Categories
poetry mojo21

Plentitude

By Marie-Andee Auclair

They want her
full as they are
caryatid
or Botticelli chubby.

Have more, they say, it’s good,
it’s good for you, you
eat like a bird.

Maybe she wants
to be bird, to glide
loop and land
graceful,
to take off again.

They are generous with advice
these earth-goddesses, well-rounded
voluptuous, keen observers of what food
covers, or not, whose plate.

She won’t answer that she likes
elbows sharp
shoulders Etruscan
limbs angular
spine supple.

I count your ribs, they mock,
as if conspicuous bones
were rude
indiscretions, better buried
under a zaftig cover.

Group meals would be convivial
except for weighing glares
and the measuring
of distance
between the forking roads
to plenitude.

Categories
poetry mojo21

A Question For The Author

By Mackenzie Kae

“don’t let the world -”
the world already beat me, baby.
it sucked everything out of me
like a leech or a hospital waiting room.

how could i stand a chance?
have you seen the size of the world?
i’m a tiny speck sitting
cross-legged in my backyard.

an ant all dressed in black,
because it’s always the funeral of personal style.
it’s always the funeral of the dream
of becoming something greater.

the leeches keep leeching.
the waiting rooms keep waiting.
i spend all day switching between
job listings and a calculator.

how can i be good, john?
how can i be good if i’m beat, baby?

Categories
poetry mojo21

Grief

By Ian Parker

she said
anyways at least the rain let up
and my car
is back from the mechanics

the other voice said
something electric and faint
she said
no no just a new battery

let’s talk
about something else, did you
see what
the score was for the Cubs game

did they
beat the Cards I hope so
The other said
they won three to two in eleven innings

or I imagine
that’s what they said, as I read
the sports page
of the daily paper at the table

they talked
a while longer about the day ahead
the niceties
one has when discussing this kind of thing

dinner plans
the price of gas in their separate towns
she said to break the silence
I just don’t know what to do

Categories
poetry mojo21

Raptured

By GTimothy Gordon

September 2024

Night flyers shocked from trees,
wing-leathery flapping across first fall,
late summer, moon, caught between
earth and ripe blue light, midair vagrants
on the lam, hightailing it somewhere,
but where? bracing themselves in the joyful
all-at-once in-betweenness of everything
known, and not, neither here nor there,
whatever otherworld lay beyond tree
or exquisite blue moonlight, before dreaming
how to live in it.

Categories
poetry mojo21

Saratoga

By Erin Matheson Ritchie

Night yawns and swallows the Mustang whole as I step
into the backseat and close my eyes through
her unpracticed touch, my spine contouring a final lie as the back
windows shatter. My God, how anyone could be straight
under a coal-charred moon a final drive, her chin
tucked into mine – twin precision engines built to flare up
and fizzle out, but we flip in a wreck that demands eyes,
witnesses, wagging tongues eager to pick our bones from the open
wreckage, peel our tights from trembling legs, staunch the heart
howling for another lap as her passenger, a future for us alive and loud.