Drino and Speebo by Christian McDonough

“Okay, so there’s this guy,” Drino said.

“Yeah ok there’s a guy,” Speebo said.

And there was such a man. Such a sweet, sweet man.

“And, like, this guy he goes out of his house, his little apartment, and he goes for a walk, right?” Drino said.

“Ok like is it a shitty apartment?” Speebo said. 

It was truly a shitty apartment. Dilapidated, floundering…the floorboards broke or torn up, the fridge stinky….

“Uh, yeah, I guess so,” said Drino. “But this guy is out on a walk.”

That horror of a home…that tragedy of architecture…. The ghost haunts it still. 

“Why’s he walking?” said Speebo.

“No he did walk,” said Drino.

“What?” Said Speebo. 

Why indeed? No ending. No beginning. And the sky above a nightmare. A horror in black and white. 

“He went on a walk like the other day, like yesterday,” said Drino. 

“Whoa,” said Speebo.

“What?” Said Drino.

And he walked on, to a great and beautiful end. The sun shined bright before him, grand and delirious, and the women smiled at him, and he was finally free.


Christian McDonough is a writer based in Dallas, Texas. 

Twitter: @CMhcrDiosntoiua

BEEEES by Michael McSweeney

On moving day Audrey knelt before her rust-crunched shitbox and attached the BEEEES license plate. The one that made the RMV lady laugh, that Zack hated. She thought about the days ahead, the drift through central Massachusetts until their friend’s house opened up. Then she decided to not feel bad about Zack not liking the plate. Audrey felt good as she worked and her body pinked beneath the heat-dome sun.

For two years Audrey and Zack lived in a former flop house by the river. They wrote marketing copy from home and the money was enough to buy food and weed and video games. It was a rut but the rut felt good. Ruts feel good, easy, quiet. Audrey said nothing as her freelance contracts turned to salt. Zack said nothing after he called a client a bitch and then, each staggered morning afterward got high and sent unreadable pitches to local businesses. Spring arrived and one of the numberless eastern slumlords spectered west and snapped the land beneath them. Promised friendship then tripled the rent. 

Audrey finished as Zack sagged outside with trash bags full of laundry under his arms. His flip-flops slapped against the cracked sidewalk. 

Do you have the keys? he asked. 

Audrey reached into her shorts pocket and clicked the unlock button on the fob. The shitbox bleated in reply. Over the next hour, they jammed their life inside: hair-choked window fans, dusty consoles, bulging duffels, unwashed linens, old clothes too tight to wear. A mattress duct-taped to the roof, a torn tarp drawn across. The couch and the flatscreen remained upstairs in limp defiance of their loss. 

They camped out in a cheap motel in Westminster. A luxury while they searched for work. Zack cursed the slag-dragged Wi-Fi as night began. 

I’ll do deliveries, he said. He paced barefoot and slid some vended pretzels in his mouth.

The car won’t survive that for long, said Audrey. And I’m the better driver.

I’ll do it. It’ll help me get better. I love you.

I love you too. It’s only temporary. You just need to watch the gas and oil. 

Once we get the room in Greenfield we’re good.

It’s only temporary.

I love you.

Zack fetched fast-food sacks from Gardner and wandered Route 2’s tragic oxidation in search of cash. Stole from orders, cursed their names, anxious, tipless. One job bequeathed a $20 tip. The guy said everyone deserves some hope. Even losers. Not that you’re a loser, stressed the guy. 

Back at the hotel, a family of five dragged luggage bags into Zack and Audrey’s room. A mix-up. The family shared their supper, sopping chicken, sauteed styrofoam. Audrey unveiled a faded stem of wine. The locked door clicked at dawn. A couple, dressed too warm for summer, flashed their door cards and built a bed beneath the bathroom sink. 

Audrey scoured the internet. Found a gig in Templeton. Some dude named Richard needed help with renovations, explained the ad. When Zack dropped her off Richard was shredding couch cushions on the lawn. Said he was deconstructing his life. 

Richard paid Audrey $45 to collect every light bulb in the house and grind them with a cinder block. $75 to send wooden doors through the chipper. $200 to pile every book, every letter, every piece of paper they could find, and light a fire. 

This feels good, said Richard. Firelight oiled his face.

I could never do this. I never get rid of anything.

Nothing?

I get too attached. To everything.

Like it’s an inseparable part of you.

Yeah. 

I feel like I’m breaking up with the worst parts of myself. The parts I couldn’t let go after he left. 

He?

Yeah.

I’m sorry.

Me, too.

Audrey hosed some scattered flames as Richard filled an envelope with cash. That’s everything, he said. Audrey felt the urge to hug him but took the money, shook his hand, and wandered down the drive. She heard the shitbox wheeze from down the street. Turned back, while Zack approached, as Richard knelt and kissed the charred remains.

They spent a week in the motel. Then a month in big-box retail shadows, the stunted eaves of once-great labor towns. Mildew stalked their clothes, their shoes, the mattress on the roof. Then the room in Greenfield opened up. Their friend carved a basement corner for what possessions did survive. Warm sheets, home meals, drowsy romance bathed the rest they found. Audrey played guitar again. 

In the fall, a letter, read aloud as Zack and Audrey’s slow-cooked dinners slept. A sale. New rules. A month or two, and then the time to go.


Michael McSweeney is a writer from Massachusetts. 

ABSOLUTION by Shannon Frost Greenstein

Grant me absolution for all the hearts I have broken.

For breaking up via text, for kissing that other guy, for hiding my affection, for being too afraid, for caring what other people think, for the refusals, for the blue balls, for the gossip, for playing with your feelings, for all the times I made you feel small and for all the times I didn’t say ‘I love you, too’ when I really should have.

Grant me absolution for leaving the headlights on again.

Grant me absolution for all the drugs I have done.

Drugs to numb and drugs to mask and drugs to soothe and drugs to feel, drugs as self-medication, drugs as coping mechanism, drugs to sit with discomfort, drugs to sit with loneliness, drugs because of boredom and drugs because of pain, drugs because I never did learn to love myself and drugs because it’s impossible to hate yourself all the time and still stay sober.

Grant me absolution for breaking into the pool to go skinny-dipping with the wrong kind of boy.

Grant me absolution for all the lives I have harmed.

For hitting that chipmunk, for stealing that lip gloss, for betraying that friend, for not calling back, for not reaching out in time, for emptying that gas tank, for spilling red wine on that white dress I borrowed, for saying hurtful things, for omitting the truth, for not pulling my weight in that group project, for smoking in that stranger’s bathroom, for forgetting to feed the parakeets.

Grant me absolution for reading too much Nietzsche.

Grant me absolution for killing God.

An apostate, a recovering Christian, a former Lutheran, a harlot, a whore, an autonomous woman who just likes to fuck, an Existentialist that can’t abide the opiate of the masses, an empath that can’t ignore the God Paradox, a Secular Humanist with a conscience and an atheist that can’t reconcile fundamental childhood Sunday-School truths with all of the suffering in this world.

Grant me absolution for that night at the Borgata.

Grant me absolution for inevitably fucking up my children.

Children at whom I yell, children for whom I set a bad example, children who are my reason for breathing, children who just want to be loved, children whom I do not always enjoy, children who are allowed to make mistakes, children who idolize me when I do not deserve it, children for whom I just want to do my absolute best and children for whom I fall short.

And grant me absolution for being human, because I’m still kind of figuring things out over here.


Shannon Frost Greenstein (she/her) resides in Philadelphia with her children and soulmate. She is the author of “These Are a Few of My Least Favorite Things,” a full-length book of poetry available from Really Serious Literature, and “Pray for Us Sinners,” a short story collection with Alien Buddha Press. Shannon is a former Ph.D. candidate in Continental Philosophy and a multi-time Pushcart Prize nominee. Her work has appeared in McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, Pithead Chapel, Litro Mag, Bending Genres, Parentheses Journal, and elsewhere. Follow Shannon at shannonfrostgreenstein.com or on Twitter at @ShannonFrostGre.

Graceland Chapel by Jacob Madkour

Palm tree bark against the back, sittin’ lawn chairless in the front yard, house all stucco. Copper chalice of cool drink sweating, and me too, jean shorts and shirtless.
Salarymen drive past, back home, afraid their scold wives are well seduced.
Mines got mouth like a sailor and ashkenazi knockers, so I’m generous, let em keep theirs.
Retired to the tropics, still, we took with us the whiskey from home, warm our gullets, Swim in sunny heat, in stars if the air’s still blazing, dry off, head
to bonfires of friends, All aging, balding, all followers of gurus to retreats, and swingers, but we don’t buy any of it, me and her, we’re stupid, sentimental, believe in love and only a couple other things.

Won all the dough in Vegas, means questionable, married in Graceland Chapel 
And ran off, moved our mothers out here, where the coconuts grow and the sea mists land,
To finest of trailer homes not far from the house, on Saturday’s we have a beer with mine,
On Sundays we go to church with hers, to make up for their men having died, our fathers.
In the light of everymorning we wake late, my darling sifts the side garden, 
I grill meats, fighting the urge to stare right at the sun, I think of bullfights, detectives.
She thinks of flowers.

A few mornings from now they’ll pull into our driveway in unmarked cars and sunglasses
For what we’ve done, the money we took, the identities we stole, we’ll look pretty
On the cover of the Hawaii Tribune, having blown each other’s brains out on the porch
Before the agents could reach the house to take us in, though no hardships will be had,
Because finally there was plenty, and from times plentiful, we go out smiling.
Drinks with little umbrellas in our hands.


Jacob Madkour is a writer living in Boston. He has yet to have any other work published.

3 Quickies from Henrik Düfke

“JERRY SEINFELD”

I’m locked into a coffin with Jerry Seinfeld. We move our body parts around to the best of our abilities, trying to figure out a way to coexist within the confined space, but I just keep getting his nose in my eyes and his arm on my ribs and his knee up my crotch. After a few minutes of jigsaw puzzling our limbs, we end up in a somewhat comfortable position inside the wooden box. Finally still, finally silent.

I stare into Seinfeld’s eyes and he stares back, between us nothing but the sound of heavy breathing, and I realize that we’re not only locked into a coffin together but also locked into each other’s inescapable gaze.

Suddenly: a fart coming from Seinfeld’s pants. It’s a muffled sound, although powerful enough to make the entire coffin vibrate slightly.

“Thought we might need a little oxygen,” he smiles, expecting a laugh I reckon. But I don’t laugh. I want to laugh, mainly out of courtesy, but I can’t get myself to laugh since I’m too busy not throwing up all over his face and all over mine.

While I’d rather just stand up and leave, I have no choice but to keep staring into Seinfeld’s eyes. It’s awkward, I can say that much. It’s painfully awkward. And it’s only getting more awkward as the smell of rotten meat from Seinfeld’s intestines start filling the coffin like the corpse that should have been here instead of us.

Why did he have to fart? I think to myself. Was it really necessary? Being stuck in this claustrophobic space is already a weird situation to begin with, why did he have to make it even worse by passing wind? But for some reason I feel a responsibility to lighten up the mood, somehow save us from the awkwardness he’s put us both in, so I start thinking of potential icebreakers.

“I know for a fact,” I say, “that Dad would very much like to have dinner with you.”

“Who’s Dad?” Seinfeld asks, seemingly relieved to finally hear me utter a combination of words.

“Dad is my wiener dog.”

“Well,” Seinfeld scoffs. “Dad can’t have me for dinner if I’m having myself for dinner first.”

Then he takes a big bite of his own shoulder, chewing it eagerly and greedily without blinking once. When he’s done with that, he starts digging in on his arm, then his chest, then his torso. He keeps devouring the different parts of his body until he’s eventually swallowed his own head and vanished altogether.

Now I’m left in the coffin all by myself, with nothing but the funky smell from Seinfeld’s lingering fart as my company.

“INTERSTATE 10”

I’m heading West on Interstate 10, speeding through rural Alabama while billboard signs keep flashing by along the highway. The deeper into the Bible Belt I go, the more consistent the advertising gets, and by the time I’m crossing state lines from Mississippi to Louisiana the messaging has narrowed down to promote three things exclusively: sex, religion and legal services.

Local strip joints offering lonesome truck drivers a quick escape from the tediousness of the road, cult-like churches promising salvation to the anonymous masses of unsaved souls, middle-aged attorneys attracting petty criminals with the irresistible pull from Colgate smiles and dubious law degrees.

As the solitude inside the car encourages my mind to wander, I begin imagining these three types of establishment being in collusion with one another. I mean, it would make perfect sense, wouldn’t it? Visit the sex club and make your twisted fantasies reality, then see a priest to clear your conscience, then get yourself a lawyer when your wife finds out.

Suddenly this Ram appears in the passing lane, driving at the exact same speed right next to me without actually passing. I turn my head, and as if on cue, the boy in the back seat presses his butt against the window, the pale cheeks spreading out over the glass like melting ice cream with a dark cherry on top.

The driver, I assume the boy’s father, is laughing and mouthing “fuck you, man!” and giving me the middle finger. Then he steps on the gas, making the truck blast off into the pink Texas sunset while I’m left all alone, thinking, how very strange that I’ll never see those two again.

“BERGHAIN”

I’m at Berlin’s infamous Berghain, the former power plant converted into a nightclub. Even though there’s no music, not even the faintest murmur of voices, people are partying and dancing and not giving a fuck in such an air of liberation it’s as if the wall fell yesterday and not three decades ago.
Since the soundlessness of the nightclub pretty quickly creeps me out, I turn to this man right behind me, pulling his elbow and wheezing into his ear, “Dude, where’s the exit?”

The man turns around, observing my body from top to toe as if casting for a porno. Patiently I wait for him to stop scanning me, to say something, to at least point me in the right direction. And every now and then he draws a breath as if he’s about to speak, but then he doesn’t.

This goes on forever. He sighs. He gasps. He utters the occasional word of nonsense like a quiet “oh” or a thoughtless “huh” or a surprised “ah” but nothing coherent that allows me to respond.

He doesn’t seem to grasp how tormenting the absence of language can be, doesn’t seem to care how fucking loud his silence is, how it’s echoing inside my head, how I want to put my hands over my ears and scream each time there’s an eternity between two words that come out of his mouth.
“Hey,” I try again, “where do I get out?”

The second he says something in a Slavic language it dawns on me: this is not a defunct power plant turned nightclub. This is an actual nuclear power plant, active and very much functional. These people are not here to enjoy a forty-eight hour drug binge, they’re here to make a living. How could I not have seen this until now? They’re all male, all Eastern European, all dressed in the same coats and pants and hats.

I freak out a little bit for obvious reasons. I know a little bit of history after all and I also know where this is going. The problem is, no one else does.

Now I start running around the power plant, grabbing random men by their shoulders like an escaped asylum inmate, screaming at their faces, trying to warn them, doing my best to communicate that we must get out, but they don’t understand a single syllable of my English. They just scoff or shrug or stare at the frantic lunatic in front of them.

All of a sudden there’s all this light and all this heat, then a sensation of being contaminated as I’m standing inside Chernobyl while the historical disaster is taking place around me.


Henrik Düfke spent a decade writing ads in London and New York before switching to fiction. He is currently finishing his debut novel.

TUFTS UNIVERSITY HOCKEY FRAT HOUSE, JULY 2014 by Catherine Spino

It is only after you hand me a beer spiked with eyeless dreams that I contort crunch arch my back unnaturally a howling spitfire kindling in my sternum my retinas glowing black as a grudge all the better to see you with my dear horny for the taste of pennies and plasma on my tongue I pull your d*ck out stretch your useless sword into banana Laffy Taffy and string it around your neck your eyes bulge tongue wagging like a Looney Toon while my hopes and dreams of aging properly sprout from my back feathers red as lust I’ll never feel until years from now when I am able to meet my reflection in the mirror and not feel shame thick like molasses pour out of my eyes but now is not that day now you scream because it was you who wanted to impale me not the other way around but I shove my blood manicured fist down your throat to shut you up Pabst Blue Ribbon bile gathering in your gullet because they’re playing my favorite song downstairs you know Sweet Caroline ba ba ba you’ll hold the taste of my talons in your jaw bone until the day you die you will never speak on it who would believe you you’re just a frat boy in a ratty Hawaiian shirt who was looking for good times never felt so good so good so good so good 


CATHERINE SPINO is a writer and a couple sandwiches short of a picnic. Her work has been featured in Hobart, HAD, Expat Press, and more. She is from the East Coast. 

Her Ladyship by Kik Lodge

Her Ladyship expects me to rise when the timer pings, remove the tinfoil from her lasagne and bring it to her on a tray with all the paraphernalia. This consists of a freshly plucked rose inside its crystal vase, a posh fork and spoon she’d bring out for guests when Kenneth wasn’t dead, the silver salt and pepper pots and the knife that cuts.

Her Ladyship expects conversations about Mr Marsdon who’s departed recently, or her lovely son Benny who’s not lovely at all because he pinched my nipple when I was opening a tin of tuna, or Henrietta who’s on her way out, disintegrating underneath her floral blanket. Henrietta’s son says that Henrietta thinks she’s in Tenerife and that a man’s coming any minute to turn on her air con, bless her!.

Thank God I have all my mental faculties, Her Ladyship’ll say and I’ll reply don’t be so sure of that! and Her Ladyship will chuckle the same supermarket chuckle she comes out with when we’re at Waitrose and the acne man at the cash-desk says steady on love, no running in the aisle!

When her Ladyship asks me if I’m still studying that ridiculous gender thing at the polytechnic or is your Mother still, you know?, I switch the conversation to the highest recorded autumn temperatures in human history or something horrific like a fatal stabbing by a young person around my age.

Were Her Ladyship to say something deflating like soon there will be no-one left to die, she has given me strict orders. Whilst she hitches her skirt up, off goes the television, off go the main light and side ones and on comes Beethoven, always put Beethoven on as it is loud enough to drown out the sound of the buzzing on her crotch.

During such moments, I usually read the newspaper in the kitchen or look out the window at Her Ladyship’s lawn – a veritable gnome central.

There are little Alpine tunnels, bridges over ponds with gnome boats.

Her husband Kenneth clearly had exceptional engineering skills to create a mechanised lift that goes all the way up through a tree trunk to a branch with a swing on

It’s all rusty now and the batteries are dud. 

Outside, I scoop out the pond weed with a stick, pick up the gnome lady whose head has sunk into the mud all the way down to her neck. I wipe her face and hair with a leaf and pick a pink geranium to decorate her plastic hair. 

When I arrive into the sitting room, Her Ladyship is sitting up in her armchair in the dark, a tiny pink geranium poking out from behind her ear, and I’m thinking good Lord, maybe her Ladyship and the gnome are connected somehow So I leave her in the dark and go back to the garden, kick the gnome lady over, and sure enough, back in the sitting room, her Ladyship is lying on the carpet in agony, saying call Benny, call Benny.

Like with any power, you don’t always know what to do with it at first. It’s almost too huge to contemplate.

No, I won’t call Benny, I say.


Kik Lodge is a short fiction writer from Devon, England, but she lives in France with a menagerie of kids, cats and rats. When she is not writing, she is not cooking or running either. Her work has featured in The Moth, Gone Lawn, Tiny Molecules, trampset, Maudlin House, Milk Candy Review, Splonk, Bending Genres, Ink, Sweat and Tears and other very fine journals. Her flash collection Scream If You Want To is forthcoming with Alien Buddha Press. Erratic tweets @KikLodge

STAR by Don Television

Things is been slipping since he saw that star night of his incarceration. So says Terry with the black rung eyes. We’re inclined to believe him, sipping bag wine not far from where we combined our funds to purchase it. That star, he says, not all unlike the usual, being blue and all and up there, but crazy extended. Star’s points was visible. That’s what he’s looking at, cheek to the roof of the squad car, the star’s points, perfectly decagonal and fixed, like a sticker. He helped himself to wine, working the bladder, beads of it up on his lips. A perfect star, but all stretched out. I wadn’t even on nothing. Birds come and go from the package store sign, rent and cracked from a recent storm, hollow inside, except for the birds. Look like crows. It’s easier to think of a cartoon star than what it actually was. He drew one in the dirt with the toe of his boot. Wadn’t as big as this. Crosstalk: Terry’s credibility. We don’t spare him this; he’s been to jail. And was the cops’ lights on during the arrest? Consensus: experience said yes. Sirens’d be strange, but lights—crucial to an arrest’s atmosphere. Strobing red and blue’s about important as the cuffs is, terms of encouraging near-term penitence, obedience. A possible factor, optical, to be considered. Someone said chromatic aberration. Nobody knew what that was. I say to the cops, I say look, look, but they’re laughing at me. Birds at a rate roughly concordant with cars entering and exiting the parking lot, a relationship there. I said look, and they won’t look. As if they might see it and forget what I done. Like, y’know, a solar eclipse. Can’t arrest nobody in a solar eclipse. Wouldn’t be right. There’s bigger things. S’unconscionable. I was in a bank, once, in a eclipse. Bank of America. And they’s dispensing branded paper glasses to view it with. I thought, Terry, rob this place. Rob it blind while everybody’s out there looking at the sun. Couldn’t do it. Bad faith. I took them glasses, stood shoulder to shoulder with all them. Bank manager, teller, security guard. Lady in line with her kid in a stroller. Glasses on the little baby. Then they denied me a loan. Loan for my business. Spurious. I was thinking right, at that time, that each of us’d remember the moment, the people there. That teller, she got the same story ‘cept it’s changed around. Security guard, manager, guy with a failing paint business, all lined up as equals, transfigured in the face of natural wonderment, the sun getting swallered up, shadows of leaves of them median saplings scattered with light, fingernails of light, like clippings. Maybe the baby don’t remember. Artifacts. Digital artifacting. This my life. I’m getting apprehended. I see a perfect star. Not a glimmer to it. Just put there. Cops’d deny me that. Cops say my sulking ‘round the Walmart parking lot amounts to criminal activity. I’m sad! My business failed. I los’ my wife. Damn took the dog. Sure, I got a record. Don’t we all? And there are sober nods of
recognition, spurt of wine from the bag. To me it’s a sign, sign ‘at says Lord God’s looking out fer you, and I’m craning my neck to see it out the back window as they’re taking me away. Terry’s Adam’s apple’s scruff-specked, bobbing as he demonstrates. Y’all. That crow have a hat on?


Don Television is an American writer. Read more: donatello.vision

A Panda’s Guide to Time Travel by David Hay

On a field just outside of Manchester, I saw a panda trying frantically to gnaw off its own tail. The closer I got the harder it became to tell if it was an actual Panda, escaped from some zoo or a person dressed in a convincing panda suite.

‘When a snake devours its own tail, it symbolises finality and the locked in cycle of all living things: primarily life and death and death and life – but when a panda tries his hand at that serpentine pastime, it is simply a metaphor for stupidity. How is that fair?’

‘What else could it mean?’ I asked as politely as I could, not wanting to disturb reality any more than I had to.

It smiled, ‘that’s what I came to find out and you are going to help me.’

I gulped.

‘A gulp is a coward’s signature.’

‘Why me?’ I said as confidently as I could.

‘Everyone else averted their eyes and walked quickly passed. An old woman even tried to run, which is rarely advisable but I feared if I tried to calm her fears she would die right here in this field. And that is
too tragic even for me.’ He cleared his throat and some glittery substance was released into the air. I took a step back. ‘ I chose you because madness crowns that human skull of yours, doesn’t it?’

‘I suppose.’ I said blankly. I was aware that I was already loosing any sense of normalcy.

His voice, calm, church sermon like went deeper and appeared to be inside my head jostling for position with my own voice until it centered itself.

He wonders if this is a new element of his long suffered psychosis.

‘My simple answer is and I’ll get on my hind legs, human style and address you as a fellow victim of
time’s unflinching advances. Are you happy? Don’t look away, I’m not recruiting you to a cult, though it’s not a bad idea is it? No I already know you wouldn’t like that. And I do know you, well as well as
someone else can know you and those voices that are chirping on even now, especially the cruel one
with the burnt toast voice – fuck off and slink back to he subconscious where you belong.’

‘Is he gone?’

I nodded not understanding why he even had to ask.

‘Good. Are you happy? It might seem like a stupid, arbitrary question. It might be pointless really but
most yearnings are I suppose, at least objectively.’ The sky turned purple.

‘Ignore that and answer.’

I shook my head and avoided its blue eyes that I was going to say looked almost human but looking
closer as I did much later I realised there was nothing human or animal like about them at all.

‘Exactly, so if I got back on my four legs as god – well that’s a crass simplification, made me and you got on my back and say we went on a trip.’ He growled. ‘Ahhh, ash glazed words. An odyssey would be
better. Anyway, would you open your mind, let the old world fall out your nose and ears and mouth or
any available orifices really, to truly experience what I have to show you and you me I should think? And if you have lost your mind as you are thinking now, I promise you will know softness and at the very least it will be interesting. Come, stop hesitating, food banks and debt are far worse for the mind than anything I have to show you.’

I assented though I felt I had little control and that my grip was loosening by the second.

He lowered himself. I got on and held his fur delicately.

‘Don’t worry about hurting me, pain is just a transitory state.’

He growled until a high pitched laugh formed. ‘You can tell me to shut the fuck up anytime you like. I’m searching for truth as much as you are.’


David Hay’s debut publication is the narrative poem Doctor Lazarus. His first poetry collection is forthcoming from Rare Swan Press. He has a collaborative work Amor Novus/A Spontaneous Prayer with Soyos Books, a pamphlet due in November from Back Room Poetry and has a novel How High the Moon coming out from Anxiety Press later this year. 

Brief overview of what’s worrying me November 7, 2023 by Robyn Schelenz

A photo of a standing bear
on one of those days it’s so nice to stand outside in the grass
But the bear is in pain
Can elephants jump accompanied by pictures of elephants not jumping
Derrick as in oil not someone you know
What happens to helium in the air – it keeps rising fyi
What exactly is a horned frog
Wordle
Worldle
Statele
Tromssa in the midnight sun
Cats named after bulls
Internet history in too small a font to read
Geese navigating by land crevices and features
Samson’s riddle because of a poem by jason heroux
Boethius for the same author, so old, this man, but never heard of him – not jason
Newcastle pub pies
What are neeps
How northern england became  how it became, which i only know from tv, the last part, if i know anything
Shepherds at north ulster obscured by an ad
Europa the consort of zeus, getting jiggy with a bull
A photo of a blackbuck from a zoo i drove by in texas
The strange creatures i saw took me aback
Made me stop
Longyearbyen, a town in norway that sounds like what it is
American primitive guitar styles
Bighorn sheep in wyoming in a parking lot
From a movie i am fond of, deeply, tired moonlight
A culvert because sometimes it sounds like custard
Custard could go inside a culvert but culvert doesn’t go inside custard
Unless you like eating rocks
The horse has six legs, a poetry anthology i forgot
The eating of bulls after they’re slaughtered, the ones that fight in the ring
Understanding spanish colors when bulls fight, colors that mean nothing to the most important “competitor”
Really are they fighting there’s a lot of running around
In the youtube videos i see, bulls looking for a fight
like me searching for dinner when i already made it
When it was already made for me
Where’s my dinner, the bull running around the ring is like that
You know cruelty is such a cunning thing
Once extinct auorchs who might not have had these problems
Bold and beautiful as that black bull may be
Chillingham cattle, again
I really like bulls
I think these are white i fell asleep about that one
Raton a bull that was honored and i believe died a natural death
For killing people who asked him for the possibility
He charged into that he gave them that
Wonder how their mothers feel about that
Holy cow, hinduism, take me away from how quickly i am lost in every other word combination than those
Imagine that kind of love
It must be possible
Not to eat 
Living creatures
Pi review, more jason heroux
Gilycuddy, a name that came to mind to fill a rhyme
Menhaden which sounds like a secret society of germans but is actually a very small little fish
That perhaps once floated with george, the lobster
Who is famous for being old and large, large as my dog
Did you know they live for 100 years if we let them live?
A trestle which i still can’t explain but i think is wood
Giraffes which are not wood but resembling woods
In the dark if you saw a hundred giraffes would you think you were in the forest
And then one ran after another and another 
Why don’t poems like these get accepted when i submit
Why do frogs look like they’re staring into your soul
Is it just the not blinking?
Ispropoyl alcohol, does it damage something other than germs
I’m only fighting violent killers
A question about feeding picky dogs
A poem by lucas restivo
A butterfly called the swallowtail my neighbor saw from upstairs 
I mean he is from upstairs, he saw it downstairs
We only meet downstairs
Like butterflies we go up and down the stairs Female giraffes, something
Trestles again, should giraffes know trestles
Do giraffes trestle? Are they trestling right now
Should i make an introduction
Depressor for the tongue, and cabo release
Of sea turtles, when the postman comes
In the UK because i saw one deliver mail at dawn and that must mean
You failed the day before?
Oh what a thing to think about
And What about the thatched roofs and the restaurants that define portland per sponsored content
Like me at this moment telling you i’m a great poet
A bit manipulative a video of something in a bowl
How big are hummingbirds,
Prado, which probably means bulls to me, nesting seasons of crows
The property management cut down their tree
The pair sat on the roof with twigs before they flew away
All that work for nothing, evicted
First thought last thought worst thought, that’s just me now, interjecting
I can’t even figure this, oh now here, some gifts for my brother
In may
Here i was high, irish menus, irish sausage rolls
Russian america … that was an accident
My credit card interest is piling up but seeing it pile is reassuring
Like the crows feel, i’m sure
Bok choy and scholarships, bangers and mash
Salt fat and acid because i reproduced salami and avocado
Toast with brie i would never, but the internet has not discovered my friend’s trick
I won’t can’t tell you, student loans and neptune township
Funny to live in a land on earth named after a planet
If anything will bring comets close to earth
It’s the annoyance of being named
For this stupid place with 12 cozy places to eat, impenetrable pastas
Old poems about women, synonyms for field where they can land
A car muffler backfires, perfect they can use that
William butler yeats
With his wild swans, which still i think
Belong to the queen
And so what does that mean

About american swans?

I need to google
And find out what american swans
Do all day
Their political beliefs
And if they fight
For independence


Robyn Schelenz is originally from Birdsboro, Pennsylvania. Her poems are at Maudlin House, The Nervous Breakdown, Words and Sports Quarterly and DUSIE. Say hi at https://www.instagram.com/robynotheswede/.