SWWIM sustains and celebrates women poets by connecting creatives across generations and by curating a living archive of contemporary poetry, while solidifying Miami as a nexus for the literary arts.
Cicadas sing— thrum and wheeze from the mulberry trees, a row of knotted trunks hugging the fence between pole beans and dandelion lawn, the highest, greenest leaves dusty from weeks of our passing back and forth on the gravel drive.
I stand on our unpainted, sagging porch, holding the baby's cup and her dress, clean and crisp as Chinese poppies flaming in a summer portrait.
Cicadas begin their song again as if they had stopped when the screen door slammed, stopped and breathed in, their eyes like orange beads and their wings like chaff.
They sing even within the walls of my human chest, they sing in the rooms of my eyes and lungs, in the struggling chambers of my heart, and the trembling of the blood in my wrists.
When I stand in the sweet humid air holding a cup of water and a red dress, I foresee their bodies’ husks emptied, clinging to the trees, shells of lace, I wonder what it will be for my fragile daughter and me to shrug our dresses, our skin, like linen from our shoulders, confused or blessed by music of our own.
Diane Hueter is a Seattle native now living in Lubbock,Texas—a place with very blue skies and very little rain. Her poetry has appeared in The Carolina Quarterly, Borderlands: Texas Poetry Review, and Iron Horse Review. Her book After the Tornado (2013) was published by Stephen F. Austin University Press. Diane attended the Community of Writers poetry workshop (a truly transformative experience) and her poems have been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.
Mid-breath I think of her and whether she’d consider my mothering well done. Mid-breath there’s a hitch and I debate crying, just to get rid of the hitch. Mid-evening and—just to fuck with the mid-breath—I shove out a sigh. It is still mid-evening’s deciding point: Google forms or dishes? Mid-evening and sex is off the table: cramps and barbed synaptic fangs. Everything is failure. Mid-poem and I know nothing. Mid-poem and I think of breasts, mine mashed into a sports bra, a friend’s replaced, another friend’s grazed with my lips for show, like the cigarette— it’s all just an original wanting, isn’t it? The bleak midwinter is both the fore- and background of wanting. Monday: snow on snow, and mid-pandemic I leave the apartment with my bagged heart. A gift for a stranger, for anyone who’ll take the gutted beating thing and pat it, saying, there there, it’s not so bad.
Solfrian’s first collection, Visible Heavens, received the Wick First Book Poetry Prize, judged by Naomi Shihab Nye. Her second collection, The Mud Room, came out last year from MadHat Press. She has also published a chapbook of ghazals with Finishing Line Press called The Second Perfect Number. Solfrian lives and works in New York City.
You’re forty years old if you haven’t accomplished something by now you probably won’t ever if your husband dies now you’d flounder in the water if you died now your mother-in-law would do a fine job taking over better in fact she makes pies you never should have had that breakdown in college or after the babies were born your daughter is right all you have are Facebook friends this house these floors this neighborhood this lawn is like some magical flower that bloomed in spite of your bad—everything everything. Bad you won’t write anything good that’s for sure and even if you do it won’t sell well
your fault too many hours in a daze too much overthinking not enough deep thinking not enough education not enough real-life experience not enough reading who are you kidding when was the last time you were able to focus through a new article that’s your husband’s territory the logical everything in its place the greased cogs the solid black lines the make your bed in the morning husband the nobody will ever want to read what you write husband the if it was so bad why are you writing about it? husband the sturdy hull that keeps me from sinking husband he’s right you shouldn’t get so offended when he says you should start a laundry service something that people actually need you’re forty if you haven’t accomplished something by now you won’t ever get in the boat of practicality let the strong engine carry you forward
Jenica Lodde is a human much of the time. Other times she is a bank of fog clawing her way across an ocean of dreams. Her poems have appeared in: io, River and South Review, Third Wednesday, Gravel, The Scop, Windows Facing Windows, Word Fountain, and others. Her chapbook, Emotional States, was published by Finishing Line Press (2020). When not writing, Jenica is daydreaming about repurposing all of her juice bottles and milk jugs into a supremely satisfying and useful work of perfection. Instagram and Twitter: @JenicaLodde.
Suzanne Honda (she/her) is a poet and teaching artist based in Michigan, where she lives with her partner and their two cats. When she is not writing, she is either curating her wildflower garden, making playlists for friends, or experimenting in her kitchen. Suzanne is published in Bear River Review.
To get lost is to learn the way— printed sun-yellow on my apron. I didn’t tell the man get lost when he said “Me Too! I’d like to have you in bed.” He’d been drinking beers in the hottest sun
but I listened and listened to how he’s lost and a little broken about mortality, its cost. Perhaps stuck at age eleven when his mother died. To get lost is to learn the way
eventually. The man is almost sixty. Because I’m afraid to make sunchoke soup, my apron’s not gritty and years ago I played it safe when I should have been alive in a beloved’s bed getting lost to learn the way.
To get lost is to learn the way— printed sun-yellow on my apron. I didn’t tell the man get lost when he said “Me Too! I’d like to have you in bed.” He’d been drinking beers in the hottest sun
but I listened and listened to how he’s lost and a little broken about mortality, its cost. Perhaps stuck at age eleven when his mother died. To get lost is to learn the way
eventually. The man is almost sixty. Because I’m afraid to make sunchoke soup, my apron’s not gritty and years ago I played it safe when I should have been alive in a beloved’s bed getting lost to learn the way.
Marjorie Thomsen loves teaching others how to play with words and live more poetically in the world. She is the author of Pretty Things Please (Turning Point, 2016). Two poems from this collection were read on The Writer’s Almanac. One of Marjorie’s poems about hiking in a dress and high heels was made into a short animated film. She has been nominated several times for a Pushcart Prize and Best of the Net. She is the recipient of poetry awards from the University of Iowa School of Social Work, Poetica Magazine, and others. Publications include Pangyrus, Rattle, SWWIM Every Day, and Tupelo Quarterly. Marjorie has been a Poet-in-Residence in schools throughout New England. She is a psychotherapist and instructor at Boston University’s School of Social Work.
It wasn’t the ring-necked pheasants strutting across the yard, lumbering ground hogs or deer splayed bloody next to every road that told me it was time
to leave. Sprawled on Hawk Mountain boulders I counted kestrels above dry quilts of corn spread next to brick hotels, general stores,
stone farm houses, red barns with hearts and horses. I played ring toss in every country bar lined with jars of pickled eggs and jerky, shopped
farmer’s market stalls tended by pink-cheeked Amish girls in white aprons, hair pulled tight and braided under capped buns. They sold
stacks of scrapple and cheese, apple butter, pretzels and pig stomach while horse drawn wagons waited for bearded men and black-brimmed boys to drive
them home to Paradise, Virginville, Intercourse, bed sheets flapping in the manure rich air. Inside my thick- walled house, beams stained with ox blood, tradition
echoed in red ware pottery, pierced tin cupboards, blue and white crocks with stiff-necked plump Dutch birds, but there were no women like me.
Lured down highways splattered with billboards, past the sprawl of malls and smoke stacks, I searched for them in bookstores and meetings, women
who lived in disguise, a man’s wife kissing another man’s wife. Let me be clear about this yearning, its embers stoked by more than a juicy bite,
more than feminist books devoured like bread, more than the company of other mothers alone at night, their men working late. Body
and mind yoked to this cultivated garden of my own sowing, I chose wilderness. When I packed up my babies to leave,
Gail Thomas’ books are Odd Mercy, Waving Back, No Simple Wilderness, and Finding the Bear. Her poems have been widely published in journals and anthologies. Awards include the Charlotte Mew Prize from Headmistress Press, Narrative Poetry Prize from Naugatuck River Review, and the Massachusetts Center for the Book’s “Must Read.” She is an editor and teacher who lives in Northampton, MA. See gailthomaspoet.com.
Lynn McGee is the author of the poetry collections Tracks (Broadstone Books, 2019) and Sober Cooking (Spuyten Duyvil Press, 2016), as well as two award-winning poetry chapbooks: Heirloom Bulldog (Bright Hill Press, 2015) and Bonanza (Slapering Hol Press, 1997). Lynn's first children's book, Starting Over in Sunset Park, co-written with José Pelauz, came out in 2021 from Tilbury House Publishers.
Dion O'Reilly has spent most of her life on a small farm in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Her prize-winning book, Ghost Dogs, was published in February 2020 by Terrapin Books. Her work appears in American Journal of Poetry, Cincinnati Review, Narrative, The New Ohio Review, The Massachusetts Review, New Letters, Rattle, The Sun, and other literary journals and anthologies.
You loved me as sword grass, ungreen and venomous, my new edges drawing scar, you loved me as heron, long-legged and coastal, as catastrophic forest fire, blackened limbs and skin as translucent as winter leaves, full dead and metamorphic, my awful knees locking between your ribs without a single rattle or cicada song. You loved me as barren, unable to flesh, as unhatched egg in April snow, as discarded nest, feathers and fur dissipating at my death-moth touch. You loved me as teeth, as fingernail, as bottled ship in an unforgiving ocean, as broken mirror shards. You loved me as wanderer, desert-starved and waterless, as scalpel-carved, without appendix or breast, you loved me as other, hungry-boned and insubstantial, as half-remembered crow song, as ghost to my unfed self.
Beth Gordon is a poet, mother and grandmother currently living in Asheville, NC. Her poetry has been widely published and nominated for Best of the Net, the Pushcart Prize, and the Orison Anthology. She is the author of two previous chapbooks and her full-length poetry collection, This Small Machine of Prayer, was published in 2021 (Kelsay Books). Her third chapbook, The Water Cycle, is being published by Variant Lit in January 2022. She is Managing Editor of Feral: A Journal of Poetry and Art, Assistant Editor of Animal Heart Press, and Grandma of Femme Salve Books.
If you’re always under the pressure of real identity, I think that is somewhat of a burden. —Mark Zuckerberg
In the cave, our histories are shadows on a wall; our memories rote lessons that flicker and mutate. Fall and spring,
then and now, captured and interchanged. Friezes like post cards sculpted to ornament the grotto, endure, resist decay.
When the shadows dance, we point, open our mouths, as if for a split second, something shifts, recalibrates. A glimpse of fire and lathe—
and shadow makers. Forms beyond hope. Ideas like sirens singing. Cracks in a wall that luminate, hint at another source: rivers,
flora and bursts of color, starlings with iridescent wings, shrubs whose roots finger through mud for something to drink. A world too fluid to dangle
from rod and string. How could we want its ranges, moon, its chorus marking dawn, its feathered swirl confusing predators, its messenger’s glad song? Why should we
mind the tether anchoring us; the flame that fixes seasons, stages night and day, that orients us frontward, ever frontward, and keeps the constellations in their place?
M.B. McLatchey is the author of two books of poems, The Lame God, for which she won the 2013 May Swenson Award (Utah State Univ. Press) and Advantages of Believing (Finishing Line Press). She is also the author of a recently-published and award-winning memoir, Beginner’s Mind (Regal House Publishing, 2021). M.B. is the recipient of several literary awards, including the American Poet Prize from the American Poetry Journal and the Annie Finch Prize from the National Poetry Review. Currently Florida’s Poet Laureate for Volusia County and Arts Ambassador for the Atlantic Center for the Arts, she is Professor of Humanities at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. Visit her at mbmclatchey.com.
When my father finally packs up his spaceship and returns to his home planet, I wonder what he’ll take with him. The man was never one for nostalgia, but these days I think he’s chucked it all, every artifact of the first sixty years he spent on Earth. The yearbooks and deferrals I understand not keeping—
all shag and pain, ancient history. And while the man reads a lot, they were all library books, no marginalia or ticket stubs to discover. Plus, you’d have to go to the movies, and when we went to see Jurassic Park in 1993 he balked at the prices, admitted the last movie he’d seen in the theatre was Superman. He was the sort of dad who collected
actual fossils, not old license plates for the garage. When his mother died, he set aside for me a crystal beer pitcher. This is practical nostalgia. Productive reminiscence. I’m not angry about these things even if I sound like it. First marriage long over, children grown and gone—I almost understand the strange logic of not keeping
the markers of these basic, expected cycles. We take note when the leopard gecko sheds it skin all at once, wriggles out of its too-tight suit, but humans too cast off our skin constantly. We just call it dust, Swiffer it off our framed photos. No, what concerns me is not the discarding but the cleaving. His Before Life
and his Now Life, how little they resemble each other, how nothing bleeds through. Now Life is two houses, an Audi TT, a leather jacket, new wife, her adult children the same age as my brother and I but somehow so much more space-taking. It’s been twelve, no, thirteen years since my father turned into this alien,
so I’m pretty much used to it. When he texts me asking when my brother’s birthday is again—I always forget—it’s only one day that I need to process my rage, only three beers I drink that night. If I’m allowed into the house after he flies away, I wonder what I’ll find. No hope for the little clay elephant I made, but maybe a couple photo albums.
Sometimes I daydream that I open a drawer and find the letters I wrote. But then I snap out of it. Geckos don’t have eyelids—they lick their eyes to keep them moist. They have tear ducts, but only to clean the cornea. How practical! If you didn’t know the science, you’d be forgiven for thinking that a gecko could cry.
Christina Olson is the author of Terminal Human Velocity (Stillhouse Press, 2017). Her chapbook, The Last Mastodon, won the Rattle 2019 Chapbook Contest. Other work appears in The Atlantic, The Normal School, Scientific American, Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Best Creative Nonfiction. She is an associate professor at Georgia Southern University and tweets about coneys and mastodons as @olsonquest.
It takes almost a year for my aunt’s chicken Tillie to start laying, the months-younger hens outpacing her, and I remember being last to get my period, freshmen year of high school, which was bad but maybe not as bad as being first. How we feared existing on the edges: E. starting to bleed while being bussed to elementary swim lessons. M. with armpit hair at ten and the rest of us smooth. How narrow the window of blending in. But the Ameraucana is an elegant chicken, silver cheek muffs and a saddle that shimmers like folds of slate taffeta. Never mind laying season, Tillie starts in winter, deep February. When I visit months later she jumps on my lap, impossibly light beneath all that fluff. She pecks weeds from my hand and when beak touches skin just a brief pinch of pain, no mark left. Tillie’s first egg was a perfect, pale blue. My blood looked rusty and I feared something wrong. It was 1993, no Google to check. I waited a day before telling my mom, made a pad from toilet paper I checked between classes: civics, earth science, what we learned at fourteen. What becomes routine: decades of bleeding, pills in shades my aunt’s chickens lay, discs pressed from packs at the end of each day. At night, the hens roost tight together, the alpha supposedly tucked most in center. Usually, it’s Esme, but not always. My aunt and uncle peer at their sleeping to see how the clique has shifted. In the dusty dark, the sweet animal smell. A hen tucks her beak beneath wings and it could be any of them or us: looking for a safe place, a self place to fold among bodies almost like our own.
Laura Donnelly's second collection of poetry, Midwest Gothic, was selected by Maggie Smith for the Snyder Memorial Prize and published by Ashland Poetry Press in 2020. Her first book, Watershed, received the 2013 Cider Press Review Editors' Prize. Originally from Michigan, she lives in Upstate New York and serves as Director of Creative Writing at SUNY Oswego.
Clayre Benzadón is an MFA graduate student at the University of Miami, managing editor of Sinking City, and Broadsided Press’s Instagram editor. Her chapbook, Liminal Zenith, was published by SurVision Books. She was also awarded the 2019 Alfred Boas Poetry Prize for "Linguistic Rewilding" and published in places including SWWIM Every Day, 14poems, and Crêpe and Penn, as well as forthcoming in ANMLY and Fairy Tale Review. You can find more about her at clayrebenzadon.com.