My Chapbook, Scarecrow Sees, Is Available for Pre-Publication Order

I am thrilled to report that my chapbook, Scarecrow Sees, will be published in early 2025 by River Glass Books, the literary imprint of EcoStudio Foundation, a 503(c)(3) non-profit organization uniting conservation, education, and the arts for a more just world. The book will be published in a limited edition of about 100 copies, and is available for order at: https://riverglassbooks.com/product/scarecrow-sees/

Proceeds will be used to support the Mandari Panga community in the Ecuadorian Amazon basin. You may read more about this endeavor here: https://ecostudiofoundation.org/artists-for-climate-justice/

The fabulous Stephanie L. Harper will be providing the cover art!

Poem Up at Hotazel Review

GoatEye

My poem “Cyclops Dreams” is live at issue three of the South African journal, Hotazel Review. Thank you to editor Linda Mostert and her team for taking this piece. 

Poem Up at Panoply

Lyra and Baraka

My poem Upon discovering that my cat moves through multiple worlds leaving a trail of tumbled objects in significant patterns” is live at Panoply. Of particular note in this issue is an in-titled poem by Stephanie L. Harper (in-titled poems are composed exclusively of the letters appearing in the title) which happens also to be a Petrarchan sonnet. The level of masochism required to produce such a poem is, well, high, to say the least. But then she married me, so… Many thanks to editors Andrea, Clara, and Jeff for taking this poem, and to Sun Hesper Jansen for providing the title during a fundraiser several years ago.

Poem Up at Book of Matches

Throop Painting

My poem Letter to Throop from the Imperfect Stuckist Sky” is live at Book of Matches. Many thanks to editors Nicholas Christian and Kelly Allen for taking this poem, and to artist Ron Throop, whose work inspires and amazes me, and whose friendship and generosity I cherish. This painting hangs on the wall of our dining room, directly across from another Throop original. I only wish we had more walls!

Poem Up at Verse Daily

MaskFaces

My poem “Until” is live at Verse Daily. Many thanks to J.P. Dancing Bear for selecting this piece, which was originally published inShō Poetry Journal. My cup runneth over…

Arbor Day Poem Up at Bulb Culture Collective

This Oak

My poem “This Oak” is live at the Chandelier issue of the Bulb Culture Collective. Thank you to editors L.M. Cole and Jared Povanda for taking this piece. “This Oak” first appeared in Slippery Elm in 2019. Happy Arbor Day, everyone!

Poem Up at Silver Birch Press

My poem “My Mother’s Ghost Sits Next to Me at the Hotel Bar” is live at Silver Birch Press. Many thanks to editor and publisher Melanie Villines for her continuing support. The poem was originally published inThe Lake, and is included in my first full-length book, Our Loveliest Bruises, forthcoming this fall from 3: A Taos Press.

Poems Published in Shō Poetry Journal

Sho Po Jo

I’m delighted to announce that my poems “Moon Cows” and “In the Batter’s Box” have been published in the print journal Shō Poetry Journal. A photo of “In the Batter’s Box” appears below. Thank you editors Johnny Cordona and Dominique Ahkong for taking these pieces. The journal features work by such luminaries as Jack Bedell, Ariel Francisco, Arah Ko, Robert L. Penick, Sage Ravenwood and Jane Zwart, among others.

Note: My two poems are part of a series of hendecasyllabic poems (eleven-line poems, each line of which consists of eleven syllables) written since early September. Another in the series, “Trigger Alert,” was published by Stone Circle Review this past fall.

In the Batter's Box

Until

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Until

This face looking back at me never lies.
I feel as if I’ve cheated, drawn the winning
ticket, passed the exam without suffering
through classes and boring soliloquies.
Then I see the sagging jowls, the dark
circles, those lines—so many of them—
marking time and various scars
invisible to the unaided eye. When death
failed to claim me, I inhaled the ecstatic
fumes of second chances, faked my way
through another sixteen months of drudgery
before pulling the plug. Now, seven years
later, a thousand miles to the north, I study
you lying behind me in bed, unaware
of my gaze, of the power you possess
even asleep, and I wonder how to retain
this minute, these days and all that will unwind
so slowly, so quickly, inevitably, until.

“Until” was published in (print-only) Shō Poetry Journal last June. I was thrilled to have poetry published in this excellent journal, and am pleased that the next issue, coming out in January, contains two of my recent pieces. Thank you, Johnny Cordova and Dominique Ahkong, for your continuing support! I urge you all to peruse their site, and to send them your best poetry.

Scarecrow Visits a Wheatfield in Auvers

Wheatfield with Crows

Scarecrow Visits a Wheatfield in Auvers

The corvids claim he was a crow. A man,
but still a crow, who knew the faith of grain
and light, the atomic distinction
between stillness and the wind’s first
flutter, the shape of loneliness and dark
skies parted by song and wing. He was
a vanishing point, and all-seeing eye.
Or, perhaps, dare I say, one of my kind,
separated from his base, destined
to observe, to record in bold,
thick strokes the hues that words
can only negate. In each of his fields,
celebration blossoms. We see what lurks
beneath the surface—that boy
walking outside the frame, a cat
behind the church—conversation
beyond speech. And in the sky, our sky,
crows suspended in directionless glory,
flying to and from, in simplicity, black
on blue and gold, above the wheat, without end.

This poem is special to me, as it represents success, such as that exists in the poetry world, on multiple levels. I wrote it as part of a fundraiser for Brick Street Poetry, a local non-profit poetry organization, and I am in great debt to Kerfe Roig for providing the inspiration, and original title, “Scarecrow Visits Van Gogh’s Wheatfield in Auvers.” The poem popped out, rather magically, almost as you see it here, in perhaps an hour. Then a few months later, a miracle happened—it was accepted for publication in The Threepenny Review, one of my white whales, an unattainable, if ever there was. Threepenny is known for quick responses. My previous two submissions were rejected in one day and two days. I expected the same for this, and was pleasantly surprised to make it to day three. And then I received the acceptance! Eight months later it appeared in print, nestled next to a story by Wendell Berry (!), and among works by Charles Simic and Philip Lopate, among others. I am still pinching myself…