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.
Jennifer Greenberg is a Floridian poet living in New England, and an associate editor for the South Florida Poetry Journal. Her writing appears in several online publications and was awarded the Joe Bolton Poetry Award in 2020.
My friend won’t go sleeveless because of her Czech arms. She means her meaty upper arms, arms like Ruben’s beauties, artful arms that remind me of fictional southern belles, mamas and grand-mamas with flesh like bread dough, moist and heavy.
I admire my friend’s solid arms and her line of women who worked them over a washboard. Used them to wield a hoe and whip oxen; assemble artillery casings and drape over a flannel shoulder while doing the two-step or polka.
Arms like mine from eastern Poland, where they dug beets and potatoes. Made the sign of the cross and lit Sabbath candles, both.
A generation and two later they wrung chicken necks, planted gladiolus bulbs and a daughter in the ground. Learned to turn a steering wheel, hurl a bowling ball and carry a suitcase away from a marriage.
Arms, in this life, that taught on a blackboard and rocked some babies, reached up at family weddings to dance the YMCA, washed a father on his deathbed now jiggle and flap when I wave goodbye.
Today I’ll put on a sleeveless shirt, grab my trowel and a bag of mixed bulbs. Today I’ll plant gladioli. Row after row.
Kathy Jacobs is a retired nursing professor who recently left the fellowship of gifted and generous Nebraska poets and is at play finding others in the Twin Cities. Her poems have been published in Plainsongs, The Comstock Review, and several anthologies from The Nebraska Writers Guild, including How It Looks from Here: Poetry from the Plains.
I root around in the box, wanting to wear my mother’s pearls again before I die. Or the tiny diamonds my husband bought to court me, veined turquoise from Taos, amber, any amount of silver, clip-on rhinestones—gorgeous but sheer murder. One hot morning, Bernadette the freckled, the brave, plucked a ripe plum from her yard, held it fast to my skull as she steered a sewing needle through my unspoiled lobes. I would have suffered worse— and did, in truth— to be a tramp in my mother's eyes. Among sailors, a pierced ear once signified the wearer had crossed the equator, voyaged far and wide. I don’t know who moved on, or away. I only know that when I bled, she stooped to swab the ruby drops with iodine, gold hoops swinging.
Cynthia White's poems have appeared in Adroit, Narrative, Massachusetts Review, Grist and ZYZZYVA among others. She was a finalist for Slapering Hol's 2021 Chapbook Prize and the winner of the Julia Darling Memorial Prize from Kallisto Gaia Press. She lives in Santa Cruz, California.
Susan Rich is an award-winning poet, editor and essayist. She is the author of four poetry collections including, most recently, Cloud Pharmacy and The Alchemist’s Kitchen. In addition, she co-edited, with Ilya Kaminsky, the anthology The Strangest of Theatres, published by the Poetry Foundation. Rich has received awards from Peace Corps Writers, PEN USA, and the Fulbright Foundation. Recent poems have appeared in the Harvard Review, New England Review, Poetry Ireland, and World Literature Today. Her fifth collection, Gallery of Postcards and Maps: New and Selected Poems, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry, Spring 2022. Visit her at poetsusanrich.com.
Heather Lanier is the author of two award-winning poetry chapbooks along with the memoir, Raising a Rare Girl, a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice. Her TED talk has been viewed over two million times. She works as an assistant professor of creative writing at Rowan University.
Forty-eight frigid hours in a row lambs fall bloody into wet fog and snow, twins, triplets, fast one on another—a hundred ewes bleating, mounds of afterbirth, earth churned to mud, dogs nervous and circling— coyotes are out there, silent, waiting— and how quick we must be to sort out the dead, skin them to cover with sad bloody shirts the rejects whose mothers nosed them away—we shove the imposters towards grieving ewes, crooning, here, here, here's your sweet one—our jeans frozen dark and wet to our thighs and our hands red ice and the tired sheep tonguing wet lumps of wool till they wobble and stand to nurse.
B.J. Buckley is a Montana poet and writer who has taught in Arts-in-Schools/Communities programs throughout the West and Midwest for over four decades. She has recent or forthcoming work in Sugar House Review, Whitefish Review, ellipsis, and Calyx. Her most recent book is Corvidae: Poems of Ravens, Crows, and Magpies (Lummox Press, 2014).
Richelle Buccilli holds a BA in Creative Writing and her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Rogue Agent, NELLE, Uppagus, Pittsburgh Quarterly, and Rattle, among others. She lives in Pittsburgh with her husband and son.
Leslie Sainz is a first generation Cuban-American, born and raised in Miami, Florida. The recipient of a 2021 National Endowment for the Arts Poetry Fellowship, she received her MFA in poetry from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her work has appeared in or is forthcoming from the Yale Review, New England Review, Kenyon Review Online, AGNI, jubilat, Narrative, and others. A two-time National Poetry Series finalist, she’s received scholarships, fellowships, and honors from CantoMundo, The Miami Writers Institute, The Adroit Journal, and The Stadler Center for Poetry & Literary Arts at Bucknell University. She is the managing editor of the New England Review. Her manuscript in progress has been a finalist for the National Poetry Series twice (2021, 2019) and a finalist for the Jake Adam York Prize, and the AWP Donald Hall Prize for Poetry.
Samika Swift writes from the huge fantastic city of Denton, Texas. When not restricted by a pandemic, she leads summer writing workshops for incarcerated youth. Her poetry can be found in Illya’s Honey and Dallas Poets Community’s anthology Cattlemen and Cadillacs and is forthcoming in Belt Magazine.
Tucked up in a strange blue bed under the eaves the mind of this house by the lake has me held tight like a gem in its mouth, it has me close and new and I’m making only memories of this house. Sears-built and funky, hand-rigged cabinets in every room, none of it is professional none of it quite square or normal. I’m a fresh new thing here; made for this moment— the tool at hand. Outside the lake freezes and my car crouches in the drive; friends sleep narrowly in the rooms below me, but I’m in the rafters. I’m unhooked from life.
Sara Eddy's poems have appeared recently or are forthcoming in the Threepenny Review, the Baltimore Review, and Spank the Carp. Her chapbook of poems about bees and beekeeping, Tell the Bees, was released in October of 2019 by A3 Press. Another poetry chapbook, Full Mouth, was published by Finishing Line Press in November 2020. She is Assistant Director of the writing center at Smith College, in Northampton, Massachusetts, and lives in nearby Amherst with a teenager, a black cat, a white dog, and three beehives.
My mother kept a saucepan with no handle and a tarnished spoon for her wax. Wax the color of pond muck more brown than yellow, but green the color of having once been organic. The pan she'd set on a low flame and when the wax had melted, she'd lift the spoon, the convex part up-facing, covered with wax, which would begin to congeal and this thin smear she'd wipe onto her upper lip, one swipe above the left side and one above the right. Then she'd light a cigarette, a filtered Raleigh purchased by the carton, the S & H Green stamps set aside for a matching platter to the table-settings for eight she'd already amassed. She'd deal us each six cards and we'd play cribbage. She would claim my missed points, didn't care that I was eight. She liked to win. Her eyes squinted when smoke flared upward. When she'd beaten me, she'd tear the hardened wax away in two swift yanks. Two curled petals, smooth on one side and hairy on the other. Two little animals.
Athena Kildegaard book of poems, Prairie Midden, is due this fall from Tinderbox Editions. Her poems have appeared recently in Prairie Schooner, december, Poetry Northwest, Beloit Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. She lives and teaches in western Minnesota.
Carly Sachs is the author of The Steam Sequence and the editor of the anthology The Why and Later, a collection of poems about rape and assault. Her poems and stories have been included in The Best American Poetry Series and read on NPR’s Selected Shorts. She is a writer, yoga teacher and lactation consultant based in Lexington, Kentucky.
Do you know the show’s premise? A real estate agent, interior designer, and a couple with a checklist of needs who must choose between a new house and their old remodeled. Pull up stakes? Or reframe the past and forego a never-inhabited future? I’ve been trying
to let go of habits that linger like garage-sale remains: the need to patch your roof, fix your flashing. As though we could fool the rain. Some rooms are unlovable. I could redecorate (call this hunger “fasting”) or move somewhere with an open floor plan, no wall between
how I’m feeling and what you’re seeing. Every criticism, judgment, diagnosis, expression of anger is the tragic expression of an unmet need. Every time your face says “stop talking,” and I want to leave—how do I decide if I don’t even have a list of boxes to tick? One partner
on Love It or List It always asks for a giant laundry room, where the systole and diastole whoosh of the washer-dryer masks any sound, a gentle sac for the release of secretions, where I can float among the folded piles, warm and soothing as a mother’s voice muffled by viscera.