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Scientists have been forced to rethink the intelligence of cattle after an Austrian cow named Veronika displayed an impressive—and until now undocumented—knack for tool use. Photo: Veronika scratching her back with a stick. Photographer: Antonio J Osuna Mascaró —The Guardian, January 19, 2026 |
TheNewVerse.News
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
The New Verse News
presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com. No simultaneous submissions. Use "Verse News Submission" as the subject line. Send a brief bio. No payment. Authors retain all rights after 1st-time appearance here. Scroll down the right sidebar for the fine print.
Tuesday, January 27, 2026
VERONIKA
Monday, January 26, 2026
NOT ICE
Homeland Security officials have urged disaster response staff at the Federal Emergency Management Agency to avoid using the word “ice” in public messaging about the massive winter storm barreling toward much of the United States... The concern is that the word could spark confusion or online mockery, given the ongoing controversy surrounding US Immigration and Customs Enforcement—also known as “ICE.” —CNN, January 24, 2026
MINNEAPOLIS, JANUARY 2026
In the midst of winter
It is difficult to remember lilacs
And warm afternoons in May.
In the midst of blizzards
It is difficult to remember
The gentle glow of August evenings.
In the midst of vicious assaults
It is difficult to recall
Companionable conversations.
In the midst of monstrous brutality
It is difficult to keep faith
In the tender and indestructible spirit.
In the crash and flash-bang and shatter
It is difficult to make out
The many quiet voices of love.
But we must
Mustn’t we?
Buff Whitman-Bradley podcasts his poetry at thirdactpoems.podbean.com .
THE CITY OF WATER
for the people of Iran
The townspeople are hungry *
for bread and freedom
The streets are rivers
bubbling with chants
Crowds break into the food storage
of revolutionary guards
not to loot
but to rip the rice bags
throw fistfuls overhead
reenact the Milky Way
against the night of news blackout
We are protestors
not rioters
We fear bullets
but we fear silence more
In this torrent of blood
courage is not a laurel wreath
but a lifeline
May joy echo in our mountains
May justice wash the blood off our valleys
May our twin lakes be ^
as lucid as freedom
* “Abdanan” means “the city of water.” Located in Ilam Province, Iran, it was the scene of a remarkable protest on January 6, 2026.
^ These twin lakes are called the Black Bull Lakes. They are known for their clear blue water, although where the depth increases, the water appears to be black. The overall patterns of blue and black look like spots on a cow’s hide.
Bänoo Zan is a poet, translator, and curator, with numerous published pieces and books including Songs of Exile and Letters to My Father. She is the founder of Shab-e She’r (Poetry Night), Canada’s most diverse and brave poetry open mic series (inception 2012). It bridges the gap between poets from different ethnicities, nationalities, religions (or lack thereof), ages, genders, sexual orientations, abilities, poetic styles, voices, and visions. Bänoo, with Cy Strom, is the co-editor of the anthology: Woman Life Freedom: Poems for the Iranian Revolution. She is the recipient of the 2025 Writers’ Union of Canada Freedom to Read Award.
THE ICE STORM
Leave this city, black ice.
These roads are unusually treacherous.
Snow, thaw, then refreeze--
a polar vortex roars in from Manitoba.
This four-wheel drive offers
little protection from icy roads.
One bad tap of the brakes
will send me crashing into
a graffiti-adorned delivery truck
which states simply,
ICE out.
Or worse,
into the protestors on the corner
of Penn Avenue and 17th Street
in north Minneapolis
on this foggy subzero morning.
Whistles shriek in feverish shrill
in crazy unison with car horns,
and phone cameras rolling,
recording truth suppressed.
Ten black SUVs skulk
on each side of the pitted street,
curbs piled high with sooty snow.
Polished obsidian flanks of fear--
ICE has rolled in.
Unmarked men stalk door to door
in a Latino neighborhood near,
faces shrouded, shadowy brute army.
The salt has not made the roads safe.
The protests change nothing.
The passport I keep
on my front seat means nothing.
We do not leave our homes
because we are too cold,
too afraid, or both.
We are cyphers, faces pressed
against cold glass,
hands zipped tied, hog tied—
frozen blood stains dirty ice.
I pray for the brother and sister
I almost wish were my children
after two years of seeing them holding hands
each morning at the bus stop on 17th,
backpacks with smiling stuffed toys
clipped to the straps.
For their mother watching
her babies climb into the yellow vessel,
and the door close tightly behind.
She scurries up frozen sidewalks
to the food pantry.
Jesus, get me to the next corner,
keep my small clenched hands visible
on this cold steering wheel.
Susan Cossette lives and writes in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Author of Peggy Sue Messed Up, she is a recipient of the University of Connecticut’s Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize. A two-time Pushcart Prize nominee, her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rust and Moth, The New Verse News, ONE ART, As it Ought to Be, Anti-Heroin Chic, The Amethyst Review, Crow & Cross Keys, Loch Raven Review, and in the anthologies Fast Fallen Women (Woodhall Press), Tuesdays at Curley’s (Yuganta Press), and After the Equinox.
MY AMAZING INVESTMENT
but they’re corpses
wrapped and tied in white shrouds.
I wish they were low clouds
laid out in a row
but they’re my purchases,
femur, tibia, wrist
tied up for delivery.
I bought the rubble,
the bulldozers, too.
Israel lets in chips
and Coke.
Children are dying of hunger.
Children are dying of cold.
Our papers blame the wind.
Blame the rain.
Aid is blocked, the doctors
forced out.
By the toe-end of a corpse
as long as my forearm
is a puddle of muddy water in which a star
was lost
Patricia Davis’ poems appear in Smartish Pace, Image, Southern Humanities Review, Hayden’s Ferry Review, and other journals. Also a playwright, she earned her MFA from American University. She is translations editor for the literary journal Poet Lore and lives in the Washington, DC area, where she works in human rights advocacy.
Sunday, January 25, 2026
EVERY LITTLE BIT: A HAIBUN
DIRGE FOR AMERICANS
by Greg Friedman
OUT OF SERVICE
by Jan Steckel
radios blaring, windows shattered,
litter the streets. It's like the rapture,
drivers disappeared. Alex Pretti's
beautiful baritone talks about service,
sacrifice, freedom that isn't free.
He's reciting his own epitaph,
just doesn't know it yet.
Boy Scout, choir boy, runner, biker,
named his dog Joule after a unit of energy.
Someone needs to immortalize him
in a song, like Joe Hill. I'm tired
of snuff videos featuring our best
and brightest. Bone-weary
of tinpot dictators, bantam Nazis
in custom greatcoats. Alex was a lover
who was loved, cared for people,
made them laugh. Now he's meat.
The pathologist will crack his chest,
weigh his heart, find it lighter
than a feather. Joe Hill tells Joule,
"Hear that? He's coming."
All the ghost cars flash their lights
in time to the whistles and shots.
Ghosts and Oceans, Jan Steckel's latest book, is a collection of short fiction. Her poetry book The Horizontal Poet won a Lambda Literary Award. Her books Like Flesh Covers Bone, Mixing Tracks, and The Underwater Hospital also won awards.



