SUMMER Poem: Summer 1, by Jeffrey Beck

The bell rang
And we all leaped to our feet
Crowding the hall
With dreams of days filled with rivers
And fires, and bikes, and naps
Our excitement hardly contained
Could be felt amongst each other
School was out for summer!

The buildup was pressurized
With many a day spent
Daydreaming and planning

There was that week we spent
Chopping down trees
To build a raft
To float down the river
Like Huckleberry Finn
The crazy plans included:
Cooking on a fire and
Bathing in the dirty river water
sleeping under the stars
and using a stick to push off from the bank

Blisters were medals
Mosquito bites were trophies
The dirt behind our ears
Evidence of adventure
Legends we were
Pioneers
The saplings were magic sticks
Of ambition and dreams had

And even now, when I pass trees
Small enough to be chopped by hand
I think of the old days before
Life’s complications and funerals
The bookmarks of a boy’s summer
Now mark your passing and
I’ll never forget those carefree days

YEAR 2025 Poem: by Isaiah Alexander

this year began in quiet pain,
same tired sun, same windowpane.
i woke up numb, then woke up late,
the calendar felt like deadweight fate.
i watched my dreams collect some dust,
and learned to stand without much trust.
doors closed so fast, i lost my grip—
each “maybe” turned to “not this trip.”
i prayed for rest, then called it grace,
while smiling through a stranger’s face.
i told myself, “just hold on tight,”
but healing never came overnight.
they said to shine, i dimmed instead—
too many thoughts inside my head.
but even shadows shape the light,
and not all wrongs deserve a fight.
now whispers spread of power’s return,
a name that makes the country burn.
i fear the laws, the loss, the lies—
the red hats hiding in disguise.
the rest of this year might not be gold,
but i’m still here, and still not cold.
i’ll keep my softness, guard my peace,
and give my guilt a small release.
i don’t expect the storms to cease,
just hope they end with some release.
and if the world forgets my name,
i’ll still spit poems through the

DEATH Poem: no rocks in my pocket, by Beril Karanfil

with your hands that are mine
drag my warm body into a lake
naked heals plowing the mud, i’m still awake
submerge me gently while i’m wearing your dress
pastels and summer, repetitive flowers
clean my sins with passion, baptize me with death
i’m John, i’m first, i’m a fair breath
the water is a cold bed, but your locking grip
is safe, but anxious to wash the words on my lip
it’s a shrift between two foreigners, no common language
i scream while water fills this mortal carriage
while you open my rib as a rite of passage
gutting this fish with a prayer made of whispers
i bleed into your nails, now this becomes your canvas
my eminence, cut away this cancerous psychosis
take away this sinking ship, this belligerent mortality
drown me in these black waters
or be my witness and drown with me

DEATH Poem: It’s Finally Bedtime, by Annabelle Kim

Stories soothe the best when imagination soars as the eyelids close and the covers’ corners adjusts and finally a warmth envelopes. So, smile and snuggle as I tell you this tale of my bedtime story.

Perched upon the windowsill, a princess is supposed to be:
her room is meant to be filled with flowing flowers caressing
decorum selected in soothing styles for her yearning presence.
A room for her and nothing more.

At least that’s what my mama said.

A princess, my dear, lives amongst grace with pride and splendor;
see the roses of sharon adorned across your ceilings embracing the
piano, you so dearly play, in a lightened halo softened only by night light.
The room builds you and no one else.

At least that’s what my mama said.

And yet mama, tell me why as I shuffle around my bed,
whilst yearning for sleep to grace my eyes
I feel an itch on my legs
I feel the humps on the bed
I feel scuffs from blankets
I feel the weight weigh on my chest.
A princess is supposed to sleep her beauty sleep for her to be a beauty.
And yet mama, tell me why as I awake tomorrow
I know that eyes dull, red faced, swollen mess all too well?

I guess I lied too to my mama.

A corner of my room she has seen.
A vision of sereneness she has been shown.
A reality of overload she has yet to foresee and feel.

A truth I owe her.

Boxes. Mama. I live amongst boxes.

Perched upon the windowsill, a princess is supposed to be;
Yet caved in cardboard has stolen her spot. Objects of mine
and friends and some from him stay in those boxes. Ones of
use, clothes and shoes, lay in obstacles amongst the floors
among the wrappers of chocolate I ate the night before. A
lip gloss or two lay forgotten yet starkly amongst blackened socks.

I live amongst memories of a future desired I have seen in
dreams and nowhere else. Perhaps in scribbled books they
may echo. Yet I just simply exist breathing to get on by, eveloped
in a room of dusty smells of packed away giggles. Notes of songs you
ask I play nights prior has long been gone in this life, mama. Long
been sold to strangers who wanted a set of keys for their talented son.

Boxes, mama, meant to be unpacked, lay still duct taped within my room.
Sharped edged long gone from the scuffle of the move are reminders of
days of promises to get things out and away. But too many hours and alarms
have come and gone. A window of opportunity I failed to grasp. Now, boxes
have become a norm – a regularized phenomenon as I come and go. Far easier
it is for me to be able to climb and grapple around the decorum I have chosen.
A room for storage and nothing more.

Don’t ask me to take more boxes, mama.
Soon they will take space from my bed. But a favor here and a favor there
means I need to merge and stack the ones already existing prior.
I don’t need more boxes, mama.

But why are they already at the door?

Packages arrive when the dawn cracks for me to gather and collect: a
spot for them upon my desk with the other letters and trinkets sent from
friends so far away, all unopened and waiting for the day I care to sit
down and embrace their warmth once more. A gift from you, mama,
lay amongst the many. Told you, I did, that I enjoyed the surprise and
yet no urge pushes me to find out what lies beyond the cardboard box.

I stuff my room with boxes with no end to see.
I take them all and place them upon each other.
I see dusted layers of the first boxes moved in.
I sense a bit of comfort in the storage room created.

A hero, mama, is supposed to come for the princess
swoop her away from the dusted past into the roar of life.
Your stories always ended with a hero.
My expectations always started with a hero.
A hero, mama, never comes in my bedtime story.
The boxes block the hero from the princess.

And so, my bedtime story, mama, filled with the boxes
I have put here myself into the room in a damp corner
of a city far away from you ends with a choice to refuse
a hero and embrace the sleep that comes at the end of
each story told at the dampening of worldly light.

I ignore an itch on my legs
I ignore the humps on the bed
I ignore scuffs from blankets

I embrace the boxes filled with mine, yours, theirs, and his.
I embrace the weight weigh on my chest.
I embrace the darkness of the night post your bedtime story.

DYSTOPIAN Poem: Burn, by Emilia Thornrose

I’ve always been told that fire would cleanse anything that it touches
So despite being surrounded by flames,
I felt hope.
Murder is not something I ever thought I was capable of
But as I stood on the steps of our nation’s capital with this president’s head in my hand,
I felt a cold satisfaction settle into the back of my heart.
For all the women who came before me
And all the women who are still fighting,
This belongs to us.

DYSTOPIAN Poem: Disappointment, by Dana Stamps, II

wilting, if there must be one stem,
greenhouse cultivated,
one root of truth,
will the universe be lonely without us? Sappy, will it yearn
for we great apes
like a flower desires petals, colors ablaze
with new life?
Withering hope is soon plucked
from people’s pots,
no more symbolic buds, sly fragrance, or green thorns.
Astonishing, these stamens
and pistils! Doom
now pollinates our apologies. Soon, no more
crimson roses to say
“Forgive me”
to paramours wronged. The fated,
hellacious sun
is a dying blossom, too.
You and me,
jilted from all memories, unromantically forgotten
by wild loves—
foxglove, oleander, hemlock,
mountain laurel,
and all our poison enemies gone—all
oblivion. My one word,
like a dandelion against my lips to sum up the human bloom,
is not “love,”
for “disappointment” echoes,
then it doesn’t.

DEATH Poem: Dream Womb, by G.R. Kramer

Ninety months since my mother’s last breath
but she returns in dreams about death
to tell of that shadow heart that drums
only for itself, that hollow home
of memory my flesh passes through,
that discard skin of forgotten folks
before my time who lived there and charmed
bright chrysanthemums, that living dream
that she wakes me into when I breathe
in and out to the skirr of crickets
as questions rummage my ransacked brain
for lame retorts. A last flower flames
as the light over the hillside fails
till the lifting moon recurs blood pale.

DEATH Poem: What To Say to My Uncle, by Zoya Davis-Hamilton

My uncle lives some hours away.
The family asked me to give him a call.
I have not spoken to my uncle in years.
The weight of my words will be magnified
By each year that has gone by.

There is no one reason why we stopped talking.
Nothing dramatic occurred or transpired.
I am sure that given the chance,
He would have continued to impart on me
Self-righteous opinions and right-wing theories.

He was part of my life when I was little.
I was drawn to narcissists even then.
They can be irresistible and charming.
So intolerable with their sense of entitlement.
But you don’t figure this out when you are little.

The question of what to say to my uncle is manyfold.
What does one care to say to someone
Who is a self-important misogynist,
Ladles disinformation and intolerance,
And does not think kindly of queer people.

What could one say to someone
Who is always toxic to his wife and daughter,
Brainwashing them so they think it is normal,
Poisoning the air in the household
With disquiet and distress as background.

What should one say to a person
Who is so ill, they lost the ability to speak,
And who happens to be dying.