The New Verse News presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.
Guidelines
Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
David Hockney, who died on Friday, painting in Normandy in 2020. Photograph: David Hockney in The Guardian
Hockney shaped the Lockdown into art -- an old half-timbered house in Normandy, and made a cider-press his studio. The synchronized, rich colors that we see in pallid light with white tonality in fruit trees and a pinkish sky take part with summer greens around a bright blue pond. "My little Bayeux tapestry, " he called these scenes of painted whorls and arabesques. Reflections show reality exists in splashing drops of rain and morning mists, as wind and moving boughs create a bond, even if no breath of wind is felt. One storm can set the blossom's wind-blown fates, transforming how we viewers see ourselves. A world we know intensifies, inflates the voices of laments each throat creates. We see a light that helps the winter melt, as trees pass nutrients from heart to heart. The openness of strokes has moved his brush in twisting marks appearing in the hundreds, a deft illusion of the real we rush to feel before Corona comes to crush us just as hoped-for Spring can truly start.
Royal Rhodes is a poet whose poems have appeared in numerous literary journals, including several times in The New Verse News.
Yes, this is a poem dribbled, crossed, headed, corner and free kicked
This is the beginning of the month that will never equal any other
period in time: The World Cup in North America, in Mexico
with families gathering to ask for news of loved ones disappeared,
to ask for electricity, to ask for justice and to ask for tickets;
In Canada, all quiet for the moment, a tranquil backwater, a pause
between acts. But over there in the Great Bearish United States,
denying entry to a Somali referee, claiming an official Iraqi photographer
has ties to terrorists, and eleven US cities handed extra costs by FIFA,
excluded from sponsorships that compete with FIFA contracts,
and local taxes removed from ticket prices. As the saying goes,
FIFA takes the loot and host cities are left holding what?
A bunch of memories, some extra grass in stadiums, and something
more ineffable, beautiful: pride in hosting teams from far away lands
in our corner of the planet, spinning the web to capture the butterfly,
not a bad use of taxes to be left holding the woven bag.
Indran Amirthanayagam writes a Substack. He has just published Isla itinerante ( Editorial Apogeo, Peru, 2025) and White Space Sonnets ( Sarasavi publishers, Sri Lanka, 2025). His other publications include El bosque de deleites fratricidas ( RIL Editores), Seer (Hanging Loose Press),The Runner's Almanac (Spuyten Duyvil), Powèt Nan Pò A: Poet of the Port (Mad Hat), and Ten Thousand Steps Against the Tyrant (Broadstone Books). He is the translator of Kenia Cano’s Animal For The Eyes (Dialogos Books) and Origami: Selected Poems of Manuel Ulacia (Dialogos Books). He edits The Beltway Poetry Quarterly, hosts the Poetry Channel on YouTube, and publishes poetry books with Sara Cahill Marron at Beltway Editions.
Chen-ou Liu is the author of five books, including Following the Moon to the Maple Land (First Prize, 2011 Haiku Pix Chapbook Contest) and A Life in Transition and Translation (Honorable Mention, 2014 Turtle Light Press Biennial Haiku Chapbook Competition). His tanka and haiku have been honored with many awards.
AI-generated graphic by Nightcafé for The New Verse News.
Under my tarp shivering, boots soaked, mud. Jesus an attack in this rain? We were ready, sure. My back muscles still zinged from days of digging burying metal cases under the trees, tamping soggy ground. Like for small graves. High school kids hacked into the Jay Six list. We were next. Tonight. My phone flashes a text from Irene in the vols tent by the road: 3 F150 pickups. A thrum of thunder rolls over the wintry field behind the library and my taut nerves. Trucks rumble into the parking lot. Profane confusion among bobbing flashlights. My binoculars pick up a dozen long-beards in ragtag camo and epaulets, oilskin duster coats. One horned helmet. Flagpoles with bayonet tips. I tap a quick text to our people.
Sprays of shattered glass and a percussive thud from a flash bang mean they are inside. Tipped shelves clatter. Rows of racks collapse, crash. Guttural whoops over their empty victory. The library’s massive alarm leaps to life, out-whooping them, pulsing louder in the rain. They scramble, cursing along the slick walkway. I huddle at the edge of the woods, my rifle close to defend sacred ground, the buried texts. We knew the Project’s targeted titles, so many, Shakespeare, Orwell, Bradbury, Margaret Atwood, Stephen King. We saved what we could, but for how long?
The F150s roar away. More would follow.
We had truth. Was it enough?
Icy rain continues to fall, steady, insistent,
pelting the tarp overhead like birdshot.
Christine Jackson is retired from her day job, three decades of teaching literature and creative writing at a South Florida university. She continues to clock in on a life-long night shift writing poetry. Her work has appeared in an array of online journals, including The Ekphrastic Review, Verse-Virtual, and South Florida Poetry Journal.
Tammy
Smith is a poet and licensed clinical social worker from New Jersey.
Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in The New Verse News, Paterson
Literary Review, ONE ART: a journal of poetry, Thimble Literary
Magazine, LIPS, Autumn Sky Poetry Daily, and elsewhere. She received
honorable mentions in the Journal of New Jersey Poets 2026 Poets Prize
and the 2026 Allen Ginsberg Poetry Awards.
Maybe history belongs in an aquarium, sealed glass, nothing escapes, tourists tapping, their faces blurring into the water like fish circling stones, forgetting how a river ever tasted.
Blindfolds are now built into the monument, no need to hand them out. People gather, guessing at the gaps, swapping stories about words that used to live here. There’s a kind of bravery in pretending not to flinch.
Slavery, taken from the wall. Women erased, the ones who refused to fold themselves small. Immigrants, scratched out. Only the dead left, the ones good for a headline in June. Someone decided truth was too “woke” for the daylight. Wouldn’t want anyone catching empathy from a plaque. You stand in front of absence,
try to piece together stories from what’s left in the shadows.
The monument looks lighter, but the air is heavy, pressing on your chest, the way silence does when no one wants to go first. Tourists line up for their photos, kids run the steps. It gets too easy, not seeing what isn’t there.
History shrinks down, something you can keep in your pocket, hard questions packed away in dust, stories left behind because they were too honest to let us sleep.
And I wonder, what happens to a country that keeps pretending it’s finished telling the truth, when everyone who knows better is still standing here, waiting for their name to be spoken in the story that always belonged to them.
Betsy
Johnson is a poet, storyteller, educator, and autism specialist whose
work explores belonging through disability, caregiving, healthcare,
social justice, and the natural world. Her writing weaves personal
narrative with larger social questions, tracing how people navigate
uncertainty, connection, loss, resilience, and change. Her poem "Mathematics of Mercy," on the human impact of Medicaid policy, was read
on the floor of the House of Representatives.
Debbie Benson’s recent poems appear (or are forthcoming) inIndiana Review, Passages North, Bennington Review,Ninth Letter, andThe Penn Review. Past awards include the Ann Stanford Poetry Prize, Vern Cowles Prize, an International Merit Award fromAtlanta Review, inclusion inBest New Poets, and a “Best of the Net” nomination. She is a prior contributor atThe New Verse News. She works as a clinical psychologist in NYC.
May the air you breathe be poison-free and fitting
for all your toiling people, and all life.
Mariana Mcdonald is a poet, writer, activist, and scientist. Her work has been published and anthologized widely. A southerner with lifelong ties to Puerto Rico, she lives in Atlanta.
Inspired by the traditional Ghanian tale “Anansi and the Box of Stories”
Anansi was not an itsy bitsy spider
but a trickster from Ghana
who asked the Sky God for some stories
God supplied only an empty story box
so the tricky, spindly spider
traveled the world gathering tales
till the spider stole all the stories ever told
and stored them neatly, categorically,
searchably, in the box.
Then Anansi scrambled tales, fabricating new ones, till we, the tellers, grew superfluous
We pleaded with the Sky Gods to help us
take back the box of stories.
stamp out the spider
give the tales back to those who lived them.
We confronted the arachnid ––
you’re not the real Anansi,
ancient figure of legend and lore
tell us your real name! we cried!
AI, the scorpion replied.
Steve Zeitlin is the Founding Director of City Lore, New York City’s Center for Urban Folk Culture, and co-founder of the Brevitas poetry collective. He is the author of two volumes of poetry, I Hear America Singing in the Rain (First Street Press, 2002), and How Do You Wear the Universe? (2026, Mediacs Press) as well as twelve books on America’s folk culture. In 2016, he published a collection of essays, The Poetry of Everyday Life: Storytelling and the Art of Awareness (Cornell University Press). In 2022, he published JEWels: Teasing Out the Poetry in Jewish Humor and Storytelling (JPS/U. of Nebraska Press).