Thursday, November 27, 2025

St. Mary’s of the Lake by Maria Giura

 

Image / Connor McManus

St. Mary’s of the Lake 

Perched on our shoulders, / the dead ride with us, teetering like pyramids of water skiers, forming / enormous wings.”--Barbara Crooker


The first night

of a residency where I know no one

I go down to the lake 

wound up from the long drive,

watch the sunset on the Adirondacks.

It’s Sunday night, weekenders gone, 

a calm begins to settle. A few yards away,

a father lights a fire,

a child tubes, a mother 

shouts, “Stay close to the pier.”

I feel, not lonely, but aware of my aloneness 

as I try to massage the migraine away, 

try to slow down like the lake

lulling against its rocks,

when I think of my stepfather  

whose legs were more sea than land,

who tried to teach me to take my time, 

enjoy life more. 


I parallel play with poets

who write in their rooms with doors open

or gather together on porches facing the lake.

I pray, I write, I idle and read

I try writing exercises I’d never try at home, 

picking twenty words randomly 

and writing from them

which leads to this.  

I go down to the lake again 

this time to kayak with new friends 

who instruct me to hold the paddle lightly,

to relax my grip, 

the opposite of what I’d thought. 

The next day strolling Beach Street 

where the lake begins

and the steamboats await their passengers, 

I spot my stepfather on his sailboat

one foot on deck, one on the bow

smiling at me,

tipping his cap.   © Maria Giura

Maria Giura

Maria Giura PhD is the author oftwo poetry collections published by Bordighera Press—If We Still Lived Where I Was Born (Nov. 2025) and What My Father Taught Me—and a memoir, Celibate (Apprentice House Press). An Academy of American Poets winner, Giura teaches writing workshops for Casa Belvedere Cultural Foundation.  instagram.com/mariagiurawrites/   facebook.com/maria.giura.3975  mariagiura.com


Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Eclipse by Alex Stolis

 

Image / cottonbro studio

Eclipse

         for Billie and Jim on their 70th anniversary

      

How many years make a love story?

How many years make a life?

How many wilderness adventures


with all their bruises, cut legs 

broken bones, mosquito bites 

make a marriage work?


Night brings with it a cold moon, 

cicadas crying, stars blossoming 

in a sullen sky 


scattered like so much broken glass;

it brings half-cooked dinners, 

a house filled with laughter.


Day brings the sun or clouds 

or smoky dew mornings with kids 

running late for school,


missed calls and mixed messages;  

and what remains the same 

through week after week


until the years accumulate 

into enough memories

to fill a new world


and the same sun circles 

and the same moon eclipses 

and pulls at the ocean 


and that same love; solid, firm

filled with grace, furnishes 

the framework for a universe. © Alex Stolis


Alex Stolis

Alex Stolis has had poems published in numerous journals. Two full-length collections, Pop. 1280 and John Berryman Died Here, were released by Cyberwit and are available on Amazon. His work has previously appeared or is forthcoming in Piker’s Press, Ekphrastic Review, Louisiana Literature Review, Burningwood Literary Journal, and Star 82 Review. His chapbooks include Postcards from the Knife-Thrower's Wife (released by Louisiana Literature Press in 2024), RIP Winston Smith (released by Alien Buddha Press in 2024), and The Hum of Geometry; The Music of Spheres (released by Bottlecap Press in 2024). He lives in upstate New York with his partner, poet Catherine Arra





Tuesday, November 25, 2025

The night owl of Minerva's requiem by Kevin Daniel Scheepers

 

Image / Simon Rizzi 

The night owl of Minerva's requiem 

The day has vibrancy, the night          freedom 

The tenebrous night is for liberation and bashful

self-transcendence 

The salient day the glowing hue of triumph that follows


To traverse that which                       disorients

To bewitch your troubles to a distant asteroid

burning away 

Only for its nightly return in redolent dreams

Continuous                                            unfolding

Appurtenant turtles all the way down, doubt

all the way up

Ineffable moments, thus endless poets

© Kevin Daniel Scheepers

Kevin Daniel Scheepers

Kevin Daniel Scheepers is a 28-year-old man from South Africa. He completed an MSc in Biotechnology in 2023, but always maintained a personal interest in the written arts. His work has previously been published in Audience Askew and Harrow House Journal, and is forthcoming in Brittle Paper and Emergent Literary.












Monday, November 24, 2025

Fighting Sleep by Nancy Machis Rechtman


Image/ Vladislav Nahorny

Fighting Sleep

I struggle against the all-consuming need

To close my eyes

Knowing what’s coming

But the battle is over as my fatigue betrays me

And I’m suddenly in the forest

Flames are everywhere

Flicking at my legs like serpents’ tongues

And I’m frantically trying to figure out

Why the world is burning.


I search for an exit

But there is a barricade of giant oaks everywhere I turn

And I begin to pound the ground like a drum

It’s a heartbeat

The shadows encircle me and my skin tingles

When I look up you are there

As if you’ve been summoned

And I wonder if after all this time

You are real

Or I’ve wished so hard I’ve made you appear

The fire hasn’t touched you though

Then I realize we’re back in the bar where we first met.


You stare at me with those damn eyes

Those eyes I’ve missed beyond time

That impossibly know my every thought 

And the deep ache of remembering consumes me

I know it’s fatal

But I can’t stop

Walking towards you

I can’t stop

Reaching out to touch your face

Kiss your lips

 One more time

Hot tears scald my face

As my eyes fly open

In the empty bed.

© Nancy Machlis Rechtman


Nancy Machlis Rechtman

Nancy Machlis Rechtman has poetry and stories published in Writing in a Woman’s VoiceminiMAG, Discretionary Love, Young Ravens, and other publications. Nancy has had poetry, essays, and plays published in various anthologies. She wrote lifestyle stories for a local newspaper and served as the copy editor for another paper.


Sunday, November 23, 2025

Inheritance of Silence by Peter A. Witt

 

Image / Mihman DuÄŸanlı

Inheritance of Silence

In the attic of almosts
a porcelain hush leans sideways,
smile chipped like a fractured lullaby,
skin lined with the thirst of old rivers.

Once was precious, now prone to gather dust,
curled beside a box that glints like doubt,
its corners soft with silence.

The air forgets its shape,
a hush stitched by trembling filaments;
each floorboard speaks in riddles of return.

A gown slouches in its coffin of cedar,
lace brittle as memory’s aftertaste.
Inked pages curl like scorched moth wings—
words fermented, not read.

Cedar clings like a second skin.
A music box limps through its lament,
the dancer spinning like a lie almost believed.

Books flake like shedding bark,
a rusted clasp kisses nothing,
while dust waltzes in filtered gold,
carrying the weight of what never quite was. © Peter A. Witt


Peter A. Witt

Peter A. Witt is a Texas poet and a recovering academic who lost his adjectives in the doldrums of academic writing. Poetry has helped him recover his ability to see and describe the inner and outer world he inhabits. His work has been twice nominated for the Best of the Net award. He also writes family history and is an avid birder and wildlife photographer.





Saturday, November 22, 2025

A Recurring Dream by Edilson A. Ferreira

 

Image / Pixabay

A Recurring Dream  

Sometimes one of us rises to the surface,

taking flight from an unknown dark sea,

where exiled, we have stayed for so long.      

Defeated in old battles forgotten in time,

sentenced in absentia by a merciless court,

clearing debts of incautious ancestors.

Our vision accustomed to the shadows,

our body surviving with minimal breath.

When the one who embarks on the climb

arrives on the shore and breathes full life,

he is abruptly sunk again by diligent guards,

those armed cherubim at Paradise Gate.

Has our penalty not yet lapsed?

Has the reparation of the beaten not yet been paid?

Could we endure light by the day of release?

Perhaps, then, with a pledge of the dark days of yore,

we may, sharing beloved Earth with the Almighty, 

make a new light; friendly to human nature,

openhearted, unabrasive, and compassionate.

© Edilson A. Ferreira


Edilson A. Ferreira

Edilson A. Ferreira, 81, is a Brazilian poet who writes in English rather than Portuguese. He has launched two poetry books, Lonely Sailor and Joie de Vivre, and has published 300 works in various international literary journals. Has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He began writing at the age of 67 after retiring from a bank.


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St. Mary’s of the Lake by Maria Giura

  Image /  Connor McManus St. Mary’s of the Lake  “ Perched on our shoulders, / the dead ride with us, teetering like pyramids of water ski...