that I be baptized by a vandal whose frostbitten hands…
that I could touch you with what I’m seeing and that a thing be worth
no words.
/
Please check out and seek out and support the work of these recent {isacoustic*} contributors:
Amy Soricelli
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/09/person-amy-soricelli-one-poem/
Kristin Garth
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/09/person-kristin-garth-one-poem/
Kat Giordano
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/09/person-kat-giordano-three-poems/
Nadia Wolnisty
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/10/person-nadia-wolnisty-three-poems/
Rebecca Kokitus
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/10/person-rebecca-kokitus-one-poem/
Cathryn Shea
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/11/person-cathryn-shea-one-poem/
James Diaz
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/12/person-james-diaz-one-poem/
Alicia Cole
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/12/person-alicia-cole-two-poems/
Suzanne Edison
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/13/person-suzanne-edison-one-poem/
Donna Vorreyer
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/17/person-donna-vorreyer-two-poems/
Anna Scotti
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/20/person-anna-scotti-two-poems/
//
Reflections on some killer works:
on From the Inside Quietly by Eloisa Amezcua:
https://isacoustic.com/2018/07/19/from-the-inside-quietly-poetry-eloisa-amezcua/
on Silver Road by Kazim Ali:
https://isacoustic.com/2018/06/29/silver-road-essays-maps-calligraphies-kazim-ali/
on What Is Not Beautiful by Adeeba Shahid Talukder:
https://isacoustic.com/2018/06/21/what-is-not-beautiful-poems-adeeba-shahid-talukder/
///
Accounting
Anna Scotti’s work appears occasionally in The New Yorker and other literary magazines. She was awarded the Mark Fischer Poetry Prize last year, and has also received the Pocataligo Poetry Prize, the AROHO Prize for short fiction, and other honors. Please visit http://www.annakscotti for more.
~The following poems originally appeared in The Comstock Review.~
/
TWELVE
So, there you are, cross-legged, patient fingers
working tangles from the silky plume of the dog’s tail,
mouth set in a stern love line exactly
like my grandmother’s. You’ve already learned that love
is mostly duty: gathering worms after every rainfall, laying
countless broken birds to rest in tissued boxes,
grim as any village preacher. You’ve dirt-
rimmed nails, scabbed knees – yet the new teacher’s
eyes can’t quite meet mine. Don’t let all that beauty
confuse you: there will be a boy who does not
love you, then a man. And someday…
View original post 248 more words
if no animal
is there
describe
to me
the one
furthest
from a mind
harmed
in the making
From the Inside Quietly
poems – Eloisa Amezcua
Shelterbelt Press, 2018
~
Eloisa Amezcua’s From the Inside Quietly has a voice that asks its hearer to articulate what is missing from readers elsewhere. I don’t know how to prove it. Does beauty know beauty is a shortcut? From text messages to auto correct, from theoretically falling cats to the dry worship of things relayed with no inflection, Amezcua collects communique to salvage the non-dueling songs of hurt and heal while acknowledging with soul how being has to suffer the body’s abridgement. If often formed from the nervously present, the work also makes itself correctly scarce as a medium that brings its own ghost.
~
reflection by Barton Smock
~
book is here:
https://www.indiebound.org/book/9780692955482
HOWIE GOOD
Please check out former contributor Howie Good’s book I’m Not a Robot now available from Tolsun Books, here:
https://tolsunbooks.com/books/
/ work in {isacoustic*}:
https://isacoustic.com/2018/03/16/person-howie-good-two-poems/
~
ACE BOGGESS
also, former contributor Ace Boggess has a title I Have Lost the Art of Dreaming It So from Unsolicited Press that is available for pre-order, here:
http://www.unsolicitedpress.com/store/p162/aceboggesspoetry
/ work in {isacoustic*}:
https://isacoustic.com/2018/03/01/person-ace-boggess-three-poems/
people are leaving my body
it is not alarming
together, how many birds
have your parents
seen
eat
I picture you
as prepared
to imagine, they will judge
her
her hunger
on its form
I pass my son in the hallway
instar
and throe
our unpracticed sleep
our elbows
he learns this way
of my mother, her father, the nothing
time does
