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Saturday, February 22, 2025

THE SHINING CITY ON A HILL

by Rose Mary Boehm


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


1
The dark shelter had low ceilings, smelled of damp and coal,
and the deafening blasts sent shards of glass and chunks
of walls across the street; we heard that friends had been buried
underneath their homes. The town smelled of rotting flesh.
 
There were those who resisted. They soon disappeared.
We learned to hold our tongues. Still, my brother and I (pssst)
listened to the AFN, The American Forces Network.
Chattanooga Choo choo.
 
It was May, the first green shoots promised a rich harvest,
and the GIs, who had parked their planes, jeeps, and tanks
on our fields, moved out, letting the Bolsheviks—as Mum called
those squat, goose-stepping men—move in.
Ochochornia, ‘Dark Eyes’.
 
They sung, they marched, they raped, they killed.
German girls drowned themselves in the river Elbe rather
than waiting to find out what the soldiers of the Red Army
were capable of.
 
2
We saw pictures of skeletal beings, eyes deep in dark
sockets, wearing striped ‘pyjamas’. We learned
what the Germans were capable of.
 
3
Our small family escaped from Stalin’s DDR
and learning Russian to learning English,
to nylon stockings and cigarettes from the PX stores.
To food in our schools, to that rich, brown,
wondrously melting-in-the-mouth thing
called chocolate… And we saw German girls
on the arms of well-fed soldiers
who walked with a swagger.
 
We learned that everything was better in America.
Films don’t lie. Everything was big in America: the houses,
the fridges, the cars, the plates heaped with food, the cows.
And they were free (so they said); the women were pretty
and wore deep-red lipstick, the men were handsome
and rich. And America was powerful and ruled the world.
Wherever they didn’t like something, they would
bomb the place and kill everyone to make peace.
We learned about it all in school.
And we believed.
 
America shone, and beckoned, seduced, and promised.
Now we could see it on TV, our newspapers were full of stories,
our friends would emigrate, sending long letters
full of tales of hardship and breathtaking achievement.
 
Temptress America, counterweight America, example
America, the American dream we all shared. Day-by-day,
week-by-week, month-by-month, year-by-year we began to comprehend
the fullness of your imperfections and your vulnerabilities.
Now here you are, shiny people without our experience of the worst
that humankind can do. You blindly stepped right into it.


Rose Mary Boehm is a German-born British national living and writing in Lima, Peru, and author of two novels as well as eight poetry collections. Her poetry has been published widely in mostly US poetry reviews (online and print). She was several times nominated for a Pushcart and Best of Net. Her eighth book, Life Stuff, has been published by Kelsay Books (November 2023). A new MS is in the works.

Friday, February 21, 2025

DEAL

by Margaret D. Stetz


Illustration: Nicola Jennings/The Guardian


that future wealth between her legs—
how much will you
snatch?
 
the territory of her arms—
where will you
amputate?
 
those children clutching at her breast—
will you drag them
away?
 
in the history of auctions
another shameful sale
you feel you own
and now will barter
with another Master
on his terms
 
this body
this Ukraine



Margaret D. Stetz is the Mae and Robert Carter Professor of Women's Studies at the University of Delaware, as well as a widely published poet. She is also a Ukrainian American, proud of her heritage.

NOT

(The View From Up Here)

by Kyle Gervais

after Rebecca Watts’ That
 

not our problem what the man does 
or does not do down there 
it really is 
not we’ve got 
our own 
 
lives to lead our crosses to bear
our own nation each to 
his own I say 
he does not 
own us 
 
yet this transactional monster 
this us against them come 
to break us make 
us his it’s
not just
 
a joke not just a whim not just
one of those things each day
he just does, does 
not ask why 
not why 
 
not why not why not why not why
not why not why not why 
not why not why 
not why not
why not 


Kyle Gervais teaches Classical Studies at the University of Western Ontario in London, where he lives with his husband and two cats. He has poems in ArionCanadian Literature, Classical OutlookEunoia Review, The New Verse News, Litbreak MagazinePRISM international, and elsewhere

Thursday, February 20, 2025

TWILIGHT ZONE CHILD’S PLAY

by Andrés Castro




Otherworldly, Rod Serling was
                                                 ahead
of his time,
     foreshadowing
an old fleshy Trump
                                with a skinny blonde boy
who tortured family and neighbors,
                                                        turning
     on a sadistic whim,
          anyone
                     into a grotesque
                                               creature,                       like a sprung jack-in-the-box
                                                                                    with a dunce-capped head,
before planting them
     in his homestead cornfield.
     No one dared to look at this boy
the wrong way.

This 60s episode,
     It’s a Good Life
in black and white,
                                                     flashes forward now
                                                                                      to 2025,
                                                                                           in bleeding colors,
                                                                                      where Trump rules
just like that boy,
     with unpredictable tantrums.

     Except,                                                                           our boy
                                                                                       would love to rule the world
if he could;
     Except,                                                                            now he has a cast of commercial
                                                                                        to mercenary flying monkeys circling
                                                                                        around him.

                                                                                                            His Hail Caesar!
                                                                                                                 Heil Hitler! moments
                                                                                                            have begun

on our way past cornfields                                                             to crucifixions
                                                                                                                 to revolutions.


DIDN’T COME TO SCHOOL TODAY

by Shawn Reagan


Demonstrators hold a rally and march to protest a recent increase of activity in the area by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents on February 01, 2025 in Waukegan, Illinois. Scott Olson/Getty Images via ABC News.


I don't know why Lorenzo      didn't come to school today. 

Just as he didn't       present his project yesterday.

So much unknown      so easy to lose track of days. 

So, I hold to what I know.       I remain resolute. 

I know when gesture      is really Nazi salute.

I know the smell      of new school fascista.

I know it's winter      and there's ICE on the streets. 

and 

I know Lorenzo      didn't come to school today. 



Authors noteI am a teacher with many immigrant students. After Trump’s inauguration, ICE vehicles and agents began appearing on our city streets. Many of my Hispanic students had to stay home from school at this time. They were often the only members of their family who could speak English in case of a knock at the door. While the students have now returned, the fear remains.



Shawn Reagan is a poet, teacher, and husband from Minnesota. A sleeping giant of the poetic world, his work is currently focused on life with bipolar 2 and depression. He was shortlisted for the 2024 Tadpole Press Poetry Prize.

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

SWAMP THING

by Mark Hendrickson




Kermit the Frog grew up in a swamp  
before he moved to Manhattan  
where all the rats still skate on butter. 
He tried to warn us that rainbows are only illusions,  
back before his voice changed,  
back when swamps seemed quirky and cute. 
 
Speaking of swamps, a story came out today  
about the 2010 discovery by Felisa Wolfe-Simon  
of a low form of life that lives in the muck  
and somehow thrives on toxic arsenic; 
she has now discovered other seemingly mindless creatures  
that appear to thrive on sheer magnetism alone. 
 
I live in the blue center dot  
of a tidal pool made of salt and Windex  
surrounded by organisms that live  
on all that is poisonous, microbes that live  
by breaking down all structure,  
that thrive on decomposition.  
 
People cheer as every potentate since Saint Reagan  
swears to finally drain the swamp; yet instead  
we see it is the swamp that drains us. 
We are mangroves surrounding ourselves with mangroves,  
all standing up to our knees in it, 
mired in marsh and methane. 
 
We all know swamps smell like corrupted flesh,  
yet our nostrils are so saturated we can’t tell anymore. 
Complacency is a swamp we think is stagnant 
even as it spreads to engulf us, and Canada, and Greenland. 
We have become swamp things: reluctant heroes twisted by the world, 
trying to save what we can; a show too implausible to endure for long. 



Mark Hendrickson (he/him/his) is a gay poet and writer in the Des Moines area. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Variant Lit, Vestal Review, The New Verse News, Spellbinder, and others. Mark worked for many years as a Mental Health Technician in a locked psychiatric unit. He has advanced degrees in marriage & family therapy, health information management, and music. Follow him @MarkHPoetry.

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

THE LAYING ON OF HANDS

by Kathie Giorgio




Trigger Warning: The following poem narrates scenes of the sexual abuse of a child by an adult.


I was always told that
God is Love.
From the church I no longer attend
From the catechism I’ve forgotten
From Buddhists, reiki masters, Wiccans,
psychics, evangelists, all whose words
have blended together into a quagmire.
But… God is Love, I was told.
My ninth grade science teacher wore a
pin on the lapel of his suit jacket.
Every day. In a public school.
It said, “PTL Anyway!”
I asked him what it meant, in a quiet moment
during study hall.
He said, “Praise The Lord Anyway!” and laughed.
Then he asked me if I was saved.
I was anything but.
He told me to follow him and we weaved through
the classroom of students and desks. Right in
front of them. They turned and watched us go.
He held my hand.
He took me to the storeroom at the back. We went
inside. He shut the door. Locked it. Turned off
the Light.
Then he folded my hands between his and he prayed.
For me. He prayed hard. His hands grew warm around mine.
I thought I felt the Holy Spirit.
And then
Well, and then
he put my hands on himself.
and then his hands on me.
He lifted me onto a table and laid me back.
As he pressed into me, he said,
“Always remember I love you. Always remember.”
God is Love. PTL Anyway!
And I so wanted Love, I didn’t fight back.
I was fourteen years old.
I have always remembered his declaration.
And I’ve always wondered about Right and Wrong.
And now
Well, and now
I think of all the stories I was told. All the stories I read
as I devoured the bible front to back, side to side, old and new.
Looking for God. Looking for Love.
The Good Samaritan, who helped the beaten man on the side of
the road, passed over by others.
The rich man who boasted of his wealth, giving to the church,
but only from his surplus
while a poor woman gave all she had.
Two pennies.
Let the little children come unto me.
Jesus wept.
And I shudder as I think of those who call themselves Christians
electing a man they say is of God, who would push the Samaritan
out of his way
and kick the beaten man over the border.
The man of God, who held up an upside-down bible with one hand
while grabbing women “by the pussy,” he said, with the other.
The man of God, who would save bits of tissue
tissue with no heart, no brain, no body,
no thoughts, no wants, no cares
and ignore the cries of children who are hungry.
Who are cold.
Who have no homes.
Who are looking for Love.
Who become pregnant by a man who wears a pin.
PTL Anyway!
And I hear again now, God is Love.
I think back to that ninth grade science teacher
who made me feel like I might be Loved
Whose PTL Anyway button pressed into my bare breast
as he pressed into me.
And I gasped with the hope of it.
I cried with the pain of it.
And then spent years, wondering about Right and Wrong.
PTL Anyway
But I feel the last nail driven in,
not the Holy Spirit.
I see who they call a man of God
and what they believe God’s Love would do.
There are no hands to deliver my spirit into.
I believe in Nietzsche.
God is Dead.


Kathie Giorgio is the author of eight novels, two story collections, an essay collection, and four poetry collections. A new poetry collection Let Me Tell You; Let Me Sing will be released in 2026. She’s been nominated for the Pushcart Prize in fiction and poetry and awarded the Outstanding Achievement Award from the Wisconsin Library Association, the Silver Pen Award for Literary Excellence, the Pencraft Award for Literary Excellence, and the Eric Hoffer Award In Fiction. She is the director/founder of AllWriters’ Workplace & Workshop LLC.

Monday, February 17, 2025

PRESIDENTS' DAY 2025

a villanelle


by Susan J. Wurtzburg


 



I sit, eyes wide-open, blank gaze,
Slow-panting dog at my back,
Ssh, ssh, soft breeze brushes hair.

 

Newsprint on the breakfast table,

Flaming pain bleeds white-and-black,

I sit, eyes wide-open, blank gaze.

WWII 𝔉𝔯𝔞𝔨𝔱𝔲𝔯 revival, a font label,                           

Brutal as “heil,” a trigger pull’s whack,

Ssh, ssh, soft breeze brushes hair.

 

Dog paw pastiches toes, under table,

Brings heart into mind’s teared track,

I sit, eyes wide-open, blank gaze.

Incomers, like me, toes under tables,

No papers safeguarding their backs,

Ssh, ssh, soft breeze brushes hair.

 

Blitzkrieg anew, focus: all of our vulnerable,

Let strong voices rise, we need to roar back,

I sit, eyes wide-open, blank gaze,

Ssh, ssh, soft breeze brushes hair.



Susan J. Wurtzburg has won or placed in several poetry competitions. She is a Commissioned Artist in Sidewalk Poetry: Senses of Salt Lake City, 2024, and an Associate Poetry Editor at Poets Reading the News. Her book, Ravenous Words, with Lisa Lucas will appear in spring, 2025.

LUNCHTIME FOR BILLIONAIRES

by Karen Warinsky


AI-generated graphic created by Nightcafé for The New Verse News.


President Trump is rolling back anticorruption efforts and ethical standards for himself and allies like Elon Musk. —The New York Times, February 12, 2025

 
The millennial check-out clerk
holds my 50 toward the florescent light,
squints hard to find a fake
which is harder by the day 
with so much fakery about,
and I wonder
who will exchange those phony notes
along with those played for the crowd 
at rallies and events?
 
Who will teach the young
the dimensions of truth;
how large, how important it really is,
how to hold assertions to the light,
see if they are real?
 
Hot with anger I ponder
what will be left after
the stuffing’s been kicked
the juice squeezed 
as billionaires slice us thin
try to make grinders
of us all,
garnished with dollar bills.
 
Will they realize in time
that people are worth more 
than money,
and will we do whatever it takes
to keep from being
eaten alive?


AI-generated graphic created by Nightcafé for The New Verse News.


Karen Warinsky is a former finalist of the Montreal International Poetry Contest and a 2023 Best of the Net Nominee. She is widely published in anthologies, journals and E-zines. Her books are Gold in Autumn (2020), Sunrise Ruby, (2022) (both from Human Error Publishing), and Dining with War (2023, Alien Buddha Press). Warinsky coordinates poetry readings under the name Poets at Large in CT and MA.

TRUTH, JUSTICE, AND BRAIN ROT

by Bonnie Proudfoot


AI-generated graphic by Shutterstock for The New Verse News.


Don’t tell me you spent all your allowance 

on comic books, or you used to stay up until 

daybreak, your knees shaping a tent under 

the covers, a weak flashlight, Superman, 

Supergirl, Batman, Spidey and the mutants, 

the whole gang rotting your brain, your eyes too. 

Did you stash your valor between the mattress 

and box spring, your rotting brain leaping tall buildings 

at a single bound, ready to keep evil at bay, fighting 

for, oh, truth, justice, and the American way.

 

Did you heft yourself out of bed on time 

for first period, or did your rotten brain let you 

snooze, then snooze some more? Did it make you 

listen to rock ‘n roll, sing "Sympathy for the Devil" 

as you walked to school? Did it know what 

"Satisfaction" really meant? And so what if 

your brain did rot? Blotchy, dark, and spongy, 

a not-so-fresh potato, or cottage cheese 

in the back of the fridge with curds of green mold 

lacing through? Would it rot all at once? Or 

one day no rot, one day riddled, one day a lot? 

 

So here you are, it’s minutes before midnight, 

kryptonite closing in, fascists tunnelling 

into Fort Knox, your knees a tent under 

the saggy covers, nothing left to lose. You’re 

scrolling through headlines at a single bound, 

seeking truth and seeking justice, index finger 

on your phone tapping with the dexterity 

of the Incredible Hulk threading a needle, 

the fate of the free world to defend,

secretly shouting Shazam, pushing send.



Bonnie Proudfoot's fiction, poetry, reviews, and essays have appeared in journals and anthologies. Her writing has been nominated for Best of the Net and the Pushcart. Her novel Goshen Road (OU Swallow Press) was the WCONA Book of the Year and long-listed for the PEN/ Hemingway. Household Gods a poetry chapbook, was published in 2022 (Sheila-Na-Gig Editions). A full-length poetry collection, Incomer, is forthcoming on Shadelandhouse Modern Press. Bonnie resides in Athens, Ohio.

MY HOUSE, YOUR HOUSE, AND THE PEOPLE’S HOUSE

by William Palmer


AI-generated graphic created by Nightcafé for The New Verse News.


Evil can be “defined most simply as the use of political power to destroy others for the purpose of defending or preserving the integrity of one’s sick self.”
 
 
At home I hear a muffled buzz
then press my ear to a wall—
it feels soft
enough to push
my finger through. 
 
I cut out a square
and find a mass
of larvae squirming
in the light, eating
the backing—
 
a replica of the Constitution.
 
I hire an exterminator.
 
Sorry, but you have an infestation.
See the sawdust—they’re gnawing 2-by-4s.
 
They’re even going after steel beams.
Look at the tiny shavings.
 
There is no guarantee we can eradicate
what’s happening.
 
Please do what you can, I say.
 
Each day I listen for the lies.


William Palmer’s poetry has appeared in EcotoneJAMAOn the SeawallOne ArtThe New Verse News, and elsewhere. A retired professor of English at Alma College, he lives in Traverse City, Michigan.

Sunday, February 16, 2025

DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION AND HOPE

by Cathy Lee




Today, in a quiet English classroom

In Southeast Ohio,

An English teacher 

And special needs teacher 

Discussed how to incorporate 

The work of students in the special needs classroom

In this year’s school-wide literary anthology

Of poems, stories, and art.


This year’s theme 

is hope. 


Some of these high school students will 

Be able to circle images of pictures

That give them hope.

Some of these students 

Have the ability to write a few sentences

And draw a picture about

what gives them hope.


Most of these students 

Rarely get included 

in school-wide projects,

Often remain hidden

And anonymous

Like Boo Radley.


But we 

are working 

To change that. 


While pompous politicians 

Flaunt their abilities to dismantle 

Programs for DEI, 

We move forward,

Inviting the voices

Of our fellow humans  

Who can name hope

By circling an image of a bird,

Or drawing their dog,

Or writing about a yummy piece of apple pie. 

Mmm, mmm. So good.



Cathy Lee is a wife, mother of almost adulting daughters, one in college and one in high school, and a high school English teacher in Southeast Ohio. She enjoys running, baking, and reading.