Dr. Frank Conahan lives in reclusive retirement outside of Baltimore, Maryland. He follows current events with trepidation and copes by writing verse. He has recently published poems with "Bards of Maryland." His collection Nothing Is Coming was published in April.
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The New Verse News
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Friday, May 15, 2026
NOMENCLATURE
Thursday, May 14, 2026
THE SIREN SONG OF TRUTH
The women, the girls know.
Our story ancient. Our voices new.
They make us believe
The crime is our fault.
Men take our bodies,
Unable to resist the siren
Song of our bodies.
The song of our bodies
Does not belong to us.
Girls whom men called sirens,
Children wounded into silence,
Sing their bodies.
Sing their truths aloud.
Strongmen claim they are victims
Of the song of our bodies.
Weak men whose bodies
Are out of control.
Bodies anatomically ungoverned.
Bluster out of control.
Vanquishing other bodies—
Seas, straits, oil fields,
Mines, minds.
Strap yourselves tighter to the mast.
Now the bindings break.
Your strength offers no protection
Against the siren song of Truth.
The women. The girls. Know.
Mother Earth sings Her body,
Raped by weak men
Whose strength is measured
In violence. Did their mothers
Teach them this was fair game?
We sing our truths aloud,
Sirens flashing red:
Pull over now. Stop raping
Our minds, our bodies,
Our mothers, our daughters.
Ourselves. Loudly we sing
Our bodies to wholeness.
Weak men are broken,
No fault of ours.
Blame your wounds, not our anatomy.
Our siren song strengthens.
Our story ancient.
Our voices new.
Robin Stevens Payes is a Pushcart Prize–nominated poet, storyteller, and cultural steward whose work braids ancestral memory, science, myth, and moral imagination. She is the author of the YA time-travel adventure series Edge of Yesterday and creator of [re]member the world, a multi-genre project retrieving and reweaving the silenced history of her grandmother’s flight from Ukraine’s Pale of Settlement. Her poetry has appeared in The New Verse News, Dawn Horizons, East Sea Bards, Maryland Bards, Poetry Reviews, and Reflections. She writes about creative ethics, generational healing, and cultural repair on her Substack, Releasing Memory.
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
BABY TALK
by Deb Myers
On TV a man “splained”
falling fertility rates
citing statistics
average output equals 1.5 babes
.6 shy of the replacement rate needed
to keep the population steady
like women are machines
underperforming
uteri transforming raw materials
egg and sperm
into finished product
in insufficient volume
underbabied
he babbled
shortly before
his boss "blinked"
Deb Myers spent her career helping companies create and improve technology products. She has left the business and technical writing world behind, and now writes poetry from her home in coastal Maine.
ABOUT LOVE
Mayon is the most active volcano in the Philippines, erupting over 52 times in the past 500 years... Its most destructive recorded eruption occurred on February 1, 1814. The volcano belched dark ash and eventually bombarded the town of Cagsawa [where] about 1,200 locals perished in what is considered to be the most lethal eruption in Mayon's history. —Wikipedia
We live in the time of ash and awe,
where the bell tower of a ruined
cathedral frames the perfect dome
its crater glow combusting in pallid
pyroclastic smoke, thousands have fled
its strombolian show
of affection, amid the terrible beauty
engulfing kilometers of sky and city
under siege of nature’s desire
to shape itself, they say that Mayon
was the womb that rose from the burial
tomb of lovers Magayon and Panganoron
passion in the form of fire turned crust
then magma, then igneous stone
then lava, then a quiet, then rage,
then warmth, then grief, then ash again—
layers that unravel histories, unpredictable
yet predictable all the same.
Those who were burned have forgotten
relocating closer to the pulse
where the fire of Ibalon resides.
That’s the theology of love.
To be close enough to feel the rumble
of a molten heart, to be in the shadow
of its ending, and to exist,
every time a little more consumed
by its divine ravishing of flame.
Ryan Caidic is a Filipino poet and advertising creative living in Denmark. His poetry has appeared or is forthcoming in The Columbia Review, The Missouri Review, Southeast Review, Apricity, Poetry Wales, and elsewhere, and has been highly commended by the Bridport Prize and Munster Literature Center.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
AMERICAN FLAG BLUE
In the twilight of my life, I came
to the history of indigo: color
and currency, “a length of cloth
in exchange for one human body.”
The secrets to its cultivation known
by Africans. “In the 1700’s profits
outpaced those of sugar and cotton.”
The first American flag stitched with
indigo-dyed cloth. Wave a flag sewn
by shackled fingers while the blue
bruise thickens, seeps its way into today,
stain of the past slumps in the corner
of every classroom, pain threaded into
every pledge, each anthem we sing.
Now, 250 more years around the sun,
we’re waiting for the arc of the moral
universe to catch the freedom train,
but the station is empty, streetlights
have begun to fail, first one, then another,
shadows lengthening while our ears
press the rails, listening for the thrum.
My country tis of thee, sweet land—
it’s twilight here in the heartland.
the indigo light dims and lingers.
Author’s note: Source of the poem’s quotations: Indigo: In Search of the Color that Seduced the World by Catherine McKinley.
Bonnie Proudfoot's fiction, poetry, reviews, and essays have appeared in anthologies and journals, including Sheila-Na-Gig, SWWIM, Gyroscope Review, Rattle, The New Verse News, and the New Ohio Review, and have been nominated for Best of the Net and the Pushcart. Her novel Goshen Road(OU/ Swallow) received the WCONA Book of the Year and was long-listed for the PEN/ Hemingway. Poetry books include Household Gods, a chapbook, on Sheila-Na-Gig Editions, and Incomer, released in 2026 on Shadelandhouse Modern Press.
FEBRUARY 28, 2026
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| Photography & Reporting by Zohreh Saberi, Los Angeles Times, May 6, 2026 |
Alice Hartley is a public health nurse in Milwaukee. She has been writing since she was five years old, starting with picture books about her friends. As an adult, she mostly writes poetry and horror stories. She has a found family that includes two cats who don't get along...but four adults that do.
Monday, May 11, 2026
WHO'S GOT THE CARDS?
by Paul A. Freeman
“My hand,” Donald boasted, “is great!
Two pairs, kings and aces. That’s fate.”
And while he did holler,
the sly Ayatollah
said, “Too bad, coz I hold a Strait.”
Paul A. Freeman is the author of The Movement, a dystopia-Americana novel set in a future United States of America. The book is available from Amazon as an ebook download and as a paperback. His first book, Rumours of Ophir, a crime novel taught at ‘O’ level in Zimbabwean high schools, was also translated into German. In addition to having two novels, a children’s book and an 18,000-word narrative poem (Robin Hood and Friar Tuck: Zombie Killers!) commercially published, Paul Freeman is the author of numerous published short stories, poems, plays and articles. He works and resides in Mauritania, Africa.
DETHRONED DEPOSTED
by Esther Cohen
The Guardian, May 1, 2026 with a photo by Roy Gumpel, The Overlook News.
Greene County New York is one of those places
small, poor, magical, compelling.
Incomparable beauty. Worthy of love.
Forty years ago we bought a house .
Sounds odd to say but
life there is a poem. A poem
I’ve been writing for forty years,
taught hundreds of writing classes.
Many at the Cairo Public Library.
Last fall the legislature and the arts council
decided they’d have their first poet laureate.
Arts council called to say I’d been nominated.
I explained that I’m a New York City Jew
who lives upstate part time. Maybe they wouldn’t
want me. Please apply he said. I won the title
of First Greene County Poet Laureate chosen by peers
and of course I was happy. They sent a signed
contract and a thousand dollar check.
My induction was planned for April 11.
The legislature and everyone would join
me writing poems. But on March 4
when the arts council head went to the legislature
(poet laureate is a legislative appointment) legislator
Michael Lanuto said on their video: I’ve been doing a
background check on her social media. She voted for
the Communist Zohran Mamdani (true) and she promoted
violence against Donald Trump on her Facebook page (untrue).
I became Not the Greene County Poet Laureate but then
a small online paper wrote this story. The story went viral
over a thousand readers wrote in support. Democrats
and Republicans too. Then The Guardian wrote the story.
A few days ago Raina Lipsitz, The Guardian reporter, posted:
I loved writing this story for many reasons.
In some small but important way
it made me feel better about Americans,
many of whom really do love their neighbors as themselves.
And even though I’m not the poet laureate, I’m still
hopeful as always that all of us together is the poem.
Esther Cohen is not the poet laureate now. She’s on Substack@Overheard.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
A TROPHYLESS FIRST
Baby’s first steps. The first words uttered.
First day of school. First day of college.
First day on the job. We rush to each
first with celebration. A race to be won,
a ribbon to break through.
Until the first Mother’s Day with no call
after the first Christmas without a mother.
The first time reaching for a name
no one answers anymore. No
Mother.
A First without a trophy. Just
a series of races no one wants to win.
Ms. Parris Krauss is honored to have published poetry in Louisiana Lit, ൪uartet, the Arkansas Review, Salvation South, Eclectica, One Art, Story South, The South Carolina Review, and the Mid/South Sonnet Anthology, among others. Fernwood Press published her full-length book (Mountain.Memory.Marsh.) in November of 2025. Carol was born in S.C., to mystical mountain people, raised in NC, and attended Clemson University. She currently lives in Virginia with her St. Bernard, Martha June.
Saturday, May 09, 2026
HOW TO MAKE THE RICH EVEN RICHER
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The companies making billions from the Iran war. —BBC, May 8, 2026 |
MIGRACIONES
Music in flight from the border tonight
and it’s pulling miles
of starlight behind it. Darkness
tuned to grosbeaks, orioles, homesick songs
and the Black-necked stilts
who come down at the golf course pond.
There’s an echo
to the ads between corridos
and the high romance that ends
in a flourish no matter
who stays and who leaves. The trogons
cross to occupy a canyon lined
with pine-oak where sycamores sing
to the daylight. Gray hawks
in the cottonwoods, tanagers where
the edge of woodland
overlooks a wide
and open valley dark priests occupied before
they named the land for
saints, and Black hawks looking down on it
from an indifferent sky.
Doves take back their city
for the summer in tune
with the natural order
of hunger and survival. 103.5, La Tricolor,
playing until morning and then
in the yard, russet crest and
greyly greened, the unmistakable
Trepador cola verde.
David Chorlton lives in Phoenix, Arizona. He writes, paints, and keeps track of which birds show up locally. Originally from Europe, he has learned that not all truth and beauty is to be found in museums and cathedrals (much as he enjoyed seeing them) but in wildlife.
Friday, May 08, 2026
MINORITY RETORT
“six in 10 Americans say president is doing a bad job” —The Guardian, May 3, 2026
INTERVAL
by Rajat Chandra Sarmah
They said
this is your moment.
So we sat—
a few rows in—
watching
democracy
adjust its lights.
Promises entered first.
Well-dressed.
Fluent.
They spoke
in our language—
better than we do, sometimes.
Jobs arrived next—
counted aloud,
like blessings
no one stopped to check.
Cash followed quietly.
No speeches.
Just something understood
without being said.
We clapped.
Not loudly—
just enough.
Somewhere between
need
and negotiation,
we stopped thinking too much
about what was ours
and what was being offered.
The button—
small,
decisive,
mercifully simple.
Press.
Nothing to show later.
Interval.
Lights dim.
Noise settles
somewhere behind us.
When the curtain lifts again,
the stage is lighter.
Fewer promises.
Some things
just not there this time.
What was announced
comes back
“under process.”
What was certain
slows down—
then disappears.
We do not protest.
We adjust.
Survival stretches itself
over the years.
Dignity—
it comes and goes.
Outside,
the posters fade first.
Inside,
something follows.
Next election,
they will return—
with improved scripts,
cleaner numbers,
and our own words
borrowed again.
And we—
seasoned audience,
repeat believers—
will take our seats
before the lights come on.
No one will ask
what the first show changed.
No one will ask
why we stayed.
The applause will begin
on time.
And we will give it—
not because we believe,
not because we forgot,
but because
we have learned.
Rajat Chandra Sarmah is a poet and writer based in India. After a 36-year career in India’s power sector, he now focuses on literary writing. His work explores public memory, environmental crisis, social change, and everyday human endurance. His poetry has previously appeared in The New Verse News and other international journals.







