TheNewVerse.News
Today's News . . . Today's Poem
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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Friday, April 03, 2026
FLIPPING BACK AND FORTH
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.
Thursday, April 02, 2026
LUNA MAGNIFICA
by Anne Gruner
Your radiant gaze
belies your violent birth—
a cataclysmic collision
delivering you from the bowels
of Mother Earth into
her synchronous embrace.
As asteroids pummeled your baby face,
lava cracked open your eyes—
Imbrium and Serenitatis—and forced
the smile of Nubium and Cognitum.
Your mother found you precious.
You shielded her from solar winds
and nurtured her atmosphere,
tugging her primordial soup
back and forth to salt life
upon her terra firma.
Now, as you age and find yourself
somewhat more distant,
you still stabilize her Goldilocks tilt,
regulate her ebbs and flows,
and calm her mood swings
as maturity and abuse take their toll
on her temperate temperament.
And at long last, you reveal
your greatest secret—
water ice at your poles,
holding out the promise
you will help her denizens,
the dwellers of graying Earth,
reach for the stars.
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, Wayfarer Magazine, The New Verse News, Humans of the World, Spillwords, and Written Tales. A former career CIA analyst and lawyer, Anne lives in McLean, Virginia with her husband and two golden retrievers.
THE NEW NORMAL
by Lawrence J. Krips
This morning I tossed an empty toothpaste tube
into the toilet bowl instead of the basket.
Later, the just simmered Marinara sauce
went from the stove into the everything drawer.
You see, the system I relied upon,
has taken an unapproved vacation.
My friends insist dictators will save the world
and that being independent is an unnecessary burden.
My children are beginning to wonder not at the barking
but by the preternatural scratching with my left foot.
By overwhelming minority opinion, The Supreme Court
declared the United States null and void.
The stairs took me up to the basement, while
the dump sink in the attic overflowed to the roof.
The President has ordered all new maps
eponymously rename the Western Hemisphere.
Who knew vaccinations cause fleas or
cameras can substitute as hearing aids?
From now on, men’s votes are the only ones counted
in all the elections we will no longer have.
For as a woman seweth so does a man reapeth,
the oceans tideth and space-time discontinueth.
Nothing does lead to something
and a stitch in mine is yours in time.
I no longer need to study all those tedious details for elections,
the decisions have been and will be made for us.
Do not fear this upheaval. The old normal
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
VAINGLORIOUS
In a word
Melanie Choukas-Bradley is a naturalist and author living in metropolitan Washington, DC. Her books include City of Trees, A Year in Rock Creek Park, and Wild Walking—A Guide to Forest Bathing Through the Seasons. Many of her poems have appeared in The New Verse News and Writing in a Woman’s Voice.
THE MOUNTAIN LION OUTSIDE MY BEDROOM WINDOW
Utah’s new study aims to kill ‘as many cougars as possible’ —High Country News, March 24, 2026
Reclusive Monty,
as I like,
in kinship,
to call you,
visits in deepest night,
not to hunt,
as one might expect,
our abundant deer,
but to slack your thirst
at the water-filled grotto
lying just beyond
where I rest my head.
We each,
in our way,
share
the same story,
breathing life
here at seven thousand feet.
where our ridge overlooks
the Rio Grande Valley.
ancestral home to Puebloans,
who worship you
as “the beast god”,
revered beyond
any other animal,
including the bear,
for your lithe beauty
and stealth.
I see you
as a high desert
panther,
royalty of solitude.
Your prints
in the snow,
broad as my hand
wide,
leave me breathless,
in their suggestion
of power unbridled,
eager
to pounce.
Recent sightings
in the neighborhood,
remind how closely
our lives touch.
Though an Anglo
living in Indian Country,
it would crush me
to see your mythical
presence eradicated.
Another gift
of your species,
the smaller,
but far less shy,
Bobby the bobcat, loves
to roll around
on the welcome mat,
outside our glass-paneled
front door.
as he taunts ravens,
into a squall
of angry screams
and fly-bys.
I find it impossible
not to feel
an intense connection
with you creatures
of the wild,
Hunters,
yes,
you will
always be,
but much more,
as even Puebloans’
ageless reverence
for Bobby shows.
Which begs
the question:
should rampant
cravings
for hooved
trophies,
outweigh
sustenance
for one’s
innermost
bearings,
linking us
to nature?
Dick Altman writes in the thin, magical air of Old West’s high desert plains, where, at 7,000 feet, reality and imagination often blur. He is published in the American Journal of Poetry, Santa Fe Literary Review, Fredericksburg Literary Review, Foliate Oak, Landing Zone, Cathexis Northwest Press, Humana Obscura, Haunted Waters Press, and others here and abroad. Pushcart Prize nominee and poetry winner of Santa Fe New Mexican’s annual literary competition, he has authored some 300 poems, published on four continents.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
DEATH TAX
In honor of the 250th anniversary of the United States of America, President Donald J. Trump’s signature will appear on future U.S. paper currency along with the Secretary of the Treasury, marking the first time in history for a sitting president. —US Treasury Dept., March 26, 2026
According to a website calculator
what I paid in taxes last year
bought the government
350 to 500 rounds of ammo.
I wonder if I bought the bullets
that killed Pretti and Good
in Minneapolis
by men in masks
Or perhaps I helped pay
for the tomahawk missile
that killed over 100 girls
in a school in Iran.
I protest policies,
but pay my taxes
the way I was taught
good Americans should.
In this way I’m complicit.
Every dollar I send
will be signed by the culprit,
and signed off by me.
Mark Hendrickson (he/him) is a poet and writer in the Des Moines area navigating the Sturm und Drang of daily life through wordcraft. His words appear in The Ekphrastic Review, The New Verse News, and Modern Haiku. Follow him @MarkHPoetry, https://www.chillsubs.com/
or on his website: www.markhendricksonpoetry.com
A SPERM WHALE BIRTH
Unimaginable, but imagine—birth into water, but needing air
Your head emerging last, sheltered until the last moment within your mother
Then, the shock of ocean—the world—and the powerlessness
Your flukes folded, useless, body limp, the surface unreachable
But you are not alone, and your mother is not alone
There is a community, her old friends, and your aunties and sisters
They are there, all around, excited, anxious to welcome, to help
Their bursts of clicks your first hearing, this code meaning “belonging”
They balance you on their great heads, lift you into the light, and you breathe
Between their gentle bodies they squeeze you, and you breathe
They keep away the circling dolphins, and you breathe
They keep watch for sharks, and you breathe
At last your body stiffens, balances in the water
You take your first milk, wise with a baby’s knowledge
Your aunties drift apart, exclaiming as they go
At your mother’s side, you slowly swim, and begin to be a whale
Based on detailed observations of a sperm whale birth, as reported in Nature and Science.
Listen to an NPR report.
Monday, March 30, 2026
UPON LEARNING THAT THE UNITED STATES VOTED AGAINST
the United Nations resolution designating the trafficking
of enslaved Africans “the gravest crime against humanity.”
his hands still badged with royal blood
and Macbeth asking why he could not say Amen,
could not call God’s blessing to himself.
Of course, even my least interested student knew
that answer: guilt. Guilt for what he’d done.
I think of my teenage daughter denying evidence
of some minor transgression, thinking, I guess,
that if she herself did not say it then it could not
be true. I think of her at 2 when we played peek-a-boo
or at 3 when we played hide-and-seek
and she thought she became invisible behind
a curtain even though it didn’t cover her shoes.
Even now, a 160 years after the 13th,
are we still Macbeth, tongue-tied by an inherited,
collective guilt? Or are we the teen who thinks
well, we didn’t know, it wasn’t even illegal then,
and what about the Holocaust or the genocide
in Armenia or litany of other horrific things?
Why can’t we just say Amen, just say yes
it was a grave crime? Oh, there’s the statement
about reparations, how they’d be right,
a remedy, if you will, for historic wrongs.
There’s the rub. Who’d volunteer to pay a fine
for great-great-great-great-grand-
Wipe the evidence from your face and books,
and never admit what can be denied.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
ASSYMETRICAL WAR
| Cartoon by NICK ANDERSON @andertoon.bsky.social |
They’re hoping schools won’t rain as rubble showers
resulting from an errant missile strike.
I can’t afford the drive to see the flowers
around the gorge I’d waited months to hike.
They fear they’ll find their children split in half
or buried under shrapnel, dust, and rocks.
I’m scared the jagged line upon a graph
will show decreasing values of my stocks.
Their sky’s become an endless sea of threats
erupting with the sights and sounds of war,
but over here, we’re making mobile bets
on every prop the market’s apps can score.
There’s something vaguely troubling, sad, and dark
about an age of gulfs so deep and stark.
Paul Burgess is the sole proprietor of a business in Lexington, Kentucky that offers ESL classes in addition to English, Japanese, and Spanish-language translation and interpretation services. He has recently contributed work to The Road Not Taken, Blue Unicorn, Light, The Orchards, Snakeskin, The Ekphrastic Review, and several other publications.
LETTER FROM A POET TO AI
by Terri Kirby Erickson
![]() |
What do you know of heartache?
How it feels to watch your father die
gasping for air like a fish in a bucket,
or to find your comatose mother in her
front yard, dying alone in the dirt?
My brother bled to death in front
of my eyes when he was twenty. Can
you even imagine it? Of course, you
can’t. You have no imagination, no
feelings, only data, data, data that you
spit out like pits from fruit you’ve
never tasted. And what about the good
stuff? That first kiss from a guy who
means it? Holding your newborn baby
in your arms, astonished by how much
love one person can bear? Have you
strolled down the Champs-Élysées in
the rain? Laughed at a joke or made
love by an open window to the sound
of Italian doves? Tasted a chocolate
milkshake or pumpkin risotto? Have
you thrown a softball or climbed a tree?
Ridden a Merry-Go-Round or a bicycle,
seen Mick Jagger strut like a rooster
across a stage or watched the Rockettes
kick their way to Christmas? So you can
write a semblance of a poem or a story
or a novel, so what? Your creations are
rickety scaffolding, Hollywood sets that
will never be the Swiss Alps or even
a human home, which is better, even if it
sucks, than anyplace you could generate
because you are nothing but a vending
machine, AI—stocked with empty words.
Terri Kirby Erickson is the author of eight full-length collections of poetry, including The Light that Follows Us Home (Autumn, 2026, Press 53). Her work has been widely published and has won numerous awards, including the Joy Harjo Poetry Prize, Annals of Internal Medicine Poetry Prize, International Book Award for Poetry, and the Tennessee Williams Poetry Prize. She lives in North Carolina, USA.




