Call it rocky
land, a slim raft
of hope, a shimmied
then stagnant skiff, squatting
in the shallows, visibly
rapt, longing at the shore.
Its anchor has the taste
of iron, when you gnaw
at the leg of its length,
then haul it up, link over
married link: capable, strong.
Feel it, this boat
of boredom turns fast
as a fish, gulping
happiness as gladly
as it does the patinaed air. Puffed,
its gills push us far
from its ears
like a fight, too wet
and fixed to recall. A hook
to the mouth pulls us
close, almost
to the center
of something. You dive
your drift onto it, then me.
-
Issue 55
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
- Abayomi Animashaun
- Justin Skylar Belote
- Brenda Butka
- Melisa Cahnmann-Taylor
- MRB Chelko
- Marcus Civin
- Susan Comninos
- Rebecca Cook
- William G Davies Jr.
- Russell Susumu Endo
- Victoria Givotovsky
- Ashwin Kannan
- Anja Konig
- Leonard Kress
- Tim B Muren
- Jeffrey Perkins
- Gretchen Primack
- Billy Reynolds
- Austin Smith
- Joseph Stanton
- David Thacker
-
Fiction