Showing posts with label Featured Poet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Featured Poet. Show all posts

Thursday, March 28, 2024

GAS Featured Poet: Jane Downing


 Australian poet Jane Downing’s work has appeared in journals at home and internationally, including MeanjinCordite, Canberra Times, Rabbit, Not Very Quiet, Social Alternatives, Otoliths, Live Encounterse.ratio, Last Stanza, and Best Australian Poems. Her collection, ‘When Figs Fly’ (Close-Up Books) was published in 2019. She can be found at janedowning.wordpress.com


Dashed Hopes


The blowflies are talking to me

from the window sill

sounding like a radio 

                        badly tuned –

words fuzzed beyond meaning

resorting to a morse code

of short headlong chops

against the glass pane

                       the long dashes

my answering cracks

against the brick wall of the day



A Song That Never Ends


When you are Bambi’s mother

you know your death

is necessary

for the plot

which does not stop

you planning your revenge

             turning your doe eyes

on the audience

for a subliminal second

brimming with remember me

to every little girl

who

growing up to be a mother

may not yet acquiesce

to the tropes of the narrative arc

 

 


Thursday, March 14, 2024

GAS Featured Poet: Jim Murdoch


 

Jim Murdoch lives down the road from where they filmed
Gregory’s Girl which, for some odd reason, pleases him no end. 
He’s been writing poetry for fifty years for which he blames Larkin. 
Who probably blamed Hardy. Jim has published two books 
of poetry, a short story collection and four novels.

 
 
The Ship of Theseus
 
 
There are many kinds of memories,
wallows, flickers, triggers and icons,
but the most vital of all are anchors,
tethers, ties that bind us to our past.
 
Some refer to them as proofs which,
is probably a more appropriate term
as proofs require outside verification
and Reason cannot be bought off.
 
The opposite of remembering should
be dismembering I would've thought
since remembering is reassembling.
Now if only it were as simple as that.
 
At what point do you stop being you?
I'm not the child I once was but insist
I'm the same person despite the fact
we don't have one atom in common.
 
What was definite is now indefinite.
I don't remember the bench we sat on
but as one bench is much like another
does it really matter which bench?
 
Memories, like every part of a human,
are short-lived and in a constant state
of flux but there is a limit and in time
even anchors get displaced by beliefs.
 
Beliefs supplant memories with ease.
Like stem cells they become whatever
they're needed to be and who can tell?
I believe we sat on a bench you and I.
 
I believe. I believe.
 

 

 

The Week of Indescribable Things
 
(for Carrie)
 
There are many things people describe as
indescribable that are eminently describable.
 
Vomit, diarrhoea, acrid piss: all are
easily describable. We just don’t want to.
 
What I want to describe,
what should be easy to describe,
 
is the pleasure water provided me at the time,
cold water running over my hands.
 
My hands are not sore but
hands know how to read the pain.
 
Afterthought
 
There were other indescribable things this week,
the way my wife cared for, endured with and simply
endured me. No words. No words. No words.
 
As she sat with me as I cried as I read
the first part of the poem to her in the dark.
No words. No words. No words.
 

 



Bishop, Bukowski and Me
 
 
The reason my poetry disappointed me
for so long
is it wasn’t great.
I thought poetry should be great.
Not necessarily great thoughts
     (not everything’s that profound)
but do great things with words.
 
Took me sixty years to realise
all poetry needs to be is poetry.
 
Occasionally,
like a Philly cheesesteak or a meat sub,
it’ll be great
     (more by fluke than design
          (some happy confluence of events))
and that’s great, really great
but, hey, even a not-so-great Mac and cheese
fills a hole, right?
 
People imagine Bishop was a better poet
than Bukowski and, technically, yeah, maybe.
What does “better” even mean?
 
I should stop beating myself up over this.

Thursday, March 7, 2024

Featured Poets/Artists: Jerome Berglund & Marjorie Pezzoli

 


Jerome Berglund has worked as everything from dishwasher to paralegal, night watchman to assembler of heart valves. Many haiku, haiga and haibun he’s written have been exhibited or are forthcoming online and in print, most recently in bottle rockets, Frogpond, and Modern Haiku. His first full-length collections of poetry Bathtub Poems and Funny Pages were just released by Setu and Meat For Tea press, and a mixed media chapbook showcasing his fine art photography is available now from Yavanika.


TWITTER: https://twitter.com/BerglundJerome 

BLOG: https://flowersunmedia.wixsite.com/jbphotography/blog-1/ 

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/JeromeBerglundPhotography/




Jerome Berglund

& Marjorie Pezzoli

 

Yet Again

 

cover

 

no one was watching

black and blue

crimson streaks

 

their badges

 

águas mil

suing

for peace

 

watch repair

 

time steals air

second hand sweeps

hourglass breaks


(Marjorie Pezzoli is a silk painter for 25+ years, visual artist, storyteller, and poet. Her writings deal with grief, hope, cosmic wonders, and stuff that catches her eye. Her poetry has been published in numerous anthologies since 2019. Many of her writings are inspired by her photographic observations taken while walking Beau, the dog with Betty Davis eyes. Marjorie looks for words that are worth a thousand images. www.Pezzoliart.com)

 

 


John Wayne’s Brain

 

You thought John Wayne was gone,

But a piece still remains.

On a shelf in some closet,

They’re keeping his brain.

 

It looks like a scrotum,

All wrinkled and pink.

Yet that’s where it started,

Those nightmares, just think!

 

He gave it quite freely,

You’d believe felt flattered.

Did he know they’d filet it,

‘Twould appear should be battered?

 

Past owner felt apart,

From all other noodles.

Which helped him immensely,

Turning them to strudel. 

 

In that mind those dozens,

Made for oils on canvas.

Value mere extrinsic,

To glut playful madness.

 

John Wayne was steadfast,

His friends never thought twice.

Wife trusted the smell,

Was because of dead mice.

 

Hope that tissue’s well-guarded,

Under strictest lock and key.

That no bumbling Igor,

Might find and set free.


 



 

Baboon’s Blood

 

 

spicy

noodle bowl

steaming

botched

home haircut

 

 

did me

like

artichoke

hope dip

was satisfactory

 

 

rich man

eyes tray

on carpet

by hotel room

once was hungrier

 

 

people

who have so much

so angry!

…bindle’s lightweight

easy to carry

 

 

playing

self at chess

no thrill

or mystery but

can always win


 




Thursday, February 15, 2024

GAS Featured Poet: Michael Lee Johnson


 Michael Lee Johnson lived ten years in Canada during the Vietnam era. Today he is a poet in the greater Chicagoland area, IL. He has 298 YouTube poetry videos. He is an internationally published poet in 45 countries, a song lyricist, has been nominated for 7 Pushcart Prize awards, and 6 Best of the Net nominations. He is editor-in-chief of 3 poetry anthologies, all available on Amazon, and has several poetry books and chapbooks. He has over 453 published poems. Michael is the administrator of 6 Facebook Poetry groups. Member Illinois State Poetry Society: http://www.illinoispoets.org/



California Summer 

 

Coastal warm breeze

off Santa Monica, California

the sun turns salt

shaker upside down 

and it rains white smog, a humid mist.

No thunder, no lightening,

nothing else to do

except for sashay 

forward into liquid

and swim

into eternal days

like this.

 



Four Leaf Clover 

 

I found your life smiling

inside a four-leaf clover.

Here you hibernate in sin.

You were dancing in the orange fields of the sun.

You lock into your history, your past, withdrawal,

taste honeycomb, then cow salt lick.

All your life, you have danced in your soft shoes.

Find free lottery tickets in the pockets of poor men and strangers.

Numbers rhyme like winners, but they are just losers.

Positive numbers tug like gray blankets, poor horses coming in 1st.

Private angry walls; desperate is the night.

You control intellect, josser men.

You take them in, push them out,

circle them with silliness.

Everything turns indigo blue in grief.

I hear your voice, fragmented words in thunder.

An actress buried in degrees of lousy weather and blindness.

I leave you alone, wander the prairie path by myself.

Pray for wildflowers, the simple types. No one cares.

Purple colors, false colors, hibiscus on guard,

lilacs are freedom seekers, now no howls in death.

You are the cookie crumble of my dreams.

Three marriages in the past.

I hear you knocking my walls down, heaven stars creating dreams.

Once beautiful in the rainbow sun, my face, even snow

now cast in banners, blank, fire, and flames.

I cycle a self-absorbed nest of words.

 



Casket of Love 

 

This moon, clinging to a cloudless sky,

offers the light by which we love.

In this park, grass knees high, tickling bare feet,

offers the place we pass pleasant smiles.

Sir Winston Churchill would have

saluted the stately manner this fog lifts,

marching in time across this pond

layering its ghostly body over us

cuddled by the water’s edge,

as if we are burdened by this sealed

casket called love.

Frogs in the marsh, crickets beneath the crocuses

trumpet the last farewell.

A flock of Canadian geese flies overhead

in military V formation.

Yet how lively your lips tremble

against my skin in a manner no

sane soldier dare deny.

 

 


Thursday, February 8, 2024

GAS Featured poet: Kushal Poddar


Kushal Poddar has eight books to his credit including Postmarked Quarantine. He is a journalist, father, and the editor of Words Surfacing. His works have been translated into twelve languages, published across the globe. Twitter-https://twitter.com/Kushalpoe



Black Monk


Night plays with the outer walls.

Black acts rebellious, defies gravity's reign.

The monks who fed us a dozen oranges

pray in far side dormitory. Hearing is holy.

Forgetting doesn't mean walking away

from a memory. I step into the sleep's garden,

write your names with pebbles - all small letters,

and realise that instead of a name it is a long sentence.




Winter Drones


The death of the bird, lone,

on the winter's clothesline, goes

unhailed even by itself, clandestine.


Sometimes I see it. It poses like

figure 'One', pluse on the upper segment

of the sky bisected by the wire.


Everything below is light and decorative.

Mistletoes drain the old trees.

My drone lips hit yours. The explosion

doesn't vex the curtains.