Saturday, July 18, 2026

Loveable Daughter by Dr. Alok Kumar Ray

Mehedi Hassan

Loveable Daughter 

My loveable daughter asked me once 

To bring her the buoy 

Meant in general for angling.

I shook my head to refuse

Disbursing a smile like a cunning politician,

Just like the Monalisha.

She said, "Oh..shit! 

You are not that good!

As a father, you ferry people 

From one bank to another in a boat every day,

Rowing in a fashion that the water looks like it's tearing apart,

And your head's sweating reflects on it, and

You are moving the boat 

Forward, cutting the current, 

And all your knots are loosening.

Your face looks clear.”

Not to answer,

Only adding sugar to the talking. 

Keeping the tongue between the teeth 

Sans any intention to taste the sweetness, juice 

Told to me in a very low voice containing tough words.

Fish are now very undisciplined and clever.

No need for a buoy now.

Come...come dear, spread the veil of the *saree, 

Me holding the other side 

As I used to hold you while reading books. 

Keep the saree tight around you

Till the water becomes slightly reddish.

We both like this. 

Will go on talking; upon our heads will reside 

Shadowing light.

*A saree is a type of garment worn by women in India.

© Dr. Alok Kumar Ray

Dr. Alok Kumar Ray

Dr. Alok Kumar Ray is a bilingual poet from Odisha, India. He writes both in Odia and English. His poems have been featured in a number of anthologies, newsletters, and magazines worldwide. He has authored two poetry anthologies in Odia and English. He has also edited one bilingual and one multilingual anthology of international repute.

Friday, July 17, 2026

DEER by Pamela A. Mitchell


Chris F

DEER


After nearly thirty years, it hit me. My marriage was ending. At the same time, my mother, who lived three thousand miles away, was battling cancer. In addition, our fifteen-year-old son was acting out in rage.


Anguish ravaged my soul.  I knew I needed to be alone. To go to the desert to pray. 


I drove 350 miles to the high desert. Our son stayed with a friend. His mother was very aware of our situation. She graciously took him in.


When I got to the motel, I unpacked and decided to walk. I was on my way to the nearby canyon river when I fell down. My body shook with grief, and I began keening in horrible screams that frightened me. I had not physically hurt myself. I felt like I was expelling my life as I sobbed. Disbelief rattled my body like a snake. How would I go on? Where would I go? I needed my mother, yet in truth, she was dying just like my marriage.


As I unleashed my grief into the earth, I raised my head to look toward the river. What I saw startled me. A semi-circle of deer stood between me and that river canyon. They were snorting, bleating, and scraping their hooves in the dirt. I was afraid, thinking they might attack me. But I knew better. I decided to continue lying there and began to talk to them. I quickly realized they were worried. They knew something was wrong. As I spoke to them softly, I reassured them I would not hurt them.


Slowly and gently, I sat up, then realized. They already hurt. They were hurting for me.


© Pamela A. Mitchell


Pamela A. Mitchell


Pamela A. Mitchell completed nursing school at SUNY Upstate Medical in Syracuse, N.Y., received an M.F.A. from Goddard College, and attended seminary at St. Bernard’s Theological School Albany, N.Y. and Church Divinity School of the Pacific in Berkeley, C.A. Pamela taught writing at SUNY Adirondack Community College, as well as journaling and poetry with psychiatric patients at Saratoga Hospital. Her poetry can be found in various literary journals, including Pulse: Voices from the heart of medicine, The Healing Muse, and the anthology Intensive Care: More Poetry and Prose by Nurses (U. of Iowa Press). She lives in Bend, Oregon, where she teaches and consults in geriatric care. 

Thursday, July 16, 2026

On the fence by Dennis Williams

cottonbro studio

On the fence

There they were-unconcern

While all around them, the pressure surge

People crying

Children being abused 

While they dare to sit on the fence


They do not show apathy

Irrespective of how loud the crying gets 

They are people without a heart 

No worry

They are just perched on the fence 


They are not bothered by

What is going on on either side? 

Probably it is right on the left 

Or wrong on the right


The echo is loud

I too hear the bellow

But no one is utterly concerned

Everyone is just sitting on the fence


The fence is their refuge 

Sitting on the fence brings them comfort 

Somewhere they can be free, carefree

Just sitting on the fence 


No one will disembark

No one is willing to be lowered

They are all aloof

Just sitting on the fence.

© Dennis Williams

Dennis Williams

Dennis Williams is a writer and Poet from Rural St. Catherine, Jamaica. He is looking forward to a good “publish 25”.  Dennis is deeply grateful to all the editors of magazines and journals who saw his work, took the time to read and appreciate it, and then included it in their prestigious publications. He would like to give a big shout-out to the editors of Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Academy of the Heart and Mind, Literary Heist, Active Muse, Rundelania Magazine, and Literary Cocktail Magazine for helping him bring his dream to life.

Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Waiting in the Waves by Rose Anna Higashi

 

Anas Hinde

Waiting in the Waves

Dawn and dusk are soundless

When, like the first pink peony opening, 

A glow appears in the murky line

Between sky and sea,

And later in silence,

The huge red orb descends,

Surrounded by quiet islands,

In the dark Sea of Japan.


Doves coo before sunrise.

On the windward coast,

Mynahs call out at first light,

And the waves lap and lilt on the sand

Or crash against the lava stones

If high tide comes with twilight.


But light itself and darkness speak only to the soul—

To the listeners who lift our hearts and eyes,

Breathless and grateful

For the gift that will come.


from Searching in Circles (Kelsay Books, 2025)


© Rose Anna Higashi


Rose Anna Higashi


Rose Anna Higashi is a retired professor of English Literature, Japanese Literature, and Poetry who lives in Honolulu with her husband, Wayne. She writes a haiku every day and publishes a monthly blog, “Tea and Travels” on her website, myteaplanner.com. Her poems appear in a variety of online and print media, including Poets Online, whose editors nominated her for the Pushcart Prize. Kelsay Books is scheduled to publish her third volume of poetry, Searching in Circles, in 2025.


Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Dandelions by Peter Mladinic

Matheus Bertelli

Dandelions 

They look like lions’ tails

standing up,

long-stemmed, silky saucer crowns

on the lawn where I am.

Maybe in a field across the ocean,

some girl picks one

and blows the silky threads 

into the air. A girl in pigtails and a dress with ruffles.




Peter Mladinic

Peter Mladinic's most recent book of poems, Maiden Rock, is available from Uncollected Press. An animal rights advocate, he lives in Hobbs, New Mexico, United States.


Monday, July 13, 2026

A STRANGE THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO MY DEATH by Duane L Herrmann

 

Edvinas Jakunskas


A STRANGE THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO MY DEATH

    As a boy, I looked up to the adults around me. They were so sure of themselves.  They always knew what to do, and what I should do, or not do.  There was no question that I was to follow their directions. 


My father's mother, whose farm was next to ours, and to whose house I began running away from home when I was two, was a firm woman.  She had rules and specific expectations.  From early on, I knew where I stood with her.  That consistency was a relief from the chaos of my home.  She loved me fiercely, but she was clear about the boundaries.


    She and the others expressed no doubts.  They knew what to do.  They knew nearly everything.  Once, when my father was working on some plumbing in our house, I asked him if he knew how to fix everything.  He repaired every piece of farm equipment he owned and used, plus our cars and trucks, and everything in the house.


     “No,” he replied.  “But I know I'm not stupid, and I can figure it out.”


     That response gave me courage decades later, when I built a house for my own family, doing all the interior work (from the studs out) and repairing appliances as needed.


     What the adults didn't know was generally not important, except for the weather.  That was vitally important to my farm family on an hourly basis, but no one could know what the weather would really be like.  The weathermen were just guessing.


    I anticipated the day when I would be just as assured and confident.  As a boy, I couldn't even be confident about little, minor things such as the way I walked, or shut my lips, or swallowed.  According to my mother, I did them all, and much else, wrong.  I certainly couldn't sleep to her satisfaction; she made that very clear.  Nor did I do any of her work correctly!  Nothing I did was satisfactory.  She merely tolerated my efforts, but often not even that.


    I was surprised to gradually learn, as the years passed, that none of what I saw in the adults in my life was true.  Their opinions, preferences, and points of view were formed before I was born, and I never observed any change.


    But that's not been true for me.


    I've kept learning my entire life, and I've shared this with my children.  I keep growing in understanding, changing, and discovering aspects and abilities about myself.  It's as if I've never become “a grown-up.”  I simply haven't gotten taller at the same time.


    Did this continual change and learning happen to the adults in my life?  I can't ask them; they are all dead now.


    If this growth also happened to them, why did I not see any evidence or indication of it?  They didn't seem to ever change.


    Surely, I'm not the only one who has kept learning and expanding as I've gotten older.


    Or am I?  


    I wonder, as each day of my life brings me closer to the end and my release.


© Duane L. Herrmann


Duane L. Herrmann

With degrees in Education and History, Duane L. Herrmann has work published in print and online, in fifty-plus anthologies, over one hundred other publications (Gonzo Press, Tiny Seed Literary JournalPage and Spine, etc), plus a sci fi novel, eight collections of poetry, a local history, stories for children, a book on fasting and other works, despite an abusive childhood with dyslexia, ADHD, cyclothymia, an anxiety disorder, a form of Mutism, and now, PTSD.  


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Saturday, July 11, 2026

Isolation by Amrita Skye Blaine

 

Angela Roma

Isolation 

The Japanese Minister of Loneliness has moved all kindergartens to the ground floor of elderly assisted-living centers. —Sara Kay


Autumn leaves abandon

the tree, collect, a blanket

on the ground   

Canada geese know

to flock with each other

Elephants, cattle, sheep, 

may stop drinking or eating

when left alone


The Minister realized

elderly people prosper 

with chatter 

and play nearby    

It’s as simple as this—

© Amrita Skye Blaine

Amrita Skye Blaine

Amrita Skye Blaine develops themes of aging, disability, and awakening. She received a PocketMFA in poetry in 2024. She has published a memoir and a three-novel trilogy, and her work has appeared in fourteen poetry anthologies and numerous literary magazines. Two poetry collections, every riven thing and strange grace, were released in Spring 2025.  

Friday, July 10, 2026

Maroon by Laura Rodley

 

Image provided by Laura Rodley


Maroon

In cranberry bogs, berries emerge as
green dots of life, swell into maroon berries
like fields of heather in Scotland,
the maroon resting, muted, swelling until
September, when the fields are flooded
and cranberries rise to the top,
necklaces of vitamin C. Along 6A
in Sandwich, a pair of regal swans
swim on the reservoir that floods
the fields, undisturbed by the back-to-back
traffic. They dip their heads to each
other, form a heart, mated for life
as they are. Where do they go
when the gates are released

and the reservoir floods the bogs?

© Laura Rodley

Laura Rodley


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Loveable Daughter by Dr. Alok Kumar Ray

Mehedi Hassan Loveable Daughter  My loveable daughter asked me once  To bring her the buoy  Meant in general for angling. I shook my head t...