Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Calcutta, 1974 by Susan Isla Tepper


                             (In memory)


Outside the terminal

lining the streets congested

by heat and car fumes—

The desperate.

Blocking zig-zagging taxis

in sheer numbers,

the begging women pleading

to sell their babies—

Arms outstretched

like holding a bread loaf.


One black dot on my pale

wall signifies nothing.

A perfect round ink splotch

from the day you shook

the printer cartridge—

squeezing out the last bits.


The women in Calcutta

wore the same dot.

A perfectionist

you had wanted to repaint.

I told you to forget it.





Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Monday, December 11, 2023

Battle of the Bulge By Doug Holder


For Lawrence J. Holder

soldiers in trees
lament to crosby's
white christmas
men wear corsages of blood.
war, that bright
vivid. red affliction
a flying hand
bitch slaps
his mess kit
a horrific side dish--
men mock the
geneva convention
and put their pistols
to the craniums
of German soldiers
the innocent
eyes of young men
clouded with jaded dust
the artillery
bombs their ears
and will do so
for years....







Doug Holder is the co-president of the New England Poetry Club, and the founder of the Ibbetson Street Press. He teaches creative writing at Endicott College, and his work has appeared in Molecule, Soul-lit, Worcester Review, South Florida Poetry Journal and more..


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



Tuesday, December 5, 2023

THE DANCE By Strider Marcus Jones


pull the roof off

knock the walls down

touch the forest

climb those mountains

and smell the sea

again.

 

watch how life

decomposes

in death

going back to land

to reform and be reborn

as something and someone else.

 

there's no great secret to it all.

no need to overthink it through

 

food and shelter

fire and shamens

clothes and coupling

used to be enough

with musicians

artists

and poets

interpreting the dance.

 

then warriors with armies

religions with god

and minds buying and selling

stole the landscape

and changed time.

 

smash the windows

break down the doors

melt the keys

rub evil words from their spells

and puncture the lungs of their wheels

 

before they kidnap you from bed

call you dissident

hold you without charge

wheel you out on a stretcher

from waterboard torture

for years 

without trial

in Guantanamo Bay.

 

they are selling

the sanctuary

we made

with our numbers

bringing back chains

making some of us slaves

outside the dance

in the five coloured rings

making winners

and losers

holding flags and flames.







Strider Marcus Jones – is a poet, law graduate and former civil servant from Salford,
England with proud Celtic roots in Ireland and Wales. He is the editor and publisher of
Lothlorien Poetry Journal https://lothlorienpoetryjournal.blogspot.com/. A member of
The Poetry Society, his five published books of poetry  https://stridermarcusjonespoetry.wordpress.com/ reveal a maverick, moving between cities, playing his saxophone in smoky rooms.
  
His poetry has been published in numerous publications including: The Huffington
Post USA; The Stray Branch Literary Magazine; Crack The Spine Literary
Magazine;The Lampeter Review and Dissident Voice.

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Friday, Again By Susan Isla Tepper

Outside uncertain boundaries

we make the pact:

The world is an invisible place.

We think we know people.

We know their clothes, 

hair, what tone they take

when things turn rocky.

Time is scarce.

Friday, again.





Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Saturday, October 21, 2023

Roadside by Susan Isla Tepper

 For Richard Fox
                   
The place that sheltered me 
is burning— though no smoke  
nor the enticing smell of leaves 
crackling in a lit barrel, roadside.
All that is long passed over.
I see you every time I walk
the bend and you come ‘round 
from the other way
passing the prickly barberry
your little dog on its leash.
We both smile waving goodbye.





Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

BLACKBALLED by Cindy Rosmus

“You see that?” I asked my roommate, Juanita. “Or am I crazy?”

As Juanita peered around the dining hall, Katie got closer.

  “’Judge Baker’s daughter?’ With her fat ass? What about her?”

“She’s wearing makeup . . .” I stood up. “On just the right side of her face!”

Those tragicomic masks, I thought of. But Katie’s whole face looked tragic. On the made-up side, black tears rolled down her cheek.

Juanita dropped her fork. “That damn CUNT.” 

She meant Chi Upsilon Nu Theta. CUNT: Liberty State’s sorority for bitches.

“Katie,” I said, when she reached our table. “Is it worth . . .”

“Don’t talk to them!” Sara said. Out of nowhere, she’d appeared. Katie’s “Big Sister.” Chi Upsilon’s “Queen” or some shit. And she didn’t even live in our dorm! 

I lost my appetite.

“That’s disgusting,” Carolyn said later, at the pub. “How they treat Katie.” Our friends nodded. 

All science nerds; or at least, nerds. Carolyn was the coolest. Blonde, and so pretty, the Chi Upsilon bitches had invited her to pledge. 

“Are you crazy?” Carolyn laughed right in Sara’s face. 

 Being Carolyn’s best friend got me, an English major, “adopted” by her nerdy pals. Science-wise, all I knew was that Claudius poured mercury into Hamlet’s dad’s ear to kill him. 

“No excuse,” Carolyn said, “pledging for Chi Upsilon.”

“Or any sorority.” In his thick glasses, Nathan looked the most scientific. “Sadistic, power-hungry females.”  

At the campus pub, we drank beer in the corner. On the jukebox, Billy Joel’s “Just the Way You Are” was playing. Rico, who dug Carolyn, played imaginary sax for her. Stevie (who we guessed was gay) held two empty plastic cups over his chest, to make tits. We all laughed.

The pitcher was empty. “I’ll buy,” I said, getting up. 

Jack the bartender was so into some blonde chick, he ignored me. A “CUNT” sister. Figures, I thought. With her feathered hair and tiny waist.

Katie would never make it. Judge Baker’s daughter, or not.

She’d be blackballed first.

I wasn’t the “sorority” type. Not fat like Katie; at least, not anymore. Mad, without the scientist part. Grieving over Joey, the “bad boy” poet from Professor Steele’s class. Joey, who’d never be mine, even now that I’d lost weight. 

Joey, who’d died in a ski accident. 

When Jack finally saw me, I raised the pitcher. 

Professor Steele’s table was empty tonight. How life had changed. I pictured us, months back, at that same table: generous Steele, with his chestnut-brown toupee and gray beard, keeping us all drunk. Loyal to our “god.” Scruffy-cheeked Joey in his leather jacket. Me, wishing Joey would grab and kiss me. Steele’s slutty young wife Lisa . . . 

“Joey doesn’t want you,” Lisa had said bluntly. 

And CUNT, I thought, smirking now, didn’t want you.

Jack slid the full pitcher over to me. “Three bucks.”

“Three?” I said.

Smirking, he took my singles. For Chi Upsilon sisters, I bet it was two.

“Shelley,” Carolyn said, as I set down the pitcher. “Guess what we’re forming?” Before I could answer, she said, “A frorority!”

“A what?”

“Fratority,” Nathan said. “I believe that’s—”

“Just us . . .” Carolyn pointed around our table. “A new club. Guys and girls. Not a fraternity, or sorority, but co-ed! And with fun people.” Still holding his plastic-cup tits, Stevie beamed.

“No sadistic, power-hungry females,” Nathan said. 

“Or asshole guys. Just us.” Rico squeezed Carolyn’s shoulders.

“You mean, like an ‘official’ club?” I said. “Don’t we need permission, from the dean, or somebody?”

Carolyn waved that off. “We’ll get it later.”

Stevie’s squinted eyes said he was calculating something. “We’ll be . . . Omega Tau Alpha!”

“Is that a real name?” I asked. 

“Who cares?”

“Is five enough members?” Nathan said.

Stevie poured out beers. “Think we need six.”

“Just to be sure,” Carolyn said, “We’ll find one more.” And got up.

Life, I thought, can be perfect, sometimes. 

In the pub doorway, Mark had appeared. This certified genius, with bulging eyes, he looked like John Belushi in Animal House. But he was crazier. 

Tonight, he had a lasso. Like a cowboy, he waved and twirled this long rope higher and higher, then farther, finally encircling Carolyn where she stood at our table. “Hey!” she yelled, as he pulled her toward him.

We were too shocked to laugh. “How about . . .” Stevie asked. 

“No,” Rico said sullenly.

“Jealous?”
“He’s crazy!”

“Then, who?” 

Life, I thought, can be fucked-up. Dead silence, as Katie walked in. However crudely it was made, we all knew what protruded from her face. Or, what it was supposed to be. To make it worse, she was all in gray. If she was skinny, it wouldn’t be funny.

Still, none of us laughed. 

Through the pub’s glass walls, Sara and Tabitha, another CUNT sister, watched, snickering. I wished the floor would split and swallow them up.

When Katie reached the bar, she burst into tears.

“Hey, Mark . . .” Carolyn rushed to untie herself. “C’mere!”

It happened so fast, Sara didn’t see it coming. Open-mouthed, Tabitha watched, as Mark’s lasso expertly looped around Sara’s waist. “You asshole!” Sara yelled. 

Then Mark was running down the hall, with Sara in tow. 

From the pub doorway, we all cheered, especially when Sara lost her balance and fell. “I’ll kill you!” she screamed. 

Seeing her dragged down the hall, legs thrashing, knowing her bony ass was nearly scraped raw, made us howl with laughter. 

Only Katie stayed behind. When Carolyn and I got back inside, Katie was sipping a beer at our table. The “elephant trunk” lay discarded next to the empty pitcher. 

“Number six!” Rico announced, when Mark came back, chuckling. As he rolled up his rope, the applause was deafening.

For the next hour, Mark’s beers were free. When Toto’s “Hold the Line” came on the jukebox, he waved his clenched fists like a victorious boxer. Again, we cheered.

“Great job, man!” Jack carried our next pitcher over, himself. “Hate that bossy bitch!”

“And Sara,” Carolyn said, “hates us!”

Katie looked down at her beer. “Guess I’m blackballed.”

With fresh cups, Stevie made a new set of tits. “Not from Omega Tau Alpha.” 

“Who’s that?”
Mark smiled. “Maybe us.” As he touched his cup to Katie’s, their fingers touched. “And maybe . . . you.” 

Carolyn kicked me under the table. 

Without that stupid trunk, Katie was cute. Especially with makeup on both sides of her face. When she smiled back at Mark, she even had dimples. 

She paused before raising the cup to her lips.

THE END




 
Cindy originally hails from the Ironbound section of Newark, NJ, once voted the “unfriendliest city on the planet.” She talks like Anybodys from West Side Story and everybody from Saturday Night Fever. Her noir/horror/bizarro stories have been published in the coolest places, such as Shotgun Honey, Megazine, Dark Dossier, Danse Macabre, The Rye Whiskey Review, Under the Bleachers, and Rock and a Hard Place. She is the editor/art director of Yellow Mama and the art director of Black Petals. She’s published seven collections of short stories. Cindy is a Gemini, a Christian, and an animal rights advocate. 

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Incinerated by Susan Isla Tepper

When you first left
I ran to the top
of the house 
tore open the window 
looked out 
over the tree line.
The trees were shivering.
I thought about searching
everywhere.
You can’t be located
on any map—
for me your body
has become incinerated—
It’s hard to remember
to pretend.
My lips squeezed shut
a rush of words
too cold to swallow.




Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Monday, September 11, 2023

A WOMAN DOES NOT HAVE TO WAIT by Strider Marcus Jones

under the old canal bridge you said
so i can hear the echoes
in your head
repeating mine
this time
when it throws
our voices from roof into water
where i caught her
reflection half in half out of sunshine.
thats when i hear Gerschwin
playing his piano in you
working out the notes
to rhapsody in blue
that makes me float
light and thin
deep within
through the air
when you put your comforts there.
Waits was drinking whisky from his bottle
while i sat through old days with Aristotle
knowing i must come up to date
because a woman does not have to wait.





Strider Marcus Jones – is a poet, law graduate and former civil servant from Salford, England with proud Celtic roots in Ireland and Wales. He is the editor and publisher of Lothlorien Poetry Journal https://lothlorienpoetryjournal.blogspot.com/. A member of
The Poetry Society, his five published books of poetry  https://stridermarcusjonespoetry.wordpress.com/ reveal a maverick, moving between cities, playing his saxophone in smoky rooms.
  
His poetry has been published in numerous publications including: The Huffington Post USA; The Stray Branch Literary Magazine; Crack The Spine Literary Magazine;The Lampeter Review and Dissident Voice.

Sunday, September 10, 2023

I See You By JPR

For the snake's proverbial tongue is always unmistakable to one such as I.
A predator hidden lacks the conviction of the wolf that stands within the open alone.

A drill bit bites into the knee; your confession matters nothing to me.
For I desire to witness you suffer.

As you walked in of your own volition.
But who said anything about leaving?

The deadbolt is merely to contain.
Never to prevent the unwanted witnesses’ momentary intrusion.

Never mistake, there is always someone willing to cross that invisible line.
Where one finds shackles of morality another equally views freedom in the rapture of murder’s power trip.

Cross the wicked and so will you suffer the consequences.




JPR, is a southern gothic writer his work has been published by.

Disturb The Universe, Horror Sleaze Trash, Piker Press, Fixator Press, The Dope Fiend Daily, Punk Noir Magazine, It Takes All Kinds A Literary Zine, Spill The Words and Fearless Poetry Zine.

His work is often dark and always unfiltered.



Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Brace by Susan Isla Tepper

— for Ukraine

You’ve seen the world
claim you paid the price
suffered:  Suffering 
is bombs falling
Years on end 
tanks down the streets
the queueing for food
and water shortages,
Collapsed buildings
corpses lining the roads
starving animals
eating other dead ones.
You haven’t suffered.
Brace yourself.





Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Friday, August 11, 2023

Ophidiophobia by Bruce Morton

The caduceus
Not withstanding
She is afraid,

Deathly afraid,
Forever fearful,
Limbic phobic,

Of snakes.
I am not
Sure why.

Perhaps it has
Something to do
With Eve.




Bruce Morton divides his time between Montana and Arizona.

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

ALL by Susan Isla Tepper

          for Simon Perchik (1923 – 2021)

All I can do is speak of love
your words and the color
of the sky
each breaking season—
Allow me to explain
my sadness at your leaving
so many felt that pain’s 
strange progression
in stops and starts.
All the while you knew
I still needed you.




Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Wednesday, July 19, 2023

Species by Susan Isla Tepper

Don’t be fooled.
We are now at the beginning.
I dare not say this out loud
for fear of being stoned.
Ridiculous, you would say,
Much more likely
you will be shot or raped.
But I know better.
The ants are back
in proliferation.
New species, much smaller, 
more deadly.






Susan Isla Tepper is a twenty years published writer in all genres. Her current project is an Off-Broadway Play on the subject of art and life.

Thursday, June 15, 2023

Jowl By Curtis Blazemore

 

I’ve seen the feeblest minds of my generation get in

the best MFA programs in the U.S. of A. I read the

finest minds pseudonymously blogging about

difficult ways to be naked in the dark. The motel in

Barstow was called The Half-Sack Motor Palace


and it was hard to know if this was fate or just gassy

bloat, or maybe it was a secret hot-tub hideout for

defrocked priests and remedial orphans… either way

I had to piss, write a poem about pissing, and nap,

so I checked in. Ginsberg was there, sitting on the bed


in my room. He puffed his hash pipe silently. I pulled

us a couple of beers from my bag and used the john,

then we split the beers and the rest of his Lebanese

Blonde space cake while comparing hungers and highs,

and Lo and Behold! We agreed that everyone is either


strange or familiar. We agreed the ex-Prez tweets like

a mean girl. We agreed this thing called the real world

is a bizarre place where pissed-off creatures say things

aimed at your face. Sunlight spilling in the window

made the smoky room iridescent. I remembered I’d


forgotten to write my poem about pissing, and heard

Buk calling me a lazy old excuse for a poet through

the floorboard. “Ginsberg,” I whispered through the

sunlit haze, “my poems got kicked off the joyride,

they’re just a rest stop headache with an occasional


glory hole— I lie in the dark naked and black out

and none of my angels come, not a one.” He looked

thoughtful for a few beats, then aimed words right at

my face. “Sounds to me like you’re fucked,” he said,


but I’ve got Kerouac’s carcass in my car trunk… I’ll

drag that in, leave him with you, so you can take him

on the road, see if that helps.” Ginsberg ambled out the

door. Like a sap I sat and waited until the sun went

down. My poetry chops were jowls. I had to piss beer.






Curtis Blazemore has been on the planet far too long, publishing various works in between having bad luck and making people rethink their faith in humanity. No matter. He sees sentences in the exhaled smoke and scribbles furiously. He hopes someday to be able to afford a Greyhound bus ticket to Graceland.

Sunday, May 21, 2023

As So Goes The Bear By John Patrick Robbins

Our words were short as time is but a moment ever fleeting upon this plain of existence.

My memories of you are as cloudy as a puddle's gray sky's reflection of something I rather forget.

But my friend you once told me.

"Our disease does not hide, we simply choose to ignore it until it's far too late."

I didn't want to face the solution, as I spoke to you beyond fucked up.
Lost in a storm of ego and ignorance that I could control a fucking tornado by pretending I was ultimately in control.

"You know you can always call me John, just make sure it's when you are ready to admit it's beyond your control."

My old friend said to me and as I said my goodbyes I played it off.
Mocking his spiel and doing what I do best.

Play the role others believe to be the fractured individual that is someone over time I truly do not understand myself.

I could always called you and like anyone not wanting to face the cancer that is their truth I never did.

And on the day an old friend told me of your passing I was numb fighting withdrawals, my heart pounding like a wounded animal yearning for escape.

I thought of you, a man who had battled a stroke, cancer and the same addiction as I.

It was never that I didn't call because I did not respect you.

It is the exact opposite my friend.
I admired you as many will speak of your words.
But as we are eternally brothers of the page.

It is the compassion you showed me as a friend knowing me no more than a stranger from a website.

You eternally are that bear, as that animal often stands alone in its strength and understanding.

That pillar has been removed only from sight never from heart or the dungeons of a darkened soul such as mine.

Rest well my friend.

Sincerely from the pains of my eternal regrets.







In memory of a great friend.
I do not explain art, I merely create it.