Tag: Winter Holiday Issue 2025 (Page 2 of 2)

Orange at Christmas

Poetry by Cecil Morris

The dwarf mandarin in the back yard is
so loaded with fruit it is more orange
than green, more fruit than tree, more and more,
an abundance beyond all eating
of our reduced family, children gone
to their own lives. We eat 8 or more
a day. We fill bags for neighbors right
and left and across the street, and still
fruit remains, grows soft, falls to the ground,
and rots, wasted. This lone tree presents
a bounty too great and makes me think of
“My Cup Runneth Over” and Ed Ames,
his rich baritone, and Psalm 23,
the goodness and mercy and plenty
and not the evil or shadow of death,
and my parents who told me oranges
were a luxury when they were young,
a treat, a Christmas gift and, some years,
the only gift. My parents, children
of the Great Depression, filled our lives
with gifts. On Christmas mornings before
we could play with anything, we had
to arrange all our gifts on our beds,
a display of how far they had come,
a proof of how they spoiled my sister
and me. When I see my mandarin tree,
its wealth of miniature oranges,
I see that embarrassment of riches.


Cecil Morris is a retired high school English teacher, sometime photographer, and casual walker. His first collection of poems, At Work in the Garden of Possibilities, came out from Main Street Rag in 2025. He has poems in The 2River View, Common Ground Review, Rust + Moth, Talking River Review, and elsewhere. He and his wife, mother of their children, divide their year between the cool Oregon coast and the hot Central Valley of California.

What we give at Christmas

Poetry by Chantal Travers

Without fail, every Christmas Eve
her cracked winter fingers
would peel chestnuts for the stuffing
No matter how much soaking before the roasting
the hard rind of this festive victim would splinter into tiny sharp slivers
making their way inside thinning nailbeds
turning from pink to angry crimson
Without any attachment to this seasonal side
he would tell her it wasn’t worth it
But she refused his suggestion to forget about them
their hearthy scent, this fiery holiday flavour
Salted buttery slugs steeped in her body since childhood
and in mine


Chantal Travers, originally from London, has lived in Hong Kong, Singapore, Beijing, and currently Sydney. She is studying a Master of Arts in Writing and Literature at Deakin University, and she was recently published in Visible Ink. Chantal enjoys Qi Gong, Cacao and travelling but misses English Christmas.

Santa V Moon

Nonfiction by Deborah Shouse

“What if the moon is watching over us, to see if we’re good? Then the moon reports to Santa,” my seven-year-old grandson speculates. We are luxuriating in a early morning walk under a lush full moon. Robert has spent the night, and I’ll be driving him to his tenth day of second grade in an hour. Meanwhile, he is walking barefoot, tiptoeing around the sticks and acorns splayed against our suburban sidewalks, still wearing his orange and silver space ship pajamas.

“That’s an interesting idea,” I say.

“Well, Santa couldn’t really visit your house to find out. I mean, he eats too many cookies.”

Robert has a point. The whole all-knowing “naughty or nice” mythology is truly hard to rationalize. If the North Pole is the source of all longed-for presents, then they should be in high production mode by now. And Santa really needs to be there to guide and inspire his team. So how could he be observing all the children of the world while he’s running a Fortune 500 industry?

As Robert and I gaze at the moon, I imagine Santa popping down Robert’s chimney to take a look-see and double check the lad’s behavior. If Mr. Claus doesn’t watch his step, he might slip on a stray Lego or marker. Or, depending on his mastery of time zones, the Jolly One might arrive at dinner time. My daughter would mask her surprise and graciously invite the intruder in to join them for the meal, after checking his ID, of course.

As Robert and I walk, we count the number of dogs and relish the early morning birdsong. Then, in a parting of trees, the moon again beams over us, now surrounded by a coterie of peach tinted clouds, illuminated by the emerging sun.

“Maybe the clouds watch us,” Robert says. “Then they tell the sun, and the sun tells the moon, and the moon tells Santa.”

Even Orwell, with his famous views on Big Brother cataloging our every move, hadn’t thought to harness the kings and queens of the sky to do the spy work. I feel a swell of pride at my grandson’s problem solving abilities. He’s faced with information he cannot quite accept and yet he loves Santa and the holidays. He wants to believe but he is practical enough to require some foundation for this leap of faith.

“Maybe the clouds and the sun have the day shift and the moon works at night,” I say.

“Maybe,” Robert says.

Our walk is almost complete; we are nearing our house. Inside, we become efficient, achieving breakfast, packing Robert’s lunch, gathering his backpack, brushing hair and teeth.

Once in the car, we search the sky for the moon. But it’s already melted away, leaving only the frivolous clouds and the saucy sun as sentinels. Still, I hope they’re watching and appreciating Robert’s imagination and analytical thinking skills. I hope they give the moon, and Santa, a good report. On both of us.


Deborah Shouse is the author of Letters from the Ungrateful Dead. She has an MBA but uses it only in emergencies. She has written a myriad of essays and many books, including a novel, An Old Woman Walks Into a Bar. Read more at deborahshousewrites.com.

Two Little Jews on Christmas Morning 1971, with

Poetry by Lana Hechtman Ayers

breath of ginger, cardamom, peppermint,
a special holiday blend of ice cream we spoon up
for breakfast, watching Saturday morning cartoons
and movies where fire-mouthed Godzilla tramples Tokyo,
then foils three-headed winged Ghidorah, his fiercest
opponent, and being Jewish, I don’t know what Christmas
means, or the word grace, or which monsters are real.
For years, brother, you instruct me in the fantastical
ways of Star Trek and Battlestar Galactica,
Buck Rogers and Doctor Who, and it’s all such fun,
good guys winning in the end, but when you introduce me
to reruns of Outer Limits and The Twilight Zone we grow
up in a world where the space shuttle explodes before our eyes
and the twin towers go up in flames with no aliens to blame—
only human hubris and brutality. This week, I rode in a hot air
balloon and witnessed the curvature of earth, the edge of all we are,
and nearly tumbled out over the realization of how beautiful
life could be if only we would cease battling one other, brother.

[Author Note: This poem begins with a line from Patricia Fargnoli’s “Winter Sky Over Cheshire County, New Hampshire” and is dedicated to my brother Alan.]


Lana Hechtman Ayers shepherded over 150 poetry collections into print in her role as managing editor for three small presses. She lives in Oregon on the unceded lands of the Yaqo’n people, where on clear, quiet nights she can hear the Pacific ocean whispering to the moon.

Antipodes

Poetry by Laura Hannett

for Fiona

She has the fanciful idea
that the flowers that have vanished
for the winter have migrated,
not unlike the birds,
and are spending these cold days
in the antipodes.

They have packed their buds and leaves
and gone to balmy climes
to turn their faces to the sun
and reminisce about their times
in other gardens, far away—
to spread their leaves and petals
in a different summer’s day.


A native of Central New York, Laura Hannett relishes the distinct seasons in this beautiful part of the world. Other work has appeared in Pulsebeat Poetry Journal, Neologism Poetry Journal, Amethyst Review, Last Stanza Poetry Journal, Mania Magazine and Verse-Virtual.

Alma’s Baked ‘Possum: A Thanksgiving Tradition

Nonfiction by Mark Hall

Times were often lean, growing up in rural South Georgia, where a Thanksgiving turkey was a luxury many families could not afford. But a holiday feast could still be had with “Alma’s Baked ‘Possum.”

Fresh out of college, I left my Southern home for a job on the West Coast. In California, I missed the simple country food of my upbringing. At the time, I helped out occasionally in the kitchen of my friend Shoen, a personal chef recently returned from a stint cooking on Cher’s latest tour. While I zested Meyer lemons for flambéed peaches with cognac and Cointreau, I chronicled my hunger for the ordinary. Instead of the nourishing goodness of Hoppin’ John, collards, and cornbread, in California even the humble burger seemed to be tricked up into something needlessly complicated. Draped with sheep’s cheese and wilted radicchio bathed in balsamic vinegar, meatless patties were delivered to the table not with fries, but with a thimble full of chilled carrot, orange, and cardamom soup, with a delicate tower of sourdough crostini perched on top.

The Southern palate, I explained to Shoen as I stirred toasted cumin seeds, is fundamentally different from those of other regions. According to Mrs. S. R. Dull’s 1928 Southern Cooking, the Bible in my grandmother’s kitchen, Southerners don’t even have the same food groups as other folks. Instead of Grains, Fruits and Vegetables, Dairy, and Meat, Mrs. Dull taught us that there are not four but five food groups:

  1. Cereals, wheat, flour, cornmeal, rice, bread, and macaroni
  2. Milk, eggs, cheese, meat, fish, peas, beans, nuts, and game
  3. Fats, butter, butter substitutes, drippings, cottonseed oil, olive oil, and bacon
  4. Sugar, syrups, honey, jelly, and preserves
  5. Vegetables and fruits

If Shoen’s menus of iced black bean soup with chipotle cream and chargrilled Belgian endive with Fontina and yellow pear tomatoes were any indication, however, Californians eschew the humble staples of Southern cooking. Folks from San Diego to San Francisco apparently live their entire lives without the “drippings” necessary to nourish the body.

When a ‘possum set up housekeeping in my basement just before Thanksgiving, I saw this as a perfect opportunity to demonstrate my point about the simplicity and goodness of Southern food. A neighbor loaned me what he termed a “humane” trap to capture my visitor. Three nights and as many pounds of Purina Dog Chow later, I found a dazed but sated ‘possum squeezed into a too-small cage intended for an errant squirrel.

In the meantime, I consulted Mrs. Dull for advice about its preparation. No haute cuisine Mrs. Dull’s cooking. Of ‘possum she directs: “Put 1⁄2 lime in about 1 gallon of boiling water and scald quickly, and pull off hair while hot. Scrape well—remove feet, tail and entrails—like you would a pig.”

I photocopied the recipe, affixed it to the ‘possum-stuffed squirrel trap, then left them together on Shoen’s doorstep. Her apartment was one of those in which all the entrances open onto a common hallway. As a result, mouths watering, neighbors sniffed the air and leaned in each day as they passed her door, wondering what delicacy simmered within. Shoen would not be home for some time, and to me, this was ideal. Neighbors would have ample opportunity to walk by and see the live caged ’possum waiting at her door. Hearing its faint scratch-scratch, they would move in for closer inspection, only to find those bulbous pink eyes staring up at them, along with Mrs. Dull’s recipe for “Alma’s Baked ‘Possum.” I imagined Shoen’s own walk down the hallway, arms piled high with Bosc pears, watercress, and lamb shanks. Slowly the cage would come into focus, then the ‘possum itself.

I returned home to wait by the phone. Shoen, herself a vegetarian, would free the ‘possum in the park across the street, and later, when I’d let down my guard, she would get even. Shoen can give as good as she can take, and so I set myself to imagining her revenge. But no phone call came. Had Shoen stayed out all day? I worried that the ‘possum might suffer in the cage, dehydrate, or worse, die. Should I return to check? I waited. Late that evening, my doorbell rang. On my doorstep I found several covered dishes. Atop the largest was an artfully calligraphed menu:

Bacon, Arugula & Leek Salad
Petits Pois & Prosciutto Soup
Lemon Mint Tagliatelle with Truffle Butter
Alma’s Baked ’Possum

    As expected, Shoen gave as good as she took. The next morning, she phoned to ask how I had liked my supper. Only then did she reveal that “Alma’s Baked ‘Possum,” was, in fact, organic free-range turkey.


    Mark Hall lives in North Carolina. His creative nonfiction has appeared in The Timberline Review, Lunch Ticket, Passengers Journal, Sand Hills Literary Magazine, Hippocampus, The Fourth River, Tahoma Literary Review, and elsewhere.

    Winter

    Poetry by Jeffrey Sommer

    As trees go bare
    As days grow dark
    I look toward winter
    When the snow will start

    Soon the grass stops growing
    Roses bow their heads
    Stray cats are sleeping
    In the flower beds

    Then the snow clouds form
    The sun goes to sleep
    Farmers cover their crops
    And shelter their sheep

    When at last the snow comes
    I rummage through the shed
    Where I keep the shovel
    And my rusty old sled

    Before the sun breaks though
    Until the snow begins to melt
    I go sledding down the hill
    To remember how it felt


    Jeffrey Sommer enjoys writing poetry on social issues as well as relationships between people and the environment.

    December’s Eve

    Poetry by Kersten Christianson

    I dream of dark crow
    night, stars or snowflakes shimmer
    their wan-lit path down,

    down, down to wave-tossed
    sea. Three weeks yet ‘til Solstice
    when we turn a left

    on a pitted road,
    put ear to the ground, listen
    for returning light’s

    arrival. My skull
    rattles from so much darkness,
    echoes a tuneless

    song. Split the wood, add
    the tinder, build the bonfire
    to welcome the sun.


    Kersten Christianson derives inspiration from wild, wanderings, and road trips. Her newest poetry collection, The Ordering of Stars, will publish with Sheila-Na-Gig in 2025. Kersten lives in Sitka, Alaska. She eyeballs tides, shops Old Harbor Books, and hoards smooth ink pens.

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