An Online Literary Journal for Poetry and Flash

Tag: distance

Christmas

Fiction by Ernest Troost

She snatched the moon from the winter sky and buried it in the stubbled field. When she was done, the old lab sniffed the fresh dirt.

She walked back towards the house with the dog at her side, their breath little puffs in the dark. She could smell the wood smoke from her neighbor’s chimney. Fat snowflakes floated slowly down through the light from the corner streetlamp. The night was still, except for the soft jiggling of the dog dragging its leash.

What had he said? “I like it here on the coast. I’m going to stay.”

And then, nothing but the soft wash of white noise, sloshing between relay towers, through transmission lines, across the 3,000 miles between them.

She let the dog in and leaned the shovel against the house. She took one more look up at the December sky and thought, tomorrow night I’ll put out the stars.


Ernest Troost is an Emmy-winning film composer, and Kerrville New Folk winning songwriter. He is also a writer of essays and short stories when he is not composing music.

Separation Anxiety

Special Selection for the 2022/2023 Winter Holiday Issue

Poetry by John Grey

Winter brings me deep snow.
You get the same old kudzu.
If only my frozen air
could fly south
to your steamy fishing shack,
if parka and gloves
knew their way around a line and hook.

Deer tremble through the flakes,
flirt with the ephemeral.
An alligator pokes a head
through brown swamp surface.
Its message is clear.

We live in different worlds
and there’s no shaking the fact.
The weather has cut me off completely.
You feel a little night time chill
but can’t decide if it’s the breeze
or your fourth beer
that’s behind it all.

If only mangrove and coral snake
could float up from the south,
surprise me at my door,
instead of these insolent drifts.

We haven’t just lost touch.
Our winters are different seasons.


John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Sheepshead Review, Stand, Poetry Salzburg Review and Red Weather. Latest books “Covert” “Memory Outside The Head” and “Guest Of Myself” are available through Amazon. See upcoming work in Washington Square Review and Open Ceilings.

Distance

Poetry by Braden Hofeling

Nothing has distance,
I think as I stare skyward,
celestial blue connected to fluffy white,
stars, suns, planets, courses set.
Even the wind, my ruffled hair–the current connects.
Everything in my world touches
one another, branching into a singular something,
inescapable as the tides that turn
craggy shoreline into ocean floor.
I wonder if I flung myself into space, into
the furthest reaches of the black cosmos,
could anything touch me there?
Could people still wrap me into a word,
binding me to this claustrophobic sphere?


Braden Hofeling is an emerging poet located in Portland, Oregon. He has two self-published collections of poetry and is hoping to publish his third book through an independent small press.

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