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Snowblind

Poetry by Stephen J Cribari

Launched with a shove (Do you remember the day?)
One by one on sleds we sailed away
In a wild flying descent of the frozen hill
Then gathered by a snow mobile until
A few kids at a time we were hauled uphill

But you, when your turn came, you had to tease
Your sled beyond the familiar way. Unchecked
You sped head first into the sun and the trees
But too fast -! This time too fast. You wrecked
Among the trees where snow hid the rocks and leaves.

I watched you struggle upright in the snow,
Collect yourself, and determined turn to go
Back uphill hauling your sled behind.
And I watched you watch us watching you: you saw
The way we stared at you – your parents, friends –
Squinting towards you into the sun snow blind.

Then you turned as you’d never turned before,
Turned and looked about you with a raw
Look of expectation, blind to us
As if drawn toward something endless. Thus
You turned, the child the man, who comprehends
That now is when he begins, or when he ends.


Stephen J Cribari’s poetry and plays have been performed in the United States and abroad. He resides in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His poetry has been published recently in Patterson Literary Review and The Bluebird Word. Still Life (2020) and Delayed en Route (2022) are published by Lothrop Street Press.

December Portrait

Poetry by Jennifer Susan Smith

Love waned atop clouds in August’s last dance,
above my reach, beyond my grasp, concealed
from eyes that believed in a second chance.
Summer ebbed lyrics my love song revealed.

As faded sun welcomed harvest’s first chill,
romance retreated when forlorn leaves fell,
and fall-frosted pumpkins circled morning still,
no love story that autumn’s moon could tell.

All soulmates do not whisper, sing, or write
verses vowing eternity through rhyme,
poems of ocean-drenched kisses at midnight,
October sonnets bound in words and time.

On solstice of winter, his blue eyes free,
my hues on canvas, artist painted me.


Jennifer Susan Smith, a retired speech-language pathologist, resides in northwest Georgia. Her writing is published or forthcoming in The Bluebird Word, WELL READ Magazine, First Literary Review-East, and Letting Grief Speak. She is chairman of Alpha Delta Kappa Pages and Pearls Book Club, and holds membership in Chattanooga Writers’ Guild.

Forever

Poetry by Susan Zwingli

I remember we came this way,
flirty, azure sports car filled to the brim,
old vinyl records, thick-lined winter boots, grandmother’s quilt
Full of the start of it all,
the beginning of everything
How is it possible that 30 years later,
I return this way, alone?
Is it just my imagination,
or does your laughter still echo in the winter wind?
Are those your footprints in the snow?
The sighing cornfields stir, crackled leaves rustling
All the endings press against my heart
Just then, a flock of snow geese startle
In feathered white waves, they lift upward, upward,
carrying my whispered goodbye, leaving a strange peace
I turn to leave, those old boots crunching snowdrift,
feeling new beginnings in my wings


Susan Zwingli has been published in the 2023 One Page Poetry Anthology and in the May 2024 edition of The Bluebird Word. She has a B.A. in English and a M.A. in Spiritual Formation. She lives in Richmond, VA, and writes about love, loss, survival, healing, and spirituality.

Snow

Poetry by Charlene Stegman Moskal

She wrote of remembered afternoon skies
dark like tarnished silver,
sleet that dissolved on sidewalks
elusive, slippery as words in the mouths of liars.

Cold wormed its way under sleeves,
collars, through the spaces
between buttons on coats heavy
with the lightness of snowflakes.

Pristine white covered the ground as if to protect it
from the intrusion of tires and footsteps;
wires now unfit roosts for evening starlings
as clouds silently delivered the rest of their bounty.

By afternoon slush piled against curbs;
made men and women hop and leap
like children playing in a puddle,
but without the laughter and joy—

snow an annoyance,
something to be avoided,
something to get over and through,
its wonder short lived, shoveled into the past.

Her memories written in November,
reread months later as something forgotten
from those days before he left her
ice-grieved in the cold of December.


Charlene Stegman Moskal is published in numerous anthologies, print and online magazines including: TAB Journal, Calyx, and Humana Obscura. Her chapbooks are One Bare Foot (Zeitgeist Press), Leavings from My Table (Finishing Line Press), Woman Who Dyes Her Hair (Kelsay Books), and a full poetry collection, Running the Gamut from Zeitgeist Press.

Nana’s Christmas Cactus

Nonfiction by MD Bier

We were always visiting my grandparents. Pop Pop grew roses. Nana grew Christmas cactuses. Every spring and summer they appeared. They took over the breezeway. These long, small white containers a couple of inches high filled with Christmas cactus on every available shelf and open space. They grew so viney draping to the floor.

In winter, they mysteriously disappeared. Vanished. The breezeway too cold for them. Unheated, they would have shivered and died.  Don’t know where Nana put them in winter. No one remembers them blooming at Christmas or being displayed on the hutch, coffee tables, or end tables. Every spring they reappeared like magic taking up the same amount of space as the previous summer.

Two of my younger sisters asked Nana for her Christmas cactus. She gave them a few pieces to take home. Those few pieces grew into a huge Christmas cactus. Each sister has pieces of the original and grew their own Christmas cactus. They are now old. Forty, fifty years old. The original older than that.  Blooming year after year. Becoming more beautiful the older they get. Elegance in aging.

She has well-grounded roots. No prickly points. Smooth, dark green leaves. Growing high. Bushy. Numerous strands of stems and leaves, some trailing. The oldest stems thick and woody. Not really a cactus. She loves dappled sunlight and lots of talking.

When the birds fly south in September, it’s lights out at five o’clock. A few months of the year, Planty likes it cool and dark so she blooms for Christmas. It’s her winter. Once the first buds appear and as the first double petaled fuchsia flowers blossom, we tell her she’s gorgeous.

Pop Pop’s roses need lots of water, and Nana’s Christmas cactus needs little.

My Nana was low maintenance like the Christmas cactus. Not fussy or prickly. Well grounded. Spunky. Her Irish skin burned in the sun just like her Christmas cactus. Pro anything Irish. Worked hard. Cooked holiday dinners, not everyday dinners.  College-educated, well-read, artist extraordinaire. Wished I had asked for her art books. Her vision grew thick and woody like her Christmas cactus stems, and we saw less and less of her after my Pop Pop passed away. Their charm couldn’t charm the grief away. Nowadays, even though Nana is long gone, she showers all our cactuses with her magic, ensuring they bloom beautifully at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter. Extremely healthy. Age defying. I don’t think when Nana gave my sisters those few pieces of Christmas cactus, she ever expected them to live, let alone create five other plants miraculously still living over half a century later.


MD Bier is a binge reader and always has book. Her writing reflects her passion for social change and social issues. She is part of several writing communities where she writes and studies. She’s published in various literary journals. She resides in NJ with her family and dog.

The Calm Before

Poetry by Nicole Hirt

fog hovers
over Colorado peaks
sculpted with snow
and flecked with pines

Run, run, run.

snowflakes trickle
from a grey sky
tickling my eyelashes
with white kisses

Run, run, run.

cold burns
my feet as they race
through mounds of powder
soft and wet

the alarm blinks on my phone:
“A blizzard is coming. Please find shelter.”

Run, run, run.


Nicole Hirt is a freelance writer based in South Florida. She is an editor at Living Waters Review, where several of her poems and prose have appeared in past issues. In her free time, she enjoys wandering through cemeteries, much to the confusion of the general public.

First of December

Poetry by Suzy Harris

Every wet leaf underfoot
gives a little sigh. Sounds like
squish squish. And every
almost bare branch bends down
in supplication. December
begins quietly, not yet wanting
to slam the door on the old year.

We have four more weeks
to finish the unfinished,
care for the untended,
seek the sublime. Each day
unfolds like the first paragraph
of a new story. We don’t know
how it ends.


Suzy Harris lives in Portland, Oregon. Her poems have appeared in Clackamas Literary Review, Willawaw Journal, and Wild Greens, among other journals and anthologies. Her chapbook Listening in the Dark, about hearing loss and learning to hear again with cochlear implants, was published by The Poetry Box in February 2023.

One Long Song

Poetry by Laura DeHart Young

It played in the key of reed –
clarinet, oboe, and sax –
notes raspy but clear.
They rose into an instrumental aria
unsung and unfinished –
yet the breathy chords
still hit, pure and insistent,
an orchestral surge cresting
on a wind that blew from the north.

Restless lake water,
chopping and spilling onto sandy rock –
that’s where the
final trailing notes were bound
at the end of a long autumn song.

Flung across the newly chilled shores
like skipping stones,
the equinoctial tune landed in my lap.
I caught it and put it in your mouth.
You hummed,
holding my arms around your waist.
A pileated kept time on a nearby tree –
tapping a backbeat on the offbeat.
Leaves scattered
in tune with autumn’s exhale,
color long gone – brittle in death.
They rustled and twisted with percussion,
merengue style,
floating and dipping in kinetic flurries.

One by one the notes blew into us.
We plucked them out of the air
with our fingertips,
swallowing them whole –
swaying and rocking
until I rolled you in that bed
of musical leaf debris
between boat docks
stacked and stowed.
You stopped humming.
I stopped listening,
the autumn timbre fading
into winter’s cymballistic brass.


Laura DeHart Young graduated with a degree in English and enjoys a career in the communications field. She is currently pursuing poetry writing. Laura is the author of seven novels published by Bella Books Inc. She has also written book reviews for Lambda Book Review in Washington, D.C.

Landscapes

Poetry by Miguel Rodríguez Otero

we hear trains rumbling away
from homes we’ve known
neither of us yet fully awake
vaguely wondering where
they may be bound for
a coastal town
some place across the border
we are not yet aware
that we’ve fallen in love

but we don’t stir
we pray the clatter on the tracks never ends
each clack a word we haven’t uttered yet
a stitch that sews the wounds
we’ve come here to soothe

our bodies travel
they explore sentences and certainties
in this room that has taken us in
we throw away the passports
disregard seat numbers

we speak of books and oranges and wine
in foreign languages
often leave questions unfinished
conversation crumbles into shorter words

our talk travels too
and the keys on the bedside table
jingle as the train rolls along
our senses suddenly sharpen

one day we will cross that border
hop that freight and look at landscapes


Miguel Rodríguez Otero’s poems appear in The Lake, Book of Matches, The Red Fern Review, Wilderness House Literary Review and Scapegoat Review, and are forthcoming in Last Leaves Magazine and DarkWinter Literary Magazine. He likes to walk country roads and is friends with a heron that lives near his home.

Lazy Man’s Pie

Nonfiction by Marilyn Paolino

What was Lazy Man’s Pie?

Just the other day, I was skimming the Beechwell cookbook, whose thirty-eight yellowed pages easily fit in my palm, when I spotted this pie with a friendly name. Lazy Man’s Pie shared the page with the French cherry and old-fashioned lemon pies.

The recipe looked familiar—except for the name and the stick of oleo. Oleo margarine was popular in the 1950s when Cooking Favorites of the Beechwell Community was probably published. The cookbook came from Aunt Judy’s attic. Before moving, she sent me several boxes packed with family photos, records, and journals dating back to the early 1900s.  

Of course! Lazy Man’s Pie was our family’s famous fruit cobbler, I thought.  


Dessert first. (Then back to my family project.)

I had a habit of reading cookbooks from back to front, starting with basic bars, cakes, and cookies. Eager to experiment in the kitchen, I began baking when I was nine or ten years old. Dad and I baked together on Sunday afternoons. Nothing fancy. I chose a cake box mix from lemon, white, and orange flavors that Dad liked best.

But we made cobbler from scratch. The recipe was forgiving, unlike pies that required practice to produce crusts with a delectable duo of texture and taste.


My parents were forgiving, loving people. During lunch celebrating their 50th wedding anniversary, my brother and I asked them what the secret was to a happy marriage.

 “There is no secret. It’s hard work,” Mom said, without hesitation.

Her answer left us to reflect on our own relationships. My brother married his high-school sweetheart, and I wed my soul mate decades later. My parents were strong role models who during their sixty-two years together treated one another with respect. They made married life look easy.   

Yet, family relationships were often fraught. I heard the hurt in Mom’s voice, some thirty years ago, when she told me my aunt and uncle opposed their marriage. They did so under a loving guise because they served as my father’s guardian, raising him as a son after both his parents died.  

Dad’s childhood lacked sweetness because he was orphaned at eight years old. Maybe that’s why as an adult, he craved sweets like fudge, pudding, cakes, and ice cream.

During the holidays, we made a rich chocolate fudge. We relied on the Fannie Farmer recipe, which called for a can of sweetened condensed milk (large) and four and a half cups of sugar.

However, ice cream was an every day treat for Dad. He heaped a generous glob of vanilla ice cream in his oatmeal and a tablespoon in his morning coffee. Usually, he ate a healthy diet, but kept a tub of “cheap” ice cream in the freezer. He lived for 89 years.

Mom grew up during World War II, an era of waste not, want not. She abided by the rule, making sure she ate food before it spoiled. In our house the running after-supper joke was, “Can this leftover be saved?” Yes, and the dish returned to the fridge. Anyone who raised doubts took a spoon and ate the last bites. Either way, we saved the food.


Before the family cookbook arrived, Mom and I had made cobbler after receiving more peaches than we could eat. Mom recited the recipe with ease: one stick of butter, one cup each of flour and sugar, a tablespoon of baking powder, a pinch of salt, and one cup of milk. We preheated the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and melted the butter in the 9 x 13 glass baking dish.  

Eager to get baking, we lined up the blemished to bruised fruit on the counter. We washed the fruit and removed the pits. I sucked off the flesh from the pits and thought, waste not, want not. We didn’t bother to blanch and peel the soft peaches whose sticky ripeness covered the counter and dripped from our hands.

In a large bowl, I measured and mixed the ingredients, and poured the cake-like batter over the butter. I plopped the cinnamon-sprinkled peaches in the middle of the pan. Do not stir, that was the secret. I confess, I’m tempted to swirl the fruit around, but learned to trust what I’ve lovingly prepared. Cobbler always tasted better when I used fresh fruit from the farmer’s market. But I have used store-bought canned fruit to satisfy my craving.   


In my kitchen, I chose the modest cobbler over pie because it’s welcome at every meal and won’t let me down.

People who claim it’s “as easy as pie” probably haven’t made one. In my hands, crust turned tough and chewy or soggy as if the fruit itself sobbed into the dough. My lattice came out lopsided. And my fruit slicing, layering, and arranging skills lacked pie-filling appeal.   

As we cleaned the kitchen, I tried to recall the last time dad and I made cobbler. We used canned cherries swimming in thick syrup.   

I checked on the cobbler in the oven as the scent of cinnamon filled the house. About forty minutes later, we had a bubbling, burbling celebration of fresh fruit. I cut a fresh-from-the-oven-corner chunk for each of us and added vanilla ice cream. The Lazy Man’s Pie, with its golden brown, bumpy crust and juicy peach filling, was easy to make, true to its name. We saved the jammy middle for the next day.

Warm cobbler topped with a dollop of ice cream takes me back to my childhood baking days those Sunday afternoons, savoring unmeasured lazy time—simple, sweet, and easy. Dad couldn’t have any cobbler with us that day, but he passed down his recipe for a joyful life: work hard, share love, and forgive all.


Marilyn Paolino is a writer who collects family stories and cookbooks. She had a career in public relations before leaving to write full time. Early in her career, she was a newspaper reporter who accepted all the leftover assignments. She lives in the Philadelphia area.

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