(Covid-19) Summer by Juanita J. Martin Beaches are quiet Except the occasional Tide coming in As the sun burns its way through the atmosphere No sizzle from the grill Everyone’s inside— Dreaming of vacations they never had as pools of sweat bead guzzling water clinging …
Hair It Is By Dr. Gina Rizzo Everyone is valuable and beautiful as they are. Hair has a mind of its own. How it is born is how it’s grown. Hair is all the same. We are all working with how it came. Perms to …
i am a doll dug out of a landfill by Melissa Eleftherion
Body of the cave mouth
Dissolution of salt
Intuitive ash collects
I vibrate to the speleothem the duodenum
My heart holds the dirt
like some sweet music
i remember once a breathing green
i remember once breathing
i am a dull dig out of a landscape
The hemisphere a polydactyl crustacean of a fault
Veil of topography how the dirt is lucid mass
shell of sea star fall
in a ditch this sun’s
channel lines and gaps
Here I am that dirt
i am limestone I am gravel
Lush grave of the verdant flesh
a lyric from the detritus
One lyric
up up little ascending
I say this to my cohort i say to the wind
my desert of doll people i say to the abandoned tire i say
to metal
up up you can reach it
Melissa Eleftherion (she/they) is a writer, a librarian, and a visual artist. She is the author of field guide to autobiography (The Operating System, 2018), & nine chapbooks, including little ditch (above/ground press, 2018) & trauma suture (above/ground press, 2020). Born & raised in Brooklyn, Melissa created, developed, and co-curates The SFSU Poetry Center Chapbook Exchange with Elise Ficarra. She now lives in Northern California where she manages the Ukiah Library, teaches creative writing, & curates the LOBA Reading Series. Recent work is available at www.apoetlibrarian.wordpress.com.