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Submission Guidelines: Send 1-3 unpublished poems in the body of an email (NO ATTACHMENTS) to nvneditor[at]gmail.com.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.
Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toys. Show all posts

Thursday, November 07, 2024

TO THE PLASTIC I SHARE THIS BODY WITH

by Laura Grace Weldon


Microplastic Pollution Is Everywhere, Even in the Exhaled Breath of Dolphins —Discover, October 28, 2024



You and your kind have been with me since 

my teething toy days. Since doll faces kissed

and freeze pops squeezed from clear cold tubes. 

 

Since hand-me-down raincoats and Halloween masks. 

Since yogurt cups and zippered sandwich bags.  

You’re in my clothes, my water, my breakfast. 

 

I now know you’re in my blood. 

In everyone's blood. 

In our breast milk, brains, muscle, hearts. 

 

You are carried in the bodies of snowy owls and orcas,

bonobos and brown bears and baobab trees.  

You are exhaled in dolphin breath. 

 

You ride through air and oceans, ride through us. 

When we die, you will persist

for thousands of years.

 

We humans dream of leaving a legacy  

but not like this. 

Not like this.



Laura Grace Weldon lives in a township too tiny for traffic lights where she works as a book editor, teaches writing workshops, serves as Braided Wayeditor, and chronically maxes out her library card. Laura was Ohio’s 2019 Poet of the Year and is the author of four books. 

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

ON MARS WE'RE BRIEFLY FLYING

by Chris Vola


 

The winds declined to rip
the helicopter to pieces,
its carbon-fiber blades
spinning furiously,
defiantly, churning
for a few seconds
in the flushed sky,
even though sooner or later,
like all expensive toys,
its sunken parts would be left
to fill with dust,
even though a storm
would eventually
take an antenna,
the circuitry would garble,
landing gear would be
plucked like scabs.
Still, NASA applauded.
Elon Musk re-tweeted.
Someone proclaimed
“a red-letter day on the Red Planet!”
From 178 million miles away,
another data burst confirmed
that the helicopter
had touched softly
back down on the rutted 
ground, where only rovers
dared to tread.
The waiting was finally over
for the engineers,
who, giddy from their screens,
began to believe the future
could be tolerable.
They immediately forgot 
the gorgeous sunlight that
filtered through the oaks
outside the command center,
or the clogged freeways 
where blood & plastic 
spilled like SpaceX
propulsion fluid across
our still-living desert.
The Earth's concerns
had become irrelevant  
to them, like a neighborhood
with unknown sirens & sickness,
or the bus-stop profile 
of a sleeping family.
The Earth itself, unmoved
by progress
on another sphere,
would only turn
& brace its stem
against its own putrid winds.
Most of us would continue
to stay in the homes
we’d been staying in 
& busy ourselves
with the swipe-&-click
routines that could never
really sustain us,
pretending not to hear
the whirring in our heads,
or see the ugly
bubble cockpit
of a much different chopper,
one fueled by muzzle-flash,
& boredom,
& lungs twisted
full of loss,
its impact heavier
than a verdict,
emptier than the spacesuits
we’d never wear 
while prancing
in the Martian gravity,
awaiting Elon’s rise
from cryogenic slumber
to save us
on the third day.
We'd long
given up wondering
why it came
for us this way or
if we might escape
it, its appetite whetted,
its wide blades
ready to grind us into
the only dust
we’d ever know. 


Chris Vola is the author of six books, most recently I is for Illuminati: An A-Z Guide to Our Paranoid Times (William Morrow, 2020). His recent poems appear or are forthcoming in New Pop Lit, The Collidescope, The Main Street Rag, Anti-Heroin Chic, and Horror Sleaze Trash. He lives in New York. 

Friday, May 22, 2020

MICAH IN THE MIDST OF THE PANDEMIC

by Katherine M. Clarke


Micah


Our puppy arrives, six pounds
of squirming golden fluff chirping and burrowing
under my arm, trembling against my breast.

I reach back to my mother’s knee to find
what I’ve forgotten I know, singing
knick-knack paddy whack give the dog a bone

and nestle him into his crate with Mr. Krinkle
whose face he chews off but who still obligingly rustles,
offering rope hands and feet to gnaw on in the night.

As pandemic chaos reigns outside, love grows inside,
my beloved Lily handling and tending this small body
bursting into life, insisting on what he wants and needs

tired or not, frightened or not, a life counting on her.
She walks softly in stocking feet to feel him underfoot
to know when he races over her toes to hide.

Scooped up Micah rides high along her arm,
a pasha attended by his servant.
Firsts abound—sleeping through the night,

tasting snow, eating grass, throwing up.
Accepting a collar and lead as she hustles
him out the side door to the yard.

Victory, cheering, applause. Relief for both.
No need for social distance as the lord of all wriggliness
plays with Delores, a stuffed sheep, and Road-Kill Buzzy,

the flat woodchuck toy. A spiky rubber teething ring
on the shower curtain spread over the living room rug
as if a sphere of the virus had leapt from the television

screen filled with images of tents and stadiums for hospitals
warehouses loaded with coffins, trucks filled with bodies
while we shelter at home, grateful, joy strewn all around.


Katherine M. Clarke is a professor emeritus of Antioch University New England. Her essays and poetry have appeared in Writing it Real, Breath and Shadow, Wordgathering, Oasis, The Sun Magazine, and Northern New England Review.