear outs plastered in your
room of your favorite bands,
it’s loss of youth. Or is it?
Terrible eyeshadow.
Married couples who were friends,
now divorced.
The scar on your head from when you fell in the hall is
now covered in curves of somewhat wrinkled skin and has faded.
Multivitamins.
Sunset afternoons without a jacket
as the day ran away and
our parents never knew where we were,
only that we existed somewhere in the ether.
Climbing and scaffolding empty houses,
Bill relieved himself in the corner bucket.
Trampoline thoughts. Broken wrist as I went over the
fence.
Karate chops.
Softball cleats and chips of plastic pieces missing. Still
have my mitt under my bed, no use but the relic that it
is.
Put a note in that guy’s locker even though he never called me.
Asked a guy to a dance. He ended up living with a different parent shortly after that and never heard from him again.
Nickelodeon. Romantic comedies. Disney made for TV movies.
Vintage video games.
Gain of religion.
Some sort of pop punk and emo upbringing. One more Fall Out Boy show.
Scars from street hockey.
Still bad eye shadow. Makeup pads.
Wanting to make it big as a videographer someday.
College degree. Years went 0 to 60 in a millisecond.
21, bottles of wine, beer, coffee. Nothing else. Only hope in my bloodstream and a light for those who need it.
Men don’t change.
Unanswered texts but don’t worry about that.
Loss of religion.
Seeing Bad Religion and The Academy Is
at Riot Fest.
Hot Mulligan blasting.
Alkaline Trio. Thrice. Paramore.
Midwest emo. Indie. Whatever.
Listen to music all millennium.
Focus on yourself, friend.
Count your blessings with cherished memories and VHS fast forward through the forgotten bad ones that should be left in a soppy paper cup in a parking lot somewhere.
I’ve been to more funerals than I can tally. Distance between friends and unintentional lines in the sand of only
lost contact.
Reconnecting, too.
Lift yourself into the next year.
You as well, friend, you as well.
Look up.
The Residuals By Joe Garvey
The first death was quiet. A chair. A jacket. The air continuing without instruction. I understood. The second death was a trade. I taught m...
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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...





