“Asceticism for Dummies” by J. Allyn Rosser
When it nests in your core, catches Your inner eye, gooses your heart, Gleams like a redeeming thing, Don’t love it. When it feels like heaven in your hands, Bathes your mind… Read More
“Rest Stop, Alabama” by Wilmer Mills
Even here the rows of urinals Are “automatic-sensor-operated.” There’s a laser eye that watches me Unzip my pants so when I zip them up It does the flushing for me seven times.… Read More
“His Secret Foe: Gravity” by Ernest Hilbert
I have a friend who falls off of bar stools. He’ll do it every time. Just watch and boom He’s down. The tall chairs at old Astor Lounge, Downtown, become teetering pedestals;… Read More
“Aubade” by Bill Coyle
On a dead street in a high wall a wooden gate I don’t recall ever seeing open is today and I who happen to pass this way in passing glimpse a garden… Read More
“On Learning, Late in Life, that Your Mother Was a Jew” by Marilyn Taylor
Methuselah something. Somethingsomething Ezekiel. —Albert Goldbarth So that explains it, you say to yourself. And for one split second, you confront the mirror like a Gestapo operative— narrow-eyed, looking for the telltale… Read More
“Love and Work” by Rachel Wetzsteon
In an uncurtained room across the way a woman in a tight dress paints her lips a deeper red, and sizes up her hips for signs of ounces gained since yesterday. She… Read More
“Hiking Alone” by Tim Green
I shimmy out on sandstone and slate rock, past the soft ledges where the last shrubs grow. I’ve got my camera, unshuttered and silent, ready to take back with me whatever I’ve… Read More
“To My Friends” by Joseph Harrison
My good friends, when you’re under the illusion That the common end of things has ended me, Whether that end was sudden or wretchedly slow, Peaceful or violent, untimely or, finally, wished… Read More
“Watching Vultures at Road Kill” by A.E. Stallings
You know Death by his leisure—take The time we saw the vulture make His slow, hot-air-balloon descent To a possum smashed beside the pavement. We stopped the car to watch. To close.… Read More
“The Life and Times of Wile E. Coyote, Super Genius” by Greg Williamson
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From “Warhol’s Portraits” by George Green
Liz Marilyn killed herself because she thought that middle age began at thirty-five. In Liz’s case it did, but she kept going, though Dick went down in flames (Exorcist II). This print’s… Read More
“Larger” by Joanie Mackowski
I don’t know how it happened, but I fell— and I was immense, one dislocated arm wedged between two houses. I felt some ribs had broken, perhaps a broken neck, too; I… Read More
“Engine Work: Variations” by Morri Creech
June morning. Sunlight flashes through the pines. Blue jays razz and bicker, perch on a fence post back of my grandfather’s yard. His stripped engines clutter the lawn. And everywhere the taste… Read More
“A Violent Moment in American History”: Dave Mason on PBS
E-Verser Dave Mason was featured on PBS recently. Click on the photo below to view a clip of him reading from his novel-in-verse Ludlow. Also view a clip below in the video… Read More
“Everyone Has a House” by Kate Gale
What I like about your country she tells me is the toilets I wouldn’t mind bringing one home but it wouldn’t do much good she says she likes the bathtubs and the… Read More
“Cut” by Sylvia Plath
For Susan O’Neill Roe What a thrill— My thumb instead of an onion. The top quite gone Except for a sort of a hinge Of skin, A flap like a hat, Dead… Read More
“Why Am I Still Angry With William Blake?” by Sharon Mesmer
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“Internal Revenue” by J. Allyn Rosser
I have distracted rodents from their cheese, Lured seasoned sirens with my melodies, And brought some handsome statues to their knees. I could not beguile you. Having faced your shoulder, back and… Read More
“Leave It All Up to Me” by Major Jackson
All we want is to succumb to a single kiss that will contain us like a marathon with no finish line, and if so, that we land like newspapers before sunrise, halcyon… Read More
“Take Good Care of Yourself” by Mark Wunderlich
On the runway at the Roxy, the drag queen fans herself gently, but with purpose. She is an Asian princess, an elaborate wig jangling like bells on a Shinto temple, shoulders broad… Read More
“Third Person” by Deborah Warren
Sometimes I turn myself from flesh to fiction, becoming a character seen (in my head) from a story’s point of view, by an omniscient writer—from outside me, where I picture I and… Read More
“The Sightseers” by Paul Muldoon
My father and mother, my brother and sister and I, with uncle Pat, our dour best-loved uncle, had set out that Sunday afternoon in July in his broken-down Ford not to visit… Read More
From “Pythagorean Silence” by Susan Howe
1. age of earth and us all chattering a sentence or character suddenly steps out to seek for truth fails falls into a stream of ink Sequence trails off must go on… Read More
“Late Night Ode” by J. D. McClatchy
It’s over, love. Look at me pushing fifty now, Hair like grave-grass growing in both ears, The piles and boggy prostate, the crooked penis, The sour taste of each day’s first lie,… Read More
“Disabled” by Wilfred Owen
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“Like a Sentence” by John Ashbery
How little we know, and when we know it! It was prettily said that “No man hath an abundance of cows on the plain, nor shards in his cupboard.” Wait! I think… Read More
“Noddy Holder Passed The Chlamydia Admirably” by Sharon Mesmer
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“Poem” by Antonio Machado, translated by Kenneth Rexroth
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“Autumn Remonstration” by Amy Lemmon
Couple-hungry, full-grown but still in your teens, off limits and thus irresistible, you tweak my demon urge. Rusty at first, then all too lubricated, my sexed brain banters with itself, is finally… Read More
Visit Mad-Scientist Jason Nelson’s Inter-Dimensional, Multi-Planar Machine Poems
Born from the computerless land of farmers and spring thunderstorms, Jason Nelson somehow stumbled into creating awkward and wondrous digital poems and interactive stories of odd lives. Currently he researches Net Art… Read More