Rabbit, rabbit! I had my fingers crossed for a commemorative blizzard, but instead it rained and then, which is cheating, turned cold.
The mail brought my contributor's copy of Not One of Us #70, leading off with my poem "The Poet." It contains a garret and an allusion to Menotti. The rest of this issue on the unheimlich theme of the domestic features stories and poems from Alexandra Seidel, Steve Toase, Patrick Doerksen, Gwynne Garfinkle, Lorraine Schein, and more. The photographic covers by John Stanton are always apt, but I am especially fond of these crumbling stairs.
At the end of this very long week, I spent most of today lying on a couch, which I do not regret. Have some links.
1. The title of this issue comes from a spell: "The endless and innocent birdsong of sky is for you: the newest Ukrainian war poems."
2. On not perpetuating the erasure of Indigenous women: "Interior is pushing states to replace derogatory place names with colonial ones."
3. Courtesy of
kathmandu: "The 1969 Easter Mass Incident." I kind of hope someone has made an "Alice's Restaurant"-style seasonal recording.
As I track the progress of my poetry across Tumblr in my intermittent and haphazard way, I may have discovered my new favorite tag.
The mail brought my contributor's copy of Not One of Us #70, leading off with my poem "The Poet." It contains a garret and an allusion to Menotti. The rest of this issue on the unheimlich theme of the domestic features stories and poems from Alexandra Seidel, Steve Toase, Patrick Doerksen, Gwynne Garfinkle, Lorraine Schein, and more. The photographic covers by John Stanton are always apt, but I am especially fond of these crumbling stairs.
At the end of this very long week, I spent most of today lying on a couch, which I do not regret. Have some links.
1. The title of this issue comes from a spell: "The endless and innocent birdsong of sky is for you: the newest Ukrainian war poems."
2. On not perpetuating the erasure of Indigenous women: "Interior is pushing states to replace derogatory place names with colonial ones."
3. Courtesy of
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As I track the progress of my poetry across Tumblr in my intermittent and haphazard way, I may have discovered my new favorite tag.