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Washed Away

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Allison Renner

When my grandmother died, I went with her. I floated just behind, through the ceiling and over the roof. As she surged toward the sea, I took one last glance down at the lush treetops, wishing I could reach for her so she’d know she didn’t have to make this journey alone. I remember her arranging my tea set just so, completing puzzles with both our hands pushing down the final piece, me struggling to stay awake while she watched the late-night talk show, baking snickerdoodles while the rest of the family talked in the den. The silence of us reading together on the couch, side by side as we are now, waiting for the waves to wash our spirits away.

* * *

ALLISON RENNER is the author of 
Green Light: The Gatsby Cycle and Won’t Be By Your Side. Her fiction has appeared in Ghost Parachute, SoFloPoJo, Ink in Thirds, Gooseberry Pie, and others. She can be found at allisonrennerwrites.com.

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Broken China

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Claire Kroening

Today, burnt coffee clung 
to the back of 
my throat. A bitter 
epilogue of your 
sweetness.
Today, tears patter 
into empty china 
cups; moon-drenched 
lyrics shakily 
forgotten. Today is a 
reminder of our last.

* * *

CLAIRE KROENING is an award-winning writer and freelance editor/proofreader residing along the great lakes. Connect with them on Instagram @clairerosek. 

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Canticle

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Leonard St-Aubin

Beloved of the sky,
said Emily Carr,
these tall pines against blue sky
​—that will never be timber--
trunks slender, twisted 
where they bent to find the sun
through the shade of hardwood trees,
and dropped low branches
'til only their tops,
feathery, exposed, catch light.
Now, like northern palms,
they rise up above
the bare winter canopy,
only they are green,
illuminated 
by afternoon sun,
each cluster of fine needles 
a starburst, lit or backlit,
vibrates, imperceptibly
a hymn to the sky.

* * *

LEONARD ST-AUBIN divides his time between Ottawa and a summer home in PEI. His poems have been published in RED: The Island Story Book (November 2025), in Bywords.ca and in the Pownal Street Press collection FIONA.

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The Shed

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Suzie Pearson

Emptied.
Standing as a monument to
      every discount,
      every sale,
      every closing down event,
      “everything must go”.
Packets, unopened, aged with neglect.
Boxes remain sealed.
A forgotten moment of need.
Duplicates waiting in the depths of shelves.
A reminder of what was lost.

* * *

SUZIE PEARSON’s poetry has been published in Whispered Words (Writer Shed Press, 2024), as well various online magazines. She's also received a highly commended in Wolverhampton Literary Festival Poetry competition and appeared at WoLF 2025, and participated in both Ironbridge & Shrewsbury Poetry Slams 2025. Find her at @wordsfromanotebook  and www.wordsfromanotebook.com 

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Winter Woe

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Jaime Dunkle

The ground is so cold 

Buried deep below
She cannot perceive
Which way the wind blows

There's no mistaking
This winter woe

In the dead of winter
No life grows
The shadows shift
Other worlds unknown
Dead trees rustle 
Covered with snow

There's no mistaking
This winter woe

* * *


JAIME DUNKLE (she/they) crafts poetic stories across multiple mediums. She mixes the profound and profane with an altruism that stems from her tenure as an award-winning journalist. They've performed work live on KBOO Radio and on many stages across America. They were most recently published in the New Orleans LMNL Arts zine.

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After You Left

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Shama

Water chalked out marks on the apartment walls,
roping me in; the macaque screeched--
its toy lungs failing.

The rising brine strengthened
its noose. I swatted flies circling
the swollen coffee table.

The carpet's frayed hands
released their hold of Lego bricks,
from which you once made a house.

Mothballs rolled down and rattled
in the drain filter as I pulled the plug
and scavenged my leftover pieces

from your jetsam.

* * *

Shama has work featured in Gyroscope Review, ONE ART, The Pierian, and elsewhere. She writes from an old dusty corner of the earth and can sometimes be found on Bluesky @entangledrhyme.bsky.social and IG @entangledrhyme.

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Grief

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Barbara Brooks

It tumbles like a torrent from the sky
soaking the ground. Drowns the newly
planted grass in a cloudburst.
 
I focus a prism on sorrow to see
if hope can be found.
 
But I can see none, only forests
razed to the ground, mountains
stripped of their tops. I notice
only the world being torn down,
dug up, burned.
 
Sorrow covers me with smog
and disease.  It forms its own glacier
that slides down to cover
my thoughts with soot and dust
from distant corners of the world.
 
In the lengthening days, I wait.
 
* * *

BARBARA BROOKS is a retired physical therapist and author of 3 chapbooks, The Catbird Sang, A Shell to Return to the Sea, Watercolors.  She is a member of PoetFools writing group. She lives in Hillsborough, NC with her dog.

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On Moosehead Lake

1/15/2026

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Picture
by John Grey

As I nod off,
a white egret
occupies the edge of my eye— 
no sound, 
only the peace
of being stone-like
in the shade,
a body open to breeze,
but forgotten by daylight.
 
The bird moves
surreptitiously--
a flash of wing,
a flick of beak,
that tuning fork
for the hidden pulse
of fish and frog.
 
I’m busy with memory
so I miss the kill,
the sudden lunge,
the silver writhing
swallowed whole.
 
The egret pauses
for a moment to digest
then resumes its ritual
of stillness and motion.
 
What’s instinct for a bird
is my way of thinking.

* * *

JOHN GREY is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Shift, River And South and Flights. Latest books, “Bittersweet”, “Subject Matters” and “Between Two Fires” are available through Amazon. Work upcoming in Rush, White Wall Review and Trampoline.

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Pirate Heart

1/15/2026

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Picture
by Bart Edelman

Hadn’t walked the plank
In a number of years.
Never planned on it again.
But when you showed up,
I dispensed with my shoes,
Feeling the smooth wood,
Cold beneath my feet,
Familiar step by step.
I was halfway across,
Before you called out--
Told me to abandon fate.
And I wavered, of course.
Didn’t know how to retreat.
Couldn’t envision the course.
Unsteady each moment.
Then I paced my way back,
Where you stood, open-handed,
Offering what still remained--
One pirate heart to another.

* * *

BART EDELMAN’s poetry collections include Crossing the Hackensack, The Alphabet of Love, The Gentle Man, The Last Mojito, The Geographer’s Wife, Whistling to Trick the Wind, and This Body Is Never at Rest: New and Selected Poems 1993 – 2023. 

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One Breath Poetry, # 1

1/15/2026

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Picture

rainy afternoon
i unburden myself to
a stranger

​
holiday tradition
that one aunt nobody
mentions

by Jahnavi Gogoi

​
​the dark side
of her temper
crescent moon


not all rainbows
lead to gold
stargazer lilies

​by Gareth Nurden


the park empty
but for mosquitos
and lovers


Can I name
one of you mine,
Douglas Firs?

by Kaushal Suvarna

* * *
​
JAHNAVI GOGOI is a poet born and raised in India now living in Canada.Her poetry has been featured in many journals and anthologies across the world. She has recently appeared in FemkuMag, The Enchanted Garden Haiku Journal, and many others.

GARETH NURDEN was born in Newport, Wales and has been writing poetry since his teenage years and in recent years has shifted focus to writing haiku and senryu and has had pieces published in over fifty sources in seventeen countries.

KAUSHAL SUVARNA: With the conversational tone and charm of offhand observations, Suvarna champions—as editor of neo-sabi voices—poetry born of authentic perception, that reveals profound beauty and insight within the everyday, scattered among everyone, not in rarefied realms reserved for a select few.

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