A Brief Gazelle Now Available for Pre-Order

A Brief Gazelle: Poems of Love and Grief is now available for pre-order.

Here’s what’s being said about the book:

Because he writes about what we value, Mike Maggio restores consciousness to language. His unswerving commitment to clarity makes poetry relevant as well as harmonic. Lyricism would mean nothing without the fine art of meaning; and, over time, other writers may wind down, but Mike Maggio will continue speaking with beauty, strength, and wisdom. In our poetry world, Maggio will surprise new readers who find him for the first time; and he will reassure old readers who are his fans.

Grace Cavalieri, Maryland Poet Laureate

 

In A Brief Gazelle, Mike Maggio explores the complexities of love–the joy and grief, the ephemeral and eternal, the real and surreal. Maggio masterfully integrates cinematic sensations of image and seasonal landscapes–inhabited by birds and celestial beings, flowers and trees, lakes and seas, and lovers who appear and disappear like gazelles–with a soundtrack of love songs. We hear the voices of lover and beloved expressing joy and pain, love that’s lost and found, grief that never leaves, and readers identify as both the speaker of the poem and the reader.

— Cathy Hailey, Author of I’d Rather Be a Hyacinth and Vice-President, Poetry Society of Virginia

 

Valentines of love glimpsed, love sung, love gone.  Mike Maggio’s A Brief Gazelle: Poems of Love and Grief is a collection of wistful hearts with lines like “I return, commune with you in my dreams a thousand times” (Oranges in Palestine), “The day burst madly with you” (Un Jour). and “[I wonder] what you’ve become” (“Zamfir’s Flute”).  Any of us who look back with wondrous regret will enjoy these poems.

 — Hiram Larew, Poet

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Coming soon from San Francisco Bay Press

Cover artwork and design by Antonella Manganelli

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Pamela Murray Winters

Arrangement in Reds and Grays

Nothing about my therapist says he’s trying to kill me,
except slowly by incompetence, but here he is,
softly cutting a diagonal through Hoppertown
in a brick-noir haze,

and here I am, in his gray bright office huddling damp
behind a file cabinet I know he doesn’t have.
No Steelers flag, no dog art; this must be a dream.
Fortunately, there are women:

assistants, midwives of billing, the “gals” he says
will schedule my next visit or fill my scripts.
Dozens, perhaps hundreds of gals.
As he enters, they pop into view

in magic bubbles, one after another. They lie for me.
“She didn’t come in.” “Across the street, maybe.”
Watches tight, their sensible arms ever conducting.

He freezes with his knife.
This world is suddenly cardboard.
I might yet get out alive.

He moves again, but it’s a broken TV or stop-motion,
and the gals are faster in their bewildering deflection,
and me I’ve disappeared altogether.



Copyright 2024 by Pamela Murray Winters

Pamela Murray Winters lives and writes in Bowie, Maryland. She’s working on a second full-length poetry collection and several chapbooks, so she will soon embark on the sometimes daunting process of submission (to publishers and the cosmos). When she’s not writing, she’s watching TV with her husband, playing with her cats, and/or competing in several quiz leagues. (Please let her know if your team needs a pop culture aficionado.)

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Carl Stilwell

BLACK FRIDAY

They say it’s darkest before dawn
but it don’t seem that way
Mama sits at table but this time
without coffee and cigarette
I don’t hear her
coughing or wheezing
It’s clear she’s gettin’ better
I call the undertaker
and cancel her funeral
It’s lighter now but still dark
Saturday after Black Friday--
the one following Thanksgiving
not the good one before Easter
I got some letters to mail
but before I do, I hug her
for the longest time
Death has given me back
my mama and I can’t
let go

Copyright 2024 Carl Stilwell

Carl Stilwell (aka CaLoki) was born during the depression in Oklahoma and came to California in 1959 and has lived here ever since. He is a retired teacher who taught for over 30 years in the
Los Angeles Unified school District and has published poems in Altadena Poetry
Review, Blue Collar Review, Four Feather’s Press, Lummox, Pearl, Prism, Revolutionary
Poets Brigade–Los Angeles, Rise Up, Sequoyah Cherokee River Jornal, The Sparring
Artists.

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Angelo Colella

The Armchairs I Liked to Wear in My Sleep


The armchairs I liked to wear in my sleep
to pretend I was a grownup
must have seemed childish, at that time.
I dreamed they were
no different than a folding chair of my father's,
and also mom says
she likes to work on the chair under the biceps.

A bundle of dreams is a gift
but mine just took up space
that could have been used to write instead,
at the entrance to the hair of the vertebrae.
There are four open walls that don't like me
because my head is a ram's rope.
The sleepers could look inside
and see ready-made sheets on the old side of the poet,
as beds say.

I bow to the sidewalk between the folds of vocal chords.
I'm a monster: my hands are drawn like flowers
and my heart has bad breath so easily.
Today I'm holding a bench
on which a newspaper seller
protrudes from a centavo's mane.
He's carved in white,
but on Sunday he'll disappear
like writers do.

Poets are saints
and, since ceilings are a thing of the past,
they think that the stars singing next to them
are feathers they can pet:
poets could really do so, even if the stars are not outside of them.

Copyright 2024 by Angelo Colella

Angelo ‘NGE’ Colella was born in Italy where he still lives. He writes prose and poetry in Italian and English and also makes collages, asemic writing and DADA objects. Some of his works have appeared on Uut Poetry, Utsanga, The Ekphrastic Review, Il Cucchiaio nell’Orecchio, Il Mirino, Multiperso, Blogorilla, Word For/Word, Otoliths, La Morte per Acqua, and 22 Pensieri.

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Dolores Hoffman

Pontus

He invited me to sit with him in the small wheelhouse
which was faintly lit by the computer screens of a few
navigational devices.

But, before the sun broke the horizon,
The silent calmness
was rudely interrupted
by everything that seemed to be alive.

The storm clouds,
the waves,
the shouts,
the accusations,
last rites and prayers,
waking God from a sound sleep.

I have always dreamed in years,
never hours or minutes,
never colors, always hues of purple.

Coming back to the emotion of my mind,
It seems incredible to live life twice.
In movies they do, screenplays and lyrics.

Although the assembly of the cast
grows with each peak and cry of my life,
it wanes when truth warms the spice of the cast.

the plot stormed off stage,
dissolving in shifting motion,
leaving the script and the words to fight it out.

waves of emotions strike us
as we sink into complete darkness.

Copyright 2024 by Dolores Hoffman

Dolores Hoffman has been a writer for South Jersey Mom Magazine and Northeast Metro Woman Magazine.  Her poems have been published in Poet’s Choice publication and Pen in Hand magazine.  She was a 2019 Selected Poet for Eastern Shore Voices during Salisbury Week.  Dolores started writing poetry at the age of 15 and her passion has led her to create a quarterly booklet called “Pick-Me-Up”.  These booklets have been delivered to local hospitals and cancer centers with the expressed purpose of exposing patients to poetry in a subtle way.

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Rick Landers

"Leviathan (Dark Dreams) 


If you could see behind these eyes
This is not some fairy tale
About a man's mind lost at sea
Outwitted by a great white whale

A harpoon's line twisted the frail
shattered leg above the knee
he found himself (among the waves
that bite was clean from that muscled knave

One hundred throws, decades would pass
The ships would heave, men breathed their last
The great leviathan would sound and breach
that storied beast, beyond their bloody reach

Sailing 'round Chilean grounds
Their fears unsaid
Ships forged a head
and the sea turned red
Filled their Yankee heads
with dark dreams

He'd sound and breach
their wails and woes
The captain pulled his three-draw glass
the man aloft cried "There she blows."
Then a lucky wind would fill their masts

Two points on the weather bow
Three were seen, one with child
A newborn calf, born just now
the great white whale would stand his ground

He'd seen it all before
whaling boats and their frenzied speed
blooded oars swung high then deep
he'd plunge below and rise the Beast

He weathered nineteen blows
His two loved ones safely below
A crimson tide, foes traded blows
The great white whale was slain, then stowed
The men grew quiet for the seed they'd sown

His body held in a hundred casks
heading toward Nantucket Sound
Sea rovers, soon home at last
With oil aplenty to light their lamps

Sailing 'round Chilean grounds
Their fears unsaid
Ships forged a head
and the sea turned red
Filled their Yankee heads
with dark dreams

So, if you could see behind these eyes
This is not some fairy tale
About a man's mind lost at sea
Outwitted by a great white whale


Copyright) Rick Landers 2021


Rick Landers is a multi-award winning singer-songwriter, author, and poet who publishes, Guitar International magazine (2004 – 2024). He and his band, Heartland, perform at house concerts, music festivals, and DMV venues. He holds a Bachelor of Science degree and a Masters degree in Public Administration. As a retired federal employee, he served as the Deputy Assistant Inspector General (Communications) with the Office of the Inspector General, Department of Defense.

30 for 30 is sponsored by Potomac Review

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Dave Lego

Truism

I am sleeping lightly
on a Sunday afternoon
vague jazz on the radio
with a world drum beat.

I drift, in content calm
into deepening darkness
A low voice beckons me
"What is your name?"

"I'm Kunta Kinte, an
American from The Bronx" I say.

I sense a looming circle
around me of others, intent
in stare, grim in outlook.

"No," the voice warns "your
name is Smith, Winston Smith."

"My name is Kunta" I start,
"No, your name is Winston Smith;
you live in Oceania. Say it."

"I was born in Virginia" I say, adding
"I now live in The Bronx."

"Your name is Winston Smith;
you live in Oceania. SAY IT!"

The circle is closing, surrounding.
"SAY IT!" rasps the voice.

"I'm a reasonable man."

"I work for The Truth Ministry" I say.
"I AM The Truth!" growls reply.

"Who are you?

Dave Lego lives on the coast of Oceania and dreams of national mediocrity, that being a step up from the current state of affairs…no, seriously. 🤨

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Kate Shine

LUCID

All the
slip, lift, and fall, wood stove grunt
or cat filled door, full mouth rot
and smoke again, can’t find class,
can’t find clothes, can’t find report,
can’t dive into the ink bottle shrink,
electric shock on a chain link fence,
train to car to bike to crawl,
can’t find a bathroom, broken bathroom,
no walls bathroom, not a bathroom,
breath-stopped float to powerline sky,
white box truck and run

Not fun, but fine,
but then

there’s the one that’s not scary.
But I realize it’s a dream.
And I want to wake up.
But I can’t.
So I scream.

and torn through
screen of med-thick weight I closed-
mouth real-shriek, to scare him wide,
so he shakes me, saves me, asks again
why, and ______ _ __ _ _ _

Copyright 2024 by Kate Powell Shine (Katherine Shine)

Kate Powell Shine (she/her) is active in numerous local literary communities including those at Montgomery College, Montgomery County Public Libraries, and the Eastern Shore Writers Association. She lives in Montgomery Village with her husband, John.

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Marianne Szlyk

Maskless in Dallas, A Dream from 2020

My parents are riding a tour bus
past mansions, universities,
museums of the last Old Masters.
They visit a historic house
that is smaller and not quite as old
as the ones back East.

My parents avoid downtown,
Dealy Plaza, the crystal skyscrapers
on postcards, the grassy knoll,
the place where my mother says
everything went wrong.

Having overslept yet again, I wander
the aisles of a Barnes and Noble
that magically expands to an art gallery,
a toy store, a supermarket, all
without selling the book I want,
nature writing set in the hill country,
all that I will miss on the flight home.

Without that book, I walk out
to the shores of an artificial lake
large enough to be an ocean
with saltwater taffy and a Cyclone
at the end of the boardwalk.

I walk past the bare-chested men
and high-heeled women
who clog this path,
singing, spitting, swigging
beer from brown bottles.

I wake up gasping.


Copyright 2024 by Marianne Szlyk

A version of this poem appeared as “Maskless in Dallas” in Mad Swirl.

Marianne Szlyk’s poems have appeared in Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Verse-Virtual, Poetry X Hunger, Poetry Breakfast, Verse-Virtual, McQueen’s Quinterly, and One Art. Her books Why We Never Visited the Elms, On the Other Side of the Window, and I Dream of Empathy are available from Amazon and Bookshop. Her poems have also been translated into Polish, Italian, and Cherokee. Her short stories have appeared in Impspired and Mad Swirl. She and her husband, the wry poet and flash fiction writer Ethan Goffman, now live in the Washington, DC area with their black cat Tyler.

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