So much needs exercising, soothing for the opening to beyond and next. Where applause for sun reverberates across plains and oceans to replace fumes of exhaust. Even on the balconies of apartments in my hometown. My car hides in the garage to avoid the steep price of gas. I plot where to scatter a bag of saved marigold and zinnia seed. Where mornings come unchallenged by worst-yet shock. When the bully pulpit voice, a vulgar weaving from Greenland to birthright, issues ultimatums that seem to threaten using nukes to resurrect the stone age and abuses the many names we use for god. A cardinal teeters on my fencepost listening to the oven bird.
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Wednesday, April 08, 2026
HINGE DAY
OIL COUNTRY
TWO-WEEK TRUCE
Trees with buds
under the rubble
Howie Good is a widely published but little-known author.
BRIDGES
one side to the other, to move
people, supplies and food
from here to there, to shorten
the journey and make it easier
to cross over a river or a bay
or a deep, precipitous gorge.
People construct rooms and roofs
so doctors wearing green or blue
can focus on the work at hand,
so teachers can greet children
carrying books and backpacks,
so exhausted parents can settle
into bed after turning off the lights.
People also make cunning machines
and devices. From up in the sky
they can see what hugs the ground:
buildings standing exposed, unable
to move, and bridges lying flat
out in the open, left to the mercies
of whoever is looking down from above.
Matthew Murrey is the author of Little Joy (Cornerstone Press, 2026) and Bulletproof (Jacar Press, 2019). He can be found on Bluesky and Instagram under the handle @mytwords.
Tuesday, April 07, 2026
HOME IS WHERE
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| The Guardian, April 3, 2026 |
Runaway nuns seek familiar stairs,
years of ascent lodged in muscle memory.
Passages internalized like arteries,
layout so deeply embedded they could sleepwalk
to table, sanctuary. A return to rails
that held their hands through ages,
yielding their gloss to dry grasps
that clasp ever tighter. Rooms where
nightly they set their prayer beads on bedside stands.
Michelle DeRose lives and writes in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Find her most recent publication in Michigan Bards Poetry Anthology, North Coast Voices 2025: Poems of the Great Lakes, Dunes Review, and Autumn Sky Daily.
RESTING ON A ROCK AT 8000 FEET WHEN IT SHOULDN’T HAVE BEEN SO HOT IN MARCH
Monday, April 06, 2026
THE MOMENT OF CLOSEST APPROACH
by Theta Pavis
Using an inflatable
Moon globe, [the Artemis II crew] practiced seeing how the angle of the
sun changed the colors and textures of the lunar surface, honing their
observation and note-taking skills for the big moment. —France 24, April
4, 2026. Above: An inflatable moon ball for sale at ebay.
Before the Artemis II Crew blasted off,
they had to practice looking at the moon.
Back on Earth, researchers would want to know
what each astronaut saw out there, in-between
the greys and dusty browns. What craters and colors,
what rocks and rockets. To prepare the voyagers,
the Science Flight Operations Lead hung a giant
inflatable moon globe from a crane and packed
the four fragile humans into a mock capsule.
She told them all to rehearse looking at the moon.
Funny no one thought to hire a poet to help with this part.
Theta Pavis is poet and editor. A former reporter, she spent years teaching journalism to first-generation college students. Her writing has appeared in The Journal of New Jersey Poets, Lilith magazine, The Red Wheelbarrow, Mom Egg Review and others. She’s received residencies from Bethany Arts Center and Arts By the People. Her chapbook The Red Strobe was published in 2025 by Finishing Line Press.
DEEPWATER PORTFOLIO
| Endangered Rice's whales live their entire lives in the gulf, where they're vulnerable to vessel strikes, noise pollution, oil spills and climate change—all of which could increase with more drilling, scientists said. Other animals, including threatened manatees and endangered sea turtles, also could be put at risk, experts said. As the Iran war pushes energy prices sharply higher, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth invoked national security in seeking an exemption from endangered species laws, which make it illegal to harm or kill species on a protected list. The seldom-used Endangered Species Committee granted that request on Tuesday. Rice’s whale is the only whale species that lives year-round in the Gulf of Mexico, where there are fewer than 100—and possibly fewer than 50—left, scientists said. —PBS, March 30, 2026 |
seamlessly filter out the pathetic,
low-frequency protests of a dwindling pod:
fifty surviving Rice’s whales, biological oddities,
drowning in our modern energy paradigm.
Stupidly stubborn, incredibly spoiled,
they insist on quiet currents
and fatty silver-rag driftfish delicacies,
never exerting effort to adapt
to the tides of quarterly dividends.
Let the regulatory committees squawk about their grievances:
the diamond-tipped drill bit demands results.
for the unquestionable superiority of the combustion engine,
the freedom to wage war against any nation,
and the right to consume without restraint.
Sunday, April 05, 2026
DROP THE MIC
A budget written by a nutter
Favors guns instead of butter.
Starve the people, stoke the power?
No, said Mr. Eisenhower.
ON FINDING JESUS TOTE BAGS AT BRANDY MELVILLE
by Lisa Seidenberg
The Jesus totes were hung
from a bare nail in the store
among the tables of baby tees
and short shorts seen
by tweens who pause purposefully
at the offerings of each station
Not a full body Jesus
Not a loving Jesus—
It was only the head
tilted slightly—quizzically even—
sporting the brambled crown
of thorns he wore
with signature aplomb
An odd sight, nevertheless
as Brandy Melville is a brand
for the body-con set
with its “one-size-fits-most"
if you are young and female
with a bikini-ready silhouette.
With doleful eyes cast downward,
the tote bag Jesus regards
the teetering mountains of
drawstring sweatpants
In soporific shades
of gray and blue and sand
A fitting attire for the desert breeze
of Bethlehem
or the Sea of Galilee
One wonders what thoughts
might cross his mind, aware
that Brandy M permits no returns
of any kind?
Saturday, April 04, 2026
NARCISSIGNATURE
James Penha edits The New Verse News. His latest book is Queer As Folk Tales.
COCOONED
in musty air—
These are my first feelings of war,
as I was a little child.
A dark cocoon
Now, in my forties,
I experienced the second touch of war.
Israel attacked Iran,
while I was far from my homeland.
Not as musty shelters,
but of total net blackout.
For days,
I had no news
from my loved ones.
All those fears and scents
came down on me.
The silkworm
got cocooned again,
in the dark.
Not long after,
a massacre of many Iranians
occurred in only two days.
Unbelievably heartbreaking.
Memories run through my head,
a track of caterpillars;
beautiful and filled with hope
covered in body bags.
The voice of “Sepehr e baba, kojaei?”
The ecstatic voice of the little child
when she saw her father’s face in TV
without knowing
it was a list of the deceased.
The ululating and grief-dancing
of bereaved mothers
As the cocoon
was getting thicker,
I made another memory of war.
America and Israel attacked Iran.
Broken and helpless,
people who live in enduring emptiness
pray for the foreign attackers
Wishing for freedom in war.
Wishing for happiness in ruin.
Wishing for life in death.
Will there be a hope
under the crash
and release the butterfly?
Marjan Sabouri, a 44-year-old Iranian woman, has a Master’s Degree in Illustration. She has completed many art works in Illustration and Design and has served as a University Lecturer for almost 12 years. Mostly, she writes her poems in Farsi, her mother tongue. However, since living abroad the last two years, she has started to translate her poems (by herself) to be shared with a bigger community of people in order to spread the message of Humanity, Peace, and Love worldwide. She wishes to be a voice protesting injustice and human rights violations, especially now, in Iran and in the Middle East.
Friday, April 03, 2026
FLIPPING BACK AND FORTH
Between the Artemis II Launch Live Stream and the Live Stream of the Supreme Court Hearing Arguments Regarding Birthright Citizenship
HARRY HINES BLVD, DALLAS, TX, 0647 AM
off the aortic arch (there’s a mnemonic for that I’ve forgotten),
blurred and softened by the translucent window shade.
Traffic lights turn from green to brief yellow to long red,
downtown skyline hulking in predawn distance, the stark ovoid
tower of the Renaissance Hotel lording it over the rest.
his embattled bone marrow doing what it can to recover
from the chemical onslaught it’s been subjected to
in the name of healing, even as the drivers of these cars
whizzing by my 3rd floor hotel window go about their business—
driving to work, worrying about their bills and their kids
and their ailing parents, listening to some false prophet
on the radio telling them it’s all the fault of the immigrants
and the trans people rather than the demented tyrant in the White House.
(and how many are there in this state?) where the people detained
would give anything to be driving to work, worrying
about an overdue mortgage payment or a wayward teenage son.
These hulking urban clusters, the fruit of oil/blood money,
can’t help but draw my contempt, even my hatred…
but because our country is, too.







