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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.

Sunday, January 18, 2026

THE KILLERS

by Howie Good


AI-generated video by NightCafé for The New Verse News.


You can hear the slow tick-tick-tick of the cooling engine. It’s the end of the so-called “American Century.” Conscienceless killers disguised as police prowl factories and airports and schools for new victims, and all with the sanction of a government of liars and thieves. The lamp beside the golden door has been shot out. My grandparents were poor Jews from the shtetl – in current parlance, “garbage people” from “shithole countries.” And look at me. My face, with its hollows and shadows, its worry lines and age wrinkles, is like a map, sort of, a map of a country I no longer know.


Howie Good is a widely published but little-known author.

ME AND MR. MONROE

by Lynn White


You wonder where next.
Gaza, or Greenland,
just follow the gas,
so some say.

But Monroe and me say Mexico.
Don-roe and they say Mexico.
Gaza and Greenland
are just chips in the deal.
You can bet your bottom dollar,
it’s Mexico, say Monroe and me.

And then it’s the time of Don-roe and they
All doors open, north and south.
Canada, Colombia, Cuba,
Greenland… and then
we can only wait
and see.


Lynn White lives in north Wales. Her work is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality and writes hoping to find an audience for her musings. She was shortlisted in the Theatre Cloud 'War Poetry for Today' competition and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net and a Rhysling Award. Her poetry has appeared in many publications including: Apogee, Firewords, Peach Velvet, Light Journal, and So It Goes.

EPSTEIN WAR

by KP Liles 


It was always about the crude.
Extracting the dark

archives out 
from under us.

A few wealthy men 
plotting to own

everything, down
to the last

liquified remains 
they groom 

to burn. Virgin 
trillions naked

for the taking.
O Power! the Power!

Unrivaled deployment—
Military, ICE, beyond oversight…

Taste Venezuela: 
lest we forget

it’s a jungle out there. 
War

drugs, law, lust
regime change

Mexico, Cuba
Minneapolis

Iran
Portland, Greenland

Behold! A politics of scandal 
heaped on scandal heaped

on scandal heaped on
morals. On truth.

Still, the trafficked girls
will not be

silenced. Drill! 
If you have the stomach for it.

It was always 
about the crude.


KP Liles desires a better, safer world for his daughter. For his son, his family, his students, his community, his fellow decent human beings. So, while he would have preferred to have spent time indulging in his newfound enthusiasm for birding, he felt obligated to put on the poet uniform for this piece.

GRĒNLAND UNFÆST (GREENLAND OFF-BALANCE)

by Zumwalt



President Trump announced in a social media post on Saturday morning his latest strategy to get control of Greenland: He is slapping new tariffs on a bloc of European nations until they come to the negotiating table to sell Greenland. —The New York Times, January 17, 2026


“Greedy for Greenland,” the great leader uttered,
Musing on military modes of grabbing.
“Shale and shield,” he shouted out loud,
White House words woke up the world!

Old World earls offered their swords,
Rallying round the Realm of the Danes.
Pushing back promptly against pressure and might,
Frederiksen fierce, flashed her reply:

“If force is flaunted on frozen shores,
Strikes from the States shatter our league;
Broken the bridges of brotherhood built,
NATO is nuked—if neighbors clash!”

Damning the Danes in deep standoff,
“Lay down the law!” the leader swore.
Taxing with tariffs those tribes that balk:
"Gobble up Greenland, get all we can;
If that game goes bad, go grab Iceland!"


Zumwalt's poetry explores themes of alienation, shifting reality, and personal adaptation. Recent work has appeared at Ink Sweat and Tears.

O GREENLAND! MY GREENLAND!

by Anne Gruner




Global AI race makes Greenland's critical minerals a tempting target —NBC News, January 17, 2026


Frozen for millennia,
your ice melts faster and faster,
the shiny shield that protects you
from the sun, reflecting its rays,
like armor deflecting spears, arrows,
and swords but not outrageous fortune.
 
Invulnerable for ages, your permafrost
softens, disgorging its methane and carbon
to fuel the global bonfire of the vanities.
Ancient microbes, freed from glacial captivity
create black holes of “giant” viruses,
standing ready for missions of good or evil.
Fresh and cold, your newly born meltwater
floods the warm salty ocean,
and like a hormonal imbalance,
it slows the sea's circulation,
a fateful harbinger.
 
As your ice bids its long farewell,
you say hello to a new peril,
one from humanity, which may transmogrify
your beauty into toxic mountains of sludge, acid,
dust, and runoff from crushing, grinding,
and chemical bleaching for coveted minerals
and a cesspool of data centers, accelerating
your blackening, melting, warming,
and death. 
 
For the first time in human memory
you have shed tears on your highest peak,
weeping for the Earth.


Anne Gruner is a two-time Pushcart nominee whose poetry has appeared in numerous print and on-line publications including Amsterdam Quarterly Review, Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Honeyguide Literary Magazine, The New Verse News, Humans of the World, Spillwords, and Written Tales. Her fiction and non-fiction can be found in Dogwood, Rhapsody of the Spheres, Persimmon Tree, Constellations, Hippocampus, and others. A former CIA analyst, Anne lives in McLean, Virginia with her husband and two golden retrievers.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

VENEZUELAN PEACE PRIZE GIVEAWAY LIMERICK

by Paul A. Freeman


The not-so-Nobel Peace prize. Cartoon by Marian Kamensky. Cartoon Movement at Instagram.


A second-hand peace prize! My word!

In hopes that St. Donald is spurred

to help out Machado,

yet ’neath her bravado

she’s trying to polish a turd.

Paul A. Freeman teaches English. He is the author of The Movement, a dystopia-Americana novel set in a future United States. It 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.

HOW CAN I WRITE A LOVE POEM?

by Rose Mary Boehm


AI-generated video by NightCafé for The New Verse News.


Do I write about poets with red holes

in their forehead? Students whose eyes

have been shot out, the mother of four

small children is rotting in a cell full of other people,

excrement, wails, the sounds of metal and wood

on flesh and bone.

 

How can I write a love poem when 

all I know is that planets no longer align,

that war has been declared on peace,

that all the crystals disintegrate into millions

of nano shards, shaken by the vibrations of hate.

 

How can I write a love poem when

I am no longer allowed to trust my eyes,

when blue is red, up is down, no means yes,

when, while I am hollow and starving

a blonde demon laughs and tells me I have riches

to look forward to. Perhaps even in this life.

All I have to do is believe.

 

And haven’t we all been taught to believe?

To believe that there is a big old man on a cloud

somewhere, an old man with a long, white beard

who has a big book and writes all your 

little misdeeds in big letters,

and who they say is love and who asks you to love

‘the other’ as you love yourself.

 

So, for many it’s easy to believe that in his name,

in the name of love, you are being hung

upside-down by your feet until you

confess how much delicious hate you feel,

and that you never had it so good.



A German-born UK national, Rose Mary Boehm lives and works in Lima, Peru. Author of two novels, eight poetry collections and one chapbook, her work has been widely published mostly by US poetry journals. A new full-length poetry collection is forthcoming in 2026.

Friday, January 16, 2026

MIRRORING OUR TIMES

by Lylanne Musselman








Lylanne Musselman is an award-winning poet, playwright, and visual artist. Her poetry has appeared in Pank, The Indianapolis Review, The New Verse News, and Tipton Poetry Journal, among many other literary journals and anthologies. A seven-time Pushcart nominee, she is the author of eight poetry collections and is currently working on another.

SPINNING HALF-TRUTH STRAW INTO BIG-LIE GOLD

by Raymond Nat Turner


Phil Maddox, a Minneapolis-area resident, told The Intercept he recorded the video [above] on Sunday morning during a quick drive around his neighborhood to keep tabs on federal agents in the area. 


POP-POP-POP … One, two, three kill shots disturbing

ICE-cold Minnesota morning. Morning frozen in the past.

Bloodstained airbag. Driver-side door ajar. A

Third Reich-ish morning ambush on crooked legs of big lies …


Expletives dripping from masked lips—shooter man struts

away after blasting 3 holes into the bullseye. No pulse to check.

No blood to scrub. No tears to fight. He prances away as if it was

routine rifle range target practice. Or, the video game of—Gaza.


Made his bones. No one to answer to but remote-controlled, traitorous,

CRC: Cruel Reich Cult. They got his back. The violence-worshipping

vampiric cult celebrates bloodshed. And for its Fox-box foot soldiers

heirs of Goebbels quickly begin to spin half-truth straw into big lie gold …


No semiautomatic “thoughts and prayers.” No “Political violence is 

unacceptable.” “Indefensible.” or, “has no place in our democracy.”

No “good guy with gun is the only thing that could’ve stopped bad guy

with gun.” Mother-poet-guitarist-legal observer’s character must die too.


Career criminal 34-count felon floods the zone riddling her body with dreck-

dipped bullets. Buckeye big lie “Haitians are eating the dogs” architect empties

his clip center mass. Puppy-killing princess of darkness, fires “domestic terrorist”

shots. “Weaponized vehicle” shots. Blonde Lil Eva Braun blasts “lunatic” rounds …


School Shooting Du Jour; War Of The Week; Nonstop Genocide—

Holy trinity, sacred triad of violence worshipped daily by Warfare State.

And besides, didn’t its high priest—pomade man—prance and pontificate to a roomful of medals “ Maximum lethality—not tepid legality.” “Violent effect—not politically correct?”



Raymond Nat Turner is a NYC poet; Black Agenda Report's Poet-in-Residence; and founder/co-leader of the jazz-poetry ensemble UpSurge!NYC.

DISRESPECTED

by Alan Catlin




For Renee Nicole Good

We came with whistles
and they came with guns.
If you see something,
say something,
blow your whistles
take pictures of malefactors.

Men with masks and guns
used to be called outlaws,
the bad guys.
Apparently, they still are.

“You should see the people
they are hiring now.
Background checks are
a thing of the past.”

We don’t need to see
the new hires, we’ve seen
what they old ones will do.

“I’m not mad at you, dude.”
are famous last words now.

The president says it’s her
own fault she was killed,
“She disrespected a federal
officer.”

Seriously.

There will be no investigation.


Alan Catlin is the poetry and reviews editor of Misfitmagazine.net. His next full-length book of poetry is Still Life with Apocalypse from Shelia Na Gig Editions.

HARD WINTER

by Thomas R. Smith


“The shadow boys are breaking all the laws.” —Tom Waits



We knew it would be so. Didn’t they

tell us themselves? Too cold on these dark streets,

we shudder at the sound of things breaking,

coming nearer. Unfortunately not too cold

for them, who are well described by the name

Ice.  We wonder if the night air will come

rushing through our own shattered windows.


The river is frozen, the snow-covered

surface a field of inaction, the birds

who need open water gone elsewhere.

Winter is a lid on a pot simmering,

sooner or later to boil over. That is

our trust as we rest, while the cold shadows

slip through the dark with their icy hammers.



Thomas R. Smith’s recent books are a poetry collection Medicine Year (Paris Morning Publications) and a prose work Poetry on the Side of Nature: Writing the Nature Poem as an Act of Survival (Red Dragonfly Press). He lives in western Wisconsin near the Kinnickinnic River.

Thursday, January 15, 2026

TONIGHT WE’RE GONNA PARTY LIKE IT’S 1939

by Steven Kent


UPenn faculty condemn Trump administration's demand for “lists of Jews” —The Guardian, January 13, 2026



At U of Penn, who's in the Tribe?

The whole thing has a 30s vibe:

Demand a list, some names get crossed—

Say, how much does a Holocaust?



Steven Kent is the poetic alter ego of writer and musician Kent BurnsideHis work appears in 251, Asses of Parnassus, The Dirigible Balloon, Light, Lighten Up Online, The Lyric, New Verse News, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Philosophy Now, The Pierian, Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, The Road Not Taken: A Journal of Formal Poetry, Snakeskin, and Well Read. His collections I Tried (And Other Poems, Too) (2023) and Home at Last (2025) are published by Kelsay Books.p

RESISTANCE

by Christine Piatek 





Nature in its resilience and beauty

flies in the face of evil

and tethers to us hope that change

is possible even when,

day by day,

by cruelty, careless words, sheer indifference,

change looks impossible.

This is resistance.

I choose nature. 

I choose the tethers it offers. 

I choose hope. 

I choose the possible.



Christine Piatek  is a retired public sector lawyer who enjoys writing in many forms, including poetry. She has  had poems published on Spillwords.com, in the Summer Fiction and Poetry edition of US 1 in various years, and in Volumes 69 and 70 of US 1 Worksheets

TURKEYS

by Matt Witt



Photo by Matt Witt


I’ve been observing wild turkeys for a long time.

 

At mating season, the males try to attract a willing female.

I’ve never seen one try to rape a hen.

 

They have their conflicts 

but I’ve never seen a murder among them. 

 

Some are dark and some are white

but they are all part of the flock.

 

When a storm comes they seek shelter under a big tree

And if another turkey shows up there is always room for one more.

 

I’ve never seen one hoard acorns or seeds or grubs 

while other turkeys have none.

 

I’ve been observing wild turkeys for a long time.

I wonder if they have been observing us?

 

 

Matt Witt is a writer and photographer in Oregon. His work may be seen at MattWittPhotography.com. His latest book is Monumental Beauty: Wonders Worth Protecting in the Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument.