by Jen Schalliol Huang


Appearances deceive. You’d like to think
I sprouted, fresh with dew, unfurled, grew
toward the sun to pink my baby cheeks.
As if I was a thing of grace. As if
I didn’t bite. As if I’d never striped
malnutrition into my enamel
and raised the gumline sharpening my maw.
I teethed on paper ‘til I started fires
in my own dry-boned mouth and then exhaled
flames just like a dragon. Like a myth. But
real. Touch me. I’m not scaled, nor a
figment. I have loved myself to softness,
cauterized and kissed closed every wound
with my own tiger’s tongue. In forgiveness.
Invoking blessings. I am plush with them.

______________________________________________________________________

Jen Schalliol Huang is a disabled poet living pondside in Massachusetts. She received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her chapbook, Means of Access, was printed through the Kenyon Review. She reads for [PANK] and has been nominated for the Pushcart, Best New Poets, and Best of the Net. Her work has been featured in Cincinnati Review, Flock, RHINO, The Shore, Sou’wester, Shenandoah, and others. Twitter: @jenschalliol.

by Diamond Forde


“hoes said they wish a bitch would, & I’m a genie” -Megan Thee Stallion


ain’t got much ass but I’ma grip it
make him catch it with his hips
two of us ridin’ to the music I puppet
through my dips real hot girl shit
liquored & liking the magic I cast
when I throw it back fat & nasty
bought a floor length mirror just to catch myself
in its glances this heft this happiness
Megan you mother an era of girls
taught them to be savage
& scholar to admire their long pink
tongues—loud girls large girls
you knew before it happened
that men stay tryna make us dance
but we twerkin’ for our damn selves
musty bullet-proof unrepentantly hot


______________________________________________________________________

Diamond Forde is the author of Mother Body, with Saturnalia Books. She is a Callalloo and Tin House Fellow whose work has appeared in Obsidian, Frontier Poetry, Ninth Letter, Massachusetts Review, and more. She currently lives in Asheville, NC with her partner and their dog.

by Jill Kitchen


what if you are your own secret affair
the warm breath you turn to in the ticking
dark of a sleepless night the liquid glow of skin
you take into the shower in the afternoon
pj harvey's rock and roll strum her low
full-throated whisper pulsing against tile
what if you are the one who finds your own shape
attractive struck by the moonglow from within
who sees your own silhouette undressed and
takes in everything that this body has been through
all the ways it has grown into this knowing
wise against the silt edge of the world
wind-brushed and beaten by sun
eyes crackle-creased by laughter
the buttered pear of mothering, this near mane reaching
toward earth, these guitar curves of hips
you have become the one you wear red lipstick for
buy the black lace edged underwear for
dance the flamenco for, pulling imaginary apples
from low tangled branches over and over
with a trill of long, piano-loving fingers
you have become the one you write sonnets for
the one you sing for with your widest-sky voice
against these soft outer walls of snow
fragile with the still broken spring
you are become this woman that you built
from treebark and the hidden stones of other countries
from salamander sheen and desert crossings
from the way each different language feels on your tongue
in the just waking tremble of your mouth
in the oracle of your heart muscle, once struck silent
you are become this woman you burned for fought for
drove across the continent in the middle of the night for
this green-eyed woman mirrored back
who summons her city within
you are still writing this woman song


______________________________________________________________________

Jill Kitchen's work appears in FERAL, Rust + Moth, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, West Trestle Review, and is forthcoming from HAD. She has a B.A. in Romance languages from Colorado College and has studied creative writing at UCLA, Columbia University, The Poetry Project in New York City, and with Hollowdeck Press in Boulder. She lives in Boulder, Colorado where she can be found rollerskating on the creek path while searching for great horned owls. Twitter: @jillkitchen.

by Melissa Studdard


And my body is a collection of rivers
that think they are bones. I love my blood

the way I love pink cherry soda, the way
I would nibble on my own earlobes

and call it good breeding. According
to Eduardo Galeano, the church says

the body is a sin; science says it’s
a machine, and advertising has tried

to make it into a business, but the body
says, I am a fiesta. That’s why both

my elbows think they are wishbones
and all my knuckles have decided

to be opals, increasingly iridescent
with every change of angle. That’s why

every glass of pinot grigio I drink
is a toast to the diamonds in your and my

and Maya Angelou’s thighs. Big, small,
and all the in-betweens are perfect

to me. Even when what I see in the mirror
makes me want to cry, I remember the glory

of the aqueducts that would deliver
those waters from the vast countryside

of my insecurity out to the glamourous
cities of my cheeks, and suddenly my body

is an event to be marked by festivities,
the best year yet of an award-winning

vineyard, a half-century-long firework
display, a pilgrimage, a parade.

______________________________________________________________________

Melissa Studdard is the author of two poetry collections, I Ate the Cosmos for Breakfast and Dear Selection Committee, and the chapbook Like a Bird with a Thousand Wings.Her work has been featured by PBS, NPR, The New York Times, The Guardian, and the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-a-Day series, and has also appeared in periodicals such as POETRY, Kenyon Review, Psychology Today, New Ohio Review, Harvard Review, Missouri Review, SWWIM Daily, and New England Review.Her Awards include The Penn ReviewPoetry Prize, the Tom Howard Prize from Winning Writers, the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America, and more.

by Micah Marie Johnson


My figure is a constellation
Bright sparks shining when I open
I am the map and the destination
Rippled and soft bellied laughter
I’m a five pointed star ready to be gazed upon
Breasts buoyant and strong

My form takes up space
The expanse holds me all night long
I feel for the void and splatter

Each mark on my body: a galaxy
My freckles are love poems to read
I’m kept in orbit to be worshiped
Rounded edges and subtle rubbing thighs
So I say a prayer in the mirror
Then my body becomes the light


______________________________________________________________________

Known as an upbeat, eclectic, and vibrant writer and artist, Micah Marie Johnson creates for creation sake, but has also appeared in a poetry and short story anthology titled Journey’s End by Two Friends Publishing. Recently Micah has completed their first children's book, Finding The Future, which was a commissioned project to commemorate the opening of the Cybrarium Library in Homestead, Florida.

by Lúcia Leão


that moves on a surface,
someone scratching
with a fingertip the picture
of existence.

Up the stairs, down a ladder,
horizontal, dreaming,
mudding the air with its breathing.

A tunnel of insides no one sees,
but feel, there is a texture
of dance, traits that attempt
the borders.

All my scars are feminine.

______________________________________________________________________

Lúcia Leão is a translator and a writer originally from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Her poems have been published in SWWIM Every Day, South Florida Poetry Journal, Gyroscope Review, Chariton Review, and Harvard Review Online, among others. Her work is included in the anthology Grabbed: Poets and Writers on Sexual Assault, Empowerment & Healing. Lúcia’s poems in Portuguese have been published in literary magazines in Brazil.

by Lara Payne


The baby imprints
her face to your face
forehead to forehead,
mouth to mouth, blowing raspberries on
any soft part of you.

Embrace fleshiness
thick legs strong.
Carry the four-year-old on your back,
the one-year-old on your hip.

Your arms
surround these children
who press themselves
into your body.
Boundless love,
a great acceptance of you
as you are right now:
disheveled, mussed, tired,
unsung in any circle
but this one.

______________________________________________________________________

Lara Payne lives in Maryland. Once an archeologist, she now teaches writing at the college level, to veterans, and to small children. Her poem “Corn Stand, 10 ears for two dollars” was a winner in the Moving Words Competition and was placed on buses in Arlington, VA. Recent poems have appeared in the Beltway Poetry Quarterly and Mom Egg Review.

by Mia Leonin


My maker unfastened the branch from heaven’s hinge

And with that branch,

She pried open the three-poisoned god in me

And from that god,

She shook out the three-cornered sack of culpability in me

And from that sack,

She produced a three-pronged compass that unmoored the navigator in me

And from that navigator,

My maker ungendered the tri-phallus, triple-breasted woman in me

And from that woman,

My maker stippled a three-cornered quilt of kindness in me

And that quilt

Comforted the three-chimed loneliness in me

And that loneliness

Tuned the three-tongued oratorio in me

And the oratorio

Reverberated in the beak of the three-trilled bird

Who reached me just in time to tell you that

In the garden’s conjugations of war, envy, and greed,

You are beauty

And the infinitive of beauty is

to be.

______________________________________________________________________

Mia Leonin is the author of four poetry collections: Fable of the Pack-Saddle Child (BkMk Press), Braid, Unraveling the Bed, and Chance Born (Anhinga Press), and a memoir, Havana and Other Missing Fathers (University of Arizona Press). Leonin has published poetry and creative nonfiction in New Letters, Prairie Schooner, Guernica, Indiana Review, Witness, North American Review, and others. She teaches creative writing at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida.

by Cindy Veach


You make me think of pewter, sticky on the inside
thrift shop pitchers—all those years of accumulated

gunk that no sponge or bottle brush can reach.
You make me think of heavy sow-belly skies,

100% humidity—the weighty weight of it all.
Grey, you are the antithesis of bougainvillea,

cheery saccharine packets, gyrating disco
balls. You are a stinking hot breeze

rifling the old neighborhood. You are wilting
breasts, senile angiomas, vaginitis, osteoporosis.

Oh little bitty grey moth plastered to the grey door frame
who thought yourself invisible—I see you

and raise you three parts 506 to one part 505
to equal parts peroxide.

______________________________________________________________________

Cindy Veach’s most recent book is Her Kind (CavanKerry Press, 2021). She is also the author of Gloved Against Blood (CavanKerry Press), named a finalist for the Paterson Poetry Prize and a ‘Must Read’ by The Massachusetts Center for the Book, and the chapbook, Innocents (Nixes Mate). Her poems have appeared in the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day, AGNI, Michigan Quarterly Review, Poet Lore, The Journal, Salamander, and SWWIM Every Day, among others. She is the recipient of the Philip Booth Poetry Prize and the Samuel Allen Washington Prize. Cindy is co-poetry editor of MER. See www.cindyveach.com.

by Mary Block


Having coalesced around you, how I love you.
You are the one I breathe through the night for.
I take flesh in my mouth each day and chew
it into something that serves you, something more
than I can give you. I try to teach you what I know,
adopted child, about the past. The hunger and grief
of the bodies that taught you to survive in snow
you’ve never seen, to bare your teeth
at anyone getting too close to your kids
or your sweet, soft life. And all the times I endured
your laxatives and relaxers, I knew that you did
it to protect me, to make less of me to hate. Be sure
that I love you. And, of course, that I’ll outlive you.
And you haven’t asked, but of course, I forgive you.

______________________________________________________________________

Mary Block lives and writes in her hometown of Miami, Florida. Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in Mudfish, Best New Poets 2020, RHINO, Nimrod International Journal, and Sonora Review, among other publications. Her work can be found online at Rattle, SWWIM Every Day, Aquifer—The Florida Review Online, and elsewhere. She is a graduate of New York University's Creative Writing Program, a 2018 Best of the Net finalist, a 2012 finalist for the Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation, and a Pushcart Prize nominee.

by Yashasvi Vachhani


After Patricia Smith


Don’t shroud them, your thunder
thighs. Unsack & air your thunder

thighs. Hoist them up. Setubandh
to the sun—an offering, not a blunder

thighs. Release them. Rainbows
in an oil spill, formerly asunder

thighs. Peacock them. In the streets
wilderness of wonder

thighs. Tandav a revolution. Oh Yash!
Unshackle. Your thunder. Thighs.

*Setubandh is the Sanskrit name of the bridge pose.
*Tandav is Lord Shiva’s dance of fury.

______________________________________________________________________

Yashasvi Vachhani is a curator and facilitator of children's programmes in Mumbai. Her poem was recently published in Of Dry Tongues and Brave Heart, an anthology for women's poetry. She loves, reading, writing and the colour yellow.

by Ruth Williams


Grandma's
stretched the quilt
around the hoop.

Her needle's rhythm,
a casual puncture.
Across the cloth, holes
you can hardly see.

I have always wanted to sew,
but my hands knotted,
couldn't follow.

When I was young,
I wished hard to be measured
by a man's hands.

A biblical knowledge,
no woman could explain to me.

The thread fills the space
the fabric makes for it, as if
it too had waited its whole life
for a grander design.

It wasn't what I thought.

Grandma says,
trace the tree’s motherline: my body
to my sisters' to my mother's to my grandmother's
just as the thread’s green spreads
to the leaves' jade tips.

Our shadows,
a knowledge
I can cool my need
beneath.

______________________________________________________________________

Ruth Williams is the author of a poetry collection, Flatlands (Black Lawrence Press, 2018), and two chapbooks, Nursewifery (Jacar Press, 2019) and Conveyance (Dancing Girl Press, 2012). Currently, she is an Associate Professor of English at William Jewell College.

Or I Want Brown & Black & Queer Joy To Be Ubiquitous: Or What We’re Made Of Connects Us, Fuck: Or I Am Writing This Poem When I Should Be Out Protesting So This Poem Is A Protest Instead

by Felicia Zamora


I wonder about vulnerability. Envisage. How my third metacarpal
smacks into wood & the purples surface skin long before tender
before my eyes package up the scene for nerve cells to detect
in a type of mystery only cells talking solves. I carve a love poem
to my body inside the skull, in hopes all eyes roll back far enough
to read my inscription in shitty penmanship. In maturation outside
the womb, to explain our thinking means a study of brain chemicals,
electric signals, neurons as neighbors—cityscapes under flesh. Our
thoughts propagate in neuron fire. Waves of waves of waves—signals
of us, compounds in coalesce. Peel us back to reveal a galaxy of burning
hydrogen & helium & churn of nuclear forges in our guts; heaven
held in the pin pricks of pin pricks. My body a constellation of elements
of stars gone supernova—transient & astronomical my atoms—stellar
fusion gives me assemblage in a last evolutionary stage before explosion.
______________________________________________________________________

Felicia Zamora is the author of six books of poetry including, Quotient (Tinderbox Editions, April 2022), I Always Carry My Bones, winner of the 2020 Iowa Poetry Prize (University of Iowa Press, 2021), Body of Render, Benjamin Saltman Award winner (Red Hen Press, 2020), and Of Form & Gather, Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize winner (University of Notre Dame Press). A CantoMundo and Ragdale Foundation fellow, she won the 2020 C.P. Cavafy Prize from Poetry International, the Wabash Prize for Poetry, the Tomaž Šalamun Prize, and a 2022 Ohio Arts Council Individual Excellence Award. Her poems appear or are forthcoming in Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day, AGNI, Alaska Quarterly Review, American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Georgia Review, Guernica, Missouri Review Poem-of-the-Week, Orion, Poetry Magazine, The Nation, West Branch, and others. She is an assistant professor of poetry at the University of Cincinnati and associate poetry editor for the Colorado Review.

by Therese Gleason


This is for the twin hinge,
hardest of bony workers,
gatekeeper of body and mind,
guardian of the toothed cave,
vestibule for breath and sustenance.
Puppeteer behind the scenes,
you crank the red drawbridge
open and closed, sheriff of the mouth,
keeper of speech, teacher of suck
and kiss, clamp with damp lips.
Is it any wonder you yawn
and ache? You are Sisyphus
of swallowing, Atlas of the mouth’s
gummed palate, tamer of muscular
tongue and teeth. You are chewer
of words and meat, mandible
and maxilla in a marriage
of opposites, chomping till death
do you part: holy equation of catch
and release. You are holder of tension,
detritus of language and emotion
ground down by the tectonics
of the molar ridge. Tender buttons,
jointed joist of bone on bone,
clenched or unseated in sleep
you rouse the three-headed dragon,
trigeminal and terrible, to unleash
a shower of darts shimmering
from eye socket to cheek.
O simple machine, mother
who feeds, domed cathedral
of human want and need. O
sacred portal that falls open
at rest when the soul
is released.

______________________________________________________________________

Therese Gleason is author of two chapbooks: Libation (co-winner, South Carolina Poetry Initiative competition, 2006) and Matrilineal (Finishing Line, 2021). Her poems appear/are forthcoming in 32 Poems, Indiana Review, Rattle, New Ohio Review, Painted Bride Quarterly, America, Valparaiso Poetry Review, Literary Mama, SWWIM Every Day, and elsewhere. Originally from Louisville, KY, she lives in Worcester, MA with her spouse and three children. A literacy teacher at an elementary school, Therese reads for The Worcester Review and has an MFA in Poetry from Pacific University. Find her at theresegleason.com.

by Jennifer Greenberg



After the summer’s geography
of bodies, you are ribbed
seashell

stripped to moonlight,
mistaken for nautilus,
the antediluvian

Venus carved from her own bone.
Those tight-lipped mammary
cells abandoned, sour

milk in the sand, hot oceans
to undress in, and all
my fantasies buxom.

When the waves split
their tongues, I lie naked
in the surf and wait

for a second adolescence;
for bud-tipped breasts
to unearth

miniatures of mountain—
bluff, bulwark, weathered
arches carved teat to teat.

This is what’s left of God’s clay,
the unmolded archetype,
a female animal

undone, her gills turned to lungs
and set to walk upright
in the waning flood.

Those who see you will say prairie,
but you are hearth. They say empty,
but I say flower—

all petal, pistil, stem of you
bursting for touch.

______________________________________________________________________

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.

by Kathy Jacobs



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.