Saturday, June 21, 2025

SONGS OF ERETZ POETRY REVIEW - SUMMER 2025 - IN THE KITCHEN



SONGS OF ERETZ POETRY REVIEW

Theme:  IN THE KITCHEN


SUMMER ISSUE 2025


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Unless otherwise indicated, all art is taken from "royalty-free" Internet sources. 


 



Chief Executive Editor

Steven Wittenberg Gordon

 

Co-Editors-in-Chief

Terri L. Cummings

Charles A. Swanson


Guest Art Editor

Terri Lynn Cummings 


 

Frequent Contributors

Terri Lynn Cummings

Steven Wittenberg Gordon

John C. Mannone

Vivian Finley Nida

Howard F. Stein

Charles A. Swanson

Tyson West


 

 

Biographies of our editorial staff & frequent contributors may be found on the "Our Staff" page.


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Letter from the Co-Editor-in-Chief 



Charles A. Swanson


Featured Frequent Contributors

 

John C. Mannone

“Fusion”

“Pot Roast”

“In My Mother’s Kitchen: Cassadeggi”

 

Tyson West

“Old Woman Cooking Eggs”

“My Kitchen at Sally’s Tavern”

“Grandma’s Realm”



Other Frequent Contributors

 

Shlomo Ben Moshe HaLevi

(Steven Wittenberg Gordon)

“The Oldest Form of Hate”

 

Vivian Finley Nida

“In the Garage Apartment Kitchen”

 

Howard F. Stein

“Grandpa’s Kitchen Stove”

“Baked Eggplant in the Kitchen with Mom”

 

Terri Lynn Cummings

“World War II

Weekly Food Ration

Per Person Per Week

Great Britain 1940-1954”

 

Charles A. Swanson

“Brown Bread”

“Meal Planning”

“Wild Gatherings: Persimmon Pulp”


 


Guest Poets


 

Sean Whalen

“So…We Bake Cakes Then…”

 

Melanie Faith

“Preservation”

 

Shikhandin

“My Neighbor’s Cooking Haleem”

“From My Kitchen Window”

 

Salvatore Difalco

“Halfway House”

“Summer”

 

Robin Woolman

“Sweeping Conjugation”

 

Llewellyn McKernan

“What She Knows”

 

Ellen Estilai

“Tehran: Friday Lunches Before and After the Revolution”

 

Paul A. Freeman

“Long-Gone Kitchen”

 

Dana I. Hunter

“Kitchen Courtroom”

 

Diane Gottlieb

“Reprieve”

“Hope”

 

Chrissie Anderson Peters

“A Smoke in the Kitchen”

 

Janet McCann

“Cooking for the Cat”

 

Guest Poet, General Submission


 

 John Wise

“Smoke Break”



Frequent Contributor News

Financial Support

2025 Themes:  What We are Looking For



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   A Letter from the Co-Editor-in-Chief

 


      

        I love reading submissions, but I despair to send letters saying, “Sorry, we have decided not to publish your poem.”  Nevertheless, the joy that comes in presenting many fine poems for your reading pleasure is a joy worth noting.  Thank you to all the poets who submitted, whether your poem was chosen or not.  I encourage you to submit again.  We want the best for you.    

        I am a bit of a rose-colored-glasses kind of person.  When I imagined kitchen poems, I thought of cheerful experiences, of luscious dishes, of warm tales told around the kitchen table.  I didn’t think much about heartbreak, about anger, about brokenness.  Of course, the kitchen is not immune to disaster.

        The range of experiences represented in these poems is authentic.  The sweet and the bitter coexist.  The normal and the strange bubble along together in the great kitchen pot of life.  If you like simple dishes, easy to digest and sweet to the tongue, you’ll find some.  If your taste is for the smoky kitchen, the old recipes and preparations, the acidic or acerbic notes that add pucker or tang, then you’ll find some, too.  The menu is wide.  We aim to please.

     


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Featured Frequent Contributors











Fusion

contrapuntal

John C. Mannone

 

The hotel shuttle drops me off

next to the conference center.

 

The glass doors to the café

mirror a hungry physicist.

 

There is plenty of time to set up the poster

layout; the paper by my research professor:

 

For a moment, I think about the science

of a pumpernickel bagel in my kitchen—

 

a torus shape sandwiching

a hydrogen plasma for thermal fusion—

 

open face, toasted, spread with

cream cheese, topped with salmon

 

pink, the color of hydrogen energized

to a hundred million degrees, a hothouse

 

tomato, sliced, and a red onion disc, together

with capers, a dash of dill, and coarsely peppered

 

with enough hot electrons held for a full second at those

searing temperatures could lead to self-sustained fusion:

 

That “sandwich,” with champagne (or coffee)

is exquisite. I am drawn to it as if magnetic

 

fields confine the plasma of Deuterium-Tritium isotopes, because

no material could withstand the heat; it would vaporize anything.

 

Even an appetite couldn’t survive

after consuming such a gourmet breakfast.

 

I’m now ready to lecture on thermal fusion reactors

at the San Francisco plasma physics conference.

 

I am well-prepared since fusion

of flavors has sated my appetite.

 

Poet’s Notes: This is based on a true experience when I flew to San Francisco in 1985 to present a paper on fusion reactor basics at a Nuclear and Plasma Physics Conference; in particular, for the fusion of Deuterium (D) and Tritium (T)—isotopes of Hydrogen (H). The D-T fusion reaction is the most feasible for fusion power generation in a Tokamak design—a torus-shaped magnetic field confines the plasma. Since I arrived a little early, I took time to eat breakfast while thinking about my lecture. So I wrote this as a braided poem, and perhaps even a contrapuntal poem where the two braids can be read separately and well as intertwined.

 

Editor’s Notes: The physics column of the poem adds heat and depth to the sandwich column.  Chemical reactions occur in much of cooking, but I rarely think of these.  In this poem, the reactions are present and up-close.  The physics transforms the sandwich, and I cannot help but see the fusion.  CAS 

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Pot Roast

free verse

John C. Mannone

 


 

I.

Some sing in the shower, but I sing in the kitchen.

At other times, I want to play a simple song but it

morphs into an orchestra, a libretto for an opera.

 

So too for creating in my kitchen. I ask, whatever

happened to the simplicity of meat and potatoes and

carrots and celery and onions, all with a basic gravy?

 

I want more variety, include green peppers and corn

still on the cob, zucchini, mushrooms, and experiment

with Brussels sprouts for more complexity.

 

II.

Before browning, season the meat with sea salt

and several good twists of a coarse ground medley

of black, white, pink, and green peppercorns.

 

Let rosemary and fresh garlic be intimate with the olive

oil on its flesh, along with several whole bay leaves

on each side. (I prefer the earthy European variety.)

 

Sizzle the meat to titillate the nose and palate, I suppose

this is where the song begins, there are no rueful

B-flat notes to the tongue. After the browning,

 

let it rest on a platter while the tempered pot

is liberated from excess fat. Deglaze

with a bit of broth. Create a rack from carrots,

 

corn, celery, and yellow onions for the meat.

I hum a hymn of sacrifice for my family’s sake,

a praise, as vegetables braise and infuse their essence

 

into the meat with steam before the roast is buried

under the music of green peppers, potatoes, and

the accompaniment of other vegetables, perhaps

 

sequenced for the right movement for equality

of doneness. There should be a blanket of parsley

and other herbs sprinkled as one fancies

 

with dollops of tomato paste to work its way

down the collage into the underlying sea of juices:

broth and wine, a dry red— the meat will be

deliriously drunk

 

also with the earthiness of mushrooms: portabella,

cremini, and white buttons, and for a vibrant

chord progression, add porcini and shiitake.

 

III.

When all have unified their song as one, the roast

tender to the fork, remove and platter the offerings.

Reduce the liquor in adagio, render it a gravy

by stirring it into a roux in allegro.

 

Serve with crusty bread, a glass of wine,

and give thanks for the symphony you are about

to receive. Amen.

 

Poet’s Notes:  A pot roast cooked in a pot instead of the popular oven. It was actually my mother who would sing. It was often Italian opera. Cooking is an artform that sometimes transcends conventional culinary sense. And so the metaphor with music was used to have the reader think that food preparation (from mise en place through cooking and plating) let alone eating and enjoying is art too.

 

Editor’s Notes: The poems that make me want to eat are poems I cherish.  I would love to sit down at John’s pot roast and breathe in the aroma—then taste slowly, luxuriously, the blessing of food—a culinary praise-song.  CAS 

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In My Mother’s Kitchen: Cassadeggi

free verse

John C. Mannone

 

My grandmother, Rosa, brought a family recipe

from Sicily to Buenos Aires. Fig tarts. Sumptuous

3-inch fruit pies made with figs and vino cotto

a “cooked-down wine” from a concentration of must

from muscatel grapes, a case yielding a small bottle.

 

My mother, Maria, would make these tarts

for my siblings and me on special occasions, besides

Christmas. The last time I had the authentic ones, I was ten—

no more of that syrupy wine from the Old Country was left.

it originated with the Romans many centuries ago.

 

Mamma would improvise with dried figs

and her homemade plum and peach preserves

with cloves & orange rind mixed with heat-reduced grape

juice. Momma would cook up that special pastry

when I came to visit from so many miles away, and not nearly

 

as often as we both had wished. If she were only

here now, I would tell her that I found vino cotto in

Australia, and also from Calabria. Maybe the Internet

can resurrect my dream of those treats, the sweetness

of my childhood,

the bittersweetness

of my manhood, but tempered with sweet-tart

smiles of my mother.

 

Poet’s Notes: I was elated on recently learning that vino cotto is still available commercially!  Sicilian has many words unique to its region that the Italian language doesn’t have, or has but with different meanings. “Cassadeggi” is a phonetic spelling with the ggi sounding like a j or gi in “magic.” There is a Sicilian recipe called cassadetti(e) that’s pronounced the same way but is something different from what I’ve described. One will find a pastry filled with sweetened ricotta with cinnamon in a dough similar to pie-crust dough, and panfried then dusted with sugar. Yet, we have another name for that, cappeggutti (sp?), which means little hat (not to be confused with the Italian word for little hat, cappelleto). This dessert, it’s very similar to what’s described as cassadetti(e) but also has some small chocolate chips.

 

Editor’s Notes: Foods of childhood are not easily recreated.  I’ve heard many times words such as these, “I can’t make it like Mama did,” or, “It doesn’t taste like Grandma’s.”  Nostalgia wreathes food memory, and this issue would not be complete without some notes of nostalgia swirling through the kitchen’s air.  CAS

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Old Woman Cooking Eggs,  Diego Velázquez (Public Domain)


 

Old Woman Cooking Eggs

ekphrastic free verse

Tyson West

 

Diego, you had painted this bodegón as a young man,

long before Felipe IV vampired your genius to illustrate

the upshot of avuncular marriage as

the penultimate Spanish Hapsburg king.

Your eyes glowed already bright as the sap

of manhood rose to compose the old woman's supple hands

whose glow belies their age.

Strong and agile, yet caressing the egg before the crack

sets clear and yellow to white and dandelion as she

manipulates her universe of clay bottles, wood spoons, and metal pots,

orbiting the grind of mortar and pestle.

Dried red chilis, gifts from Aztec and Maya mujeres―

peones of the New World―

lie on her table near purple onions.

When my eyes first entered her cocina

they fell upon her face swollen of left shot shafts of light―

the knife in the bowl sundials her position and place as

the life among still life.

No well waxed, trimmed soldiers' mustaches

would perk at her smile

perhaps that is why she poaches without passion.

Salt and pepper hair hidden under her plain white scarf demands I dream

of once alluring fresh black locks

perfumed of workaday Spanish herbs and East Asian spice.

Though she sports no fine lace mantilla as Goya's

"Majas on a Balcony," harlequin in their distant decade,

our mujer shares protein and fat―

poached eggs, salsas, and Jamón Ibérico prove her power

to feed the attention of men

whose hungers rise at dawn like Christ who in turn

offers His flesh and blood at each new day's mass.

 

Poet’s Notes: Diego Velázquez, in his youth, produced genre paintings called "bodegóns" which reflect everyday objects, including food and drink, in taverns and kitchens. This genre in 17th century Spain gave the upper classes, who purchased art, a view into the life of the common people. These paintings tend to be character studies within still-life backgrounds. This poem, "Old Woman Cooking Eggs," also contains a cameo of a painting, two centuries later, by Goya called "Majas on the Balcony", in which two young women on the balcony each wear lace mantillas; one black, and the other white. 

 

Editor’s Notes: West’s choice of a painting for the subject of this kitchen theme is a wise one.  Through his poem, I enter a kitchen of long ago, one I haven’t seen in my own lifetime, although I’ve seen some very rudimentary kitchens.  CAS 

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My Kitchen at Sally's Tavern

free verse

Tyson West

 

I poked Father Flaherty once I done my time

I was going back to my old trade―cookin'.

"Okay", he says, "as long as it's food, not meth."

He blessed me then laughed, "Ain't no kitchens in heaven

cause except maybe for Jesus and the Virgin Mary,

no one there got bodies to feed."

As long as we got bodies here, they need me fixin' grub. 

I kept my cell clean, left the joint clean,

and I needed someplace clean now

for my body to finish its left over time on earth

since I done the government's time in the joint.

So I jumped at Sally's offer to make her kitchen my way station. 

Sure, her old man, Uncle Buddy, who Jesus gave

the slickest tongue since Satan, wrapped flattery around my sorry ass but

I would'a jumped at the chance to wipe, clean, and cook

at Sally's Kitchen even without syrupy words.

No one at Mickey Dees would want to see the cobweb tats on my elbows

or let me make its kitchen mine once they seen my paperwork.

Sally was too busy watchin' her barkeep

and barmaids scramble pitchers and mixed drinks

to snookies while Uncle Buddy perched his 350-pound ass

in their basement card room massaging his poker hands and bluffing better

than the Prince of Darkness hisself.

Neither the judge who sentenced me

nor guards at the joint

liked my attitude, but Sally and Buddy didn't care,

as long as I do time behind my kitchen door

passing out fast and good grub through the slot.

Once she tossed me the apron

I was not scared of plugged sink traps or the oil slick on the floor.

The Broaster smelled like a wino's breath

and the food in the walk in must've come down the greasy hood vent

with Santa Claus last Christmas.

I tossed the stuff we couldn't use

but definitely scrounged the ice block of frozen burgers.

I topped the renderer's barrel out back

with rancid Broaster fat and deep fryer oil gone dark

and cleaned chicken breading and jojo crust

from the cooking well of the Broaster.

I spic and spanned floors and walls with gallons of ammonia―

the best stuff to cut pig and cow fat.

Sally only give me three days to get my kitchen up

but Jesus only needed three days to rise hisself from the dead.

I was sure I could roll back the stone from my kitchen door by then.

Uncle Buddy tossed me a hand full of food stamps

he got for half price tradin'

marked up white port and Mad Dog

so I shopped to fill my walk in to match my menu.

Sally smiled and counted her till. Buddy just wanted a bratwurst,

so I Broasted him a half dozen.

Pots and pans put away and fresh sweet grease

gleaming in the Broaster and deep fryer under the spotless hood

my grill glows red to cook off soap and cleaner smells

ready to catch burgers and bacon and brats.

I brown and break up thawed burger patties to blend

with my special chili powder and garlic in my big stew pot,

then tells Jimmy behind the bar I need two big pitchers of draft.

After tossing red beans and browned burger and chopped onions in the pot

I add a pitcher of beer and spices

stir in the tomato paste and set it slow simmering.

Sally and Buddy may have themselves one clean well lit barroom

but I got me a kitchen―spotless and warm

under the cold fluorescent lights of

a cell I choose to do my time in.

I pull up a polished schooner as the second pitcher

bubbles rise for the tired but happy cook.

 

Poet’s Notes:  In my misspent youth, I worked for a time at a tavern tending bar and in the kitchen. I much preferred the kitchen, as it gave me the sense that I could eventually make my surroundings clean and orderly, whereas when tending bar I heard the same sad stories, over and over again, from broken people I would never have any hope of fixing. I cooked chicken in a Broaster, which is a deep-fat pressure cooker. Because of the pressure, the oil is heated to a lower temperature than a regular deep fryer, which results in the oil lasting longer. Tavern kitchens are a more enjoyable place to work than busy fast-food restaurants or sit-down restaurants, because they are not so hectic. Tavern food is designed to keep people drinking, not to give them a five-star meal or feed a herd of teens in minutes.

 

Editor’s Notes: A strong voice in a poem is a pleasure.  A consistent voice puts me in another world.  I love the voice of this reformed convict, and I wish him well in his spic and span tavern kitchen.  CAS 

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Grandma's Realm

free verse

Tyson West

 

Not ever―even as Anna and I spoke as adults of marriage

during my visit before my Virginia nuptials

three years after grandpa died―

did I see her eat.

Her father's second wife must have imprinted fiercely

the old country taboo that women must serve a table

of all men then wait until they rise

for smoking and to sip starka and krupnikas

for the bevy of cooks and waitresses to dine

on leftovers bonding in table talk.

Perhaps her mother, who had joined Club 27

in that pre-penicillin desert, would have pushed

her to adopt the ways of America.

Still old country custom served her sex power

to claim kitchen her undisputed realm where

her fickle decrees brewed unquestioned.

In the narrow pantry with shelving full to thwart famine

the exotic scent of orange pekoe lured me

to the first taste of tea mother forbade

but Grandma muted my sips with unpasteurized cream, fresh from the barn.

My fidgeting matured at the great, oil cloth covered table

as my flesh distorted from toe-headed toddler

to insecure stripling to gangling college cobber

like some Hogarthian progression.

I admired Anna forming fire in her great Monarch

wood cook stove lifting black iron plates

to charge the grate with newspaper and kindling split

from the wood pile by the barn.

The room grew hotter once she struck

the Diamond kitchen match to yesterday's news

as draft sucked the smell of sulfur up the chimney.

Yellow cardamom bread matrixing golden raisins,

potato blynais, and kugelis with sour cream fed me

as my uncles' bellies rounded the trencher

boasting with a wink over Nargansett Long Necks of "finding"

among tract homes under construction after the Big War

Anna's gas range they installed beside the Monarch.

 

She would scold me old country worries, "Eat! Eat!

Valgyti Sūnelis! I don't want you to die in my house!"

Well buttered black bread and homemade

farmer cheese she pressed between oak planks

kept me firmly among the quick.

But a decade after my visit her soul slipped

from the bedroom off the kitchen where a half century before

she chose to sleep alone while Grandpa snored upstairs.

For my last supper in the room she ruled

around her casket set on the great table, uncles

and we cousins bantered in English over catered cold cuts,

pizza, and burgers their wives selected.

As her boxed up body left to rejoin Grandpa

her kitchen wilted―emptied of its elemental spirit.

Though Google tells me our homestead still stands

I choose not to visit the husk of plaster and lead based paint

but to remember the alchemy of elixirs that swirled there once

and the young girl who dwindled down the decades

across her bridge from rattle boned Baltic lowlands

where sandy soil wraps skeletons of our ancestors

to ever changing American excess

where flesh of the flesh she once fed

spreads across the fruited plains.

 

Poet’s Notes:  My paternal grandparents both came from Lithuania. Grandfather arrived in 1906, and his unknown wife in 1914. They met and married in Massachusetts. She was less than five feet tall, but she ruled the kitchen like a queen. She prepared a lot of old country recipes with saturated fats and carbohydrates, which were valuable because they kept you alive in the unstable world of Eastern Europe, where you weren't sure when famine would strike. Only later did I learn why none of us ever saw her eat. She was raised in a paternal world where men ate first.

 

Editor’s Notes: As America is such a multi-cultural, melting pot country, old ways, tucked into the homes of immigrants, still live, old ways that survive a generation, or two, or sometimes more.  The kitchen is where many of those old ways are kept alive.  These food ways are recipes that contain a bit of lore, a smack of wisdom, even a hint of cooking magic.  West’s poem catches the hint of magic and brings it to life.  CAS 

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Other Frequent Contributors





 

The Oldest Form of Hate

free verse narrative

Shlomo Ben Moshe HaLevi

 

This was to be a special occasion.

My mother’s father was coming for Passover!

Grandfather was first generation Irish,

A devout Catholic, and was not at all pleased

When his eldest daughter married a Jew.

Neither he nor my grandmother attended their wedding.

Relations between him and my parents were—to be polite—strained.

By this time, my parents had been married for ten years.

I was nine. My little brother was seven.

I sat at the kitchen table while my mother prepared the food.

She made the chicken soup from scratch

Using a bird purchased from a family farm up the road.

She had lovingly cultivated the dill in our backyard garden.

Mom used my father’s aunt’s recipe for the matzoh balls.

She rendered the fat from the chicken skin for schmaltz

And fried minced onions in this golden goodness.

Its savory scent filled the kitchen with love.

The schmaltz and onions were added to the matzoh ball batter.

She did this instead of frying the balls in it.

While my great aunt’s matzoh balls were better,

My mom’s were a close second,

Fluffy and floating in the soup despite the added ingredients.

There would be potato kugel, charoset (I helped chop the apples),

Tzimmes, and leg of lamb—again, from our neighbor’s farm.

In addition to a flourless apple cake, my mother made vanilla pudding for dessert,

Even though it would violate the milk/meat law.

She knew that her father enjoyed vanilla pudding,

And, while the entire meal had to be perfect,

The pudding had to be especially so.

Hence, it was especially tragic when Mom accidentally added

A heap of chicken-fried onions to the pudding.

Maybe she mistook the pudding for the matzoh ball batter?

This was the first time that I recall ever seeing my mother cry.

However, there was nothing else for it—

Grandfather would be arriving in a few minutes.

I suggested that the onions were so small that they would go unnoticed

And that fried onions would be sweet, like the pudding.

Maybe she could pass it off as tapioca?

These culinary tips from me made Mom laugh—a rarity for her.

My parents greeted Grandfather at the door.

He and Dad shook hands, but I could tell neither was pleased to do so.

We sat down for dinner at once and began the “seder” that was not a real seder.

My father, brother, and I could not wear yarmulkes,

There were no Haggadahs, and there was absolutely to be no praying,

Unless Grandfather wanted to pray to Jesus, which, of course, he did,

And he made quite a show of it.

The feast normally would have started with gefilte fish—

The most ethnic of ethnic foods—

But Mom knew better than to offer such blatantly Jewish cuisine.

We began with the matzoh ball soup instead—

Fluffy clouds surrounded by liquid gold.

Grandfather did not touch a drop.

Then came the lamb, the kugel, and all the rest.

Grandfather did not take a single bite of any of it.

My little brother was oblivious,

But I could see the hurt in my mother’s eyes.

Would it have killed Grandfather to eat the lovely meal prepared in his honor?

Apparently, Grandfather thought it would,

As though eating Jew-food would turn him into a Jew,

Which for him would be the worst thing ever.

My father was a Holocaust survivor, and recently shared with his eldest son

Just a taste of the horrors that he lived through when he was my age.

Even his sugar-coated version was enough to give me nightmares.

So, I knew a little bit about antisemitism, but this was my first experience of it.

Ironically, the only food that Grandfather ate that night was the pudding—

Onions and all.

 

Poet’s Notes:  In 2023, the terrorist organization Hamas invaded Israel and tortured, raped, and killed over 1,200 innocent people, including children, and took 250 more as captives, many of whom are presumed dead. Israel responded with and continues to respond with deadly force, as would any other nation or people. I pray that the war will not end until every member of Hamas is disarmed and killed, imprisoned, or exiled (and not to my country, please). That is not hate. That is justice.

        According to The Anti-Defamation League, there were a record 9,354 incidents of antisemitism in the United States in 2024, a 5% increase from 2023 and an astounding 893% increase over the past 10 years. Vandalism against Jewish businesses and institutions increased by 20% and assaults by 21% in 2024. Incidents on college campuses saw a dramatic 84% increase in antisemitism in 2024. A significant portion of antisemitic incidents have occurred and continue to occur online and in social media.

The impact on Jewish Americans has been staggering. Most admit to feeling less safe and have altered their behavior due to fear of antisemitism. Personally, I have removed the mezuzah from the entry to my home and have advised my wife and children to be careful of what they say in public.

While I am disappointed in my countrymen, sadly, I am not surprised. As my father knew only too well, antisemitism, the oldest form of hate, is always lurking in the population at large. The war in Gaza has only sparked the latest surge.

 

Editor’s Notes: A pressure cooker doesn’t have to explode for disaster to occur in a kitchen.  Gordon takes me into human prejudices, the tensions that can develop, the pressure that can build, the sadness that can reign, around the festive table of lovingly prepared food.  CAS

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In the Garage Apartment Kitchen

free verse

Vivian Finley Nida

 

Summer’s oppressive heat

thought it could conquer

Mama’s small, square kitchen.

 

It blasted through raised windows

and forced oscillating fans to riddle

the air with searing breath.

 

Jelly glasses of sweet iced tea,  

sprigged with mint, sweated.

Strawberry popsicles dripped,

 

and we sticky sisters, two and four,

wiggled out of shoes, shirts, shorts.

Mama saw all, imagined more. 

 

She shoved table and chairs out,  

then armed with Tide and a wet broom,

scrubbed and rinsed the linoleum floor.

 

We watched her sweep water under

the screen door and down a dozen steps

to the patch of yellow grass beyond.

 

With a five gallon aluminum pan

filled to the brim, she commanded,

“Strip and dive in!”

 

We tossed our panties,

jumped in and fell flat,

slammed by a tsunami.

 

Barely standing, another surge swept

us into a whirlpool. We escaped, but

a rogue wave tumbled us like tadpoles.

 

Shrieking with laughter,

wave after wave, we reveled

in this realm of endless possibility.

 

Poet’s Notes:  A year later we moved into a house that had window unit air conditioners. We liked the way they kept us cool but missed our kitchen water park.

 

Editor’s Notes: I’m right there with the child in this poem.  I remember summer days when we sat in front of the kitchen window where the box fan was humming.  The fan moved the hot air around, but did nothing to cool it.  I love this mother’s creativity and her willingness to work extra hard to provide some moments of both relief and joy.  CAS 

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Grandpa’s Kitchen Stove

free verse narrative poem

Howard F. Stein

 

At age ten how could I have known

When I entered my grandpa’s kitchen,

I was walking into a hundred years ago?

My maternal grandpa lived in the apartment

Across the hall from ours, where

His daughter, her husband, and son,

Mom, dad, and I, lived.

 

Any 1950s’ futuristics of sleek design,

Bright colors, automation, stainless steel,

And open space failed to make their way

Into his cramped, cracked linoleum kitchen.

But still, small miracles

Of aroma and taste made their way

From here to his adjacent dining room.

The kitchen’s centerpiece was

A massive, iron, boxy natural gas

Stove and oven. Weight and weightiness

Defined it. Oven and broiler

Doors were heavy to open and close.

At this magnificent massif,

Grandpa did all his cooking,

From a daily morning percolator

Of coffee to a Sunday morning

Specialty of slow-cooked oatmeal

In a cracked porcelain double boiler.

 

If heavy metal can be cozy,

His kitchen stove was.

Immigrant from Russia

In his early teens, grandpa

Created a nest in his orange-brick

Apartment building built around 1900.

Though it looked old fashioned,

I had no interest in fashion.

For me, the timing was perfect – 

With him, his kitchen, and his

Great gas stove.

 

Lighting the gas stove burners

And the broiler and oven

To their left, required

Precision and courage,

Science and art,

With a lit match –

Talents I sorely lacked.

No permanent pilot light

Here; fire was labor intensive.

I pressed the button

On the front of the stove,

Which released gas,

Quickly struck a match

On a flint strip, then tossed

The lit match into the center

Of the stove, hoping the burners

Would ignite. Occasionally

My cowardice worked.

 

Mostly, though, the match would

Extinguish before gas came on.

Reluctantly, I would have to hover

The lit match in my hand,

Wait for a flame to emerge,

Then get out of the way.

Most of the time flames would

Burst several inches upward,

I rarely pulled

My hand back fast enough.

I do not remember getting burned,

But each time I was scared.

Still, it became a game

I returned to play several times

A week on my grandpa’s

Cast iron stove.

In addition to silken oatmeal,

Sunday mornings were also

The day when grandpa toasted Challah*   

 

In the oven to last a week –

Baked to his doting

Perfection of both sides

Of the slice, evenly browned

To a crisp, rarely burned.

He doted over his toasting

Bread as a devoted mother

Her children. His toast was

Perfect for dunking in

Freshly percolated coffee.

Sunday morning breakfasts

With grandpa were a feast.

 

I could swear there were

Times I saw him

Dance with that oven.

It was his moment,

Which I watched nearby

With awe.

 

This sturdy kitchen stove

Had presence, character.

The “clunker” was majestic.

Grandpa’s stove

Was a titan – so was he.

I savored being

Behind the times

In his kitchen.

The times were just right –

They were his. They were mine.

They were ours.

 

*Egg-based, yeast-leavened Bread, often braided, an eastern European Jewish staple

 

Poet’s Notes:  When I discovered that the theme for the Summer 2025 issue of Songs of Eretz would be Kitchens, I was momentarily at an utter loss for any idea for a poem that was not trite. Soon an image of the massive old gas stove in my maternal grandpa's kitchen redeemed my paralysis. It was a Presence for me since as far back as memory allows. I was born in 1946, and my beloved grandpa died in 1962. He lived in the apartment across the hallway from that of my mom, dad, and me. In a world that could change -- usually for the worse -- in an eye-blink, this stove, like my grandpa, had solidity, even permanence, inscribed on the manufacturer's label.  Although the stove was not beautiful, it exuded magnificence. "Built to last" could have been its motto.

Whatever it "symbolized," it was also the dwelling place of bustling activity, grandpa's, mine, ours together.  Relationships were part of its essence. Its history was, at least in part, our history.

 

Editor’s Notes: We find memory in objects.  As taste and smell are also depositories of memory, how fitting that a stove, even a massive iron gas stove, should become a focal point of delicious memories.  CAS

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Baked Eggplant in the Kitchen with Mom

narrative poem  

Howard F. Stein

 

Every few months, mom –

Who did not especially relish cooking –

Made one of her specialties:

Baked eggplant. She made sure

To puncture it before baking,

Because it once exploded

In the oven because she forgot

(We never forgot the mess.).

She pulled out the tray

That held the cooked eggplant,

Peeled the skin; then it was

Ready for my turn.

 

I retrieved from deep

In a kitchen drawer,

The galvanized iron parts

I first had to assemble,

Clamp to the metal kitchen table,

Install the long, curved handle

Beneath the chamber where

The eggplant would go,

And finally be ready to crank.

 

Mom and I bantered while

I stuffed the eggplant slices,

Followed by chunks of onion,

And cranked away. We enjoyed

It all, though it was a lot

Of messy work. After I ground

The eggplant and onions,

My hands deliciously slimy,

I slowly poured it all into a large bowl,

To which mom added vegetable oil

And various spices – then mixed

It into a homogeneous, pungently

Aromatic masterpiece. It was ready

For mom, dad, and I to feast on.

Mom’s cheerful company was part

Of our work together; she said she added

Love to make this Eastern European

Jewish delicacy taste better.

 

Even dad, always ready to be critic,

Complimented mom as he

Took a second helping.

We were all relaxed, and for now,

Enjoyed each other’s company,

A rare ease of being together.

No signs in the kitchen today

Of the darkness that enveloped

So much of mom’s life, and ours . . .

 

Over many years, I would find

Mom sitting immobile,

Head drooped down,

For hours on the living room couch,

A graveyard monument

Among the living, unreachable

By voice or touch,

Inconsolable, lost in an

Inner space I could not comprehend.

 

I despaired at her despair, and

At my helplessness to help her –

Or myself. Mom alive. Mom dead.

Mom dead while alive.  Not a

Logic exercise or multiple choice.

I wanted to yell: “Wake up mom.

I need you!” Silence. Am I

Already dead, too?  Where is

My mom of baking eggplant

In the kitchen, so much alive?

 

Then, there were mom’s

Screaming tirades at me,

Fortissimo, furioso –

I did not know then not

To argue back even more harshly,

About some misdeed I had committed,

Or that simply I had been born,

Her frequent refrain: “First my father,

Then my husband, now You!”

Despots all, despicable, irredeemable.

Worse than her yelling fits were

What she called the “silent treatment” –

Refusing to speak with me for days,

Even weeks. Abandoned in her presence.

I did not know how to live

Beyond reclamation by my own mom.

 

Over the years, mom disappeared

From the apartment.

All dad would tell me

Was that she was “sick.”

I didn’t know why she left,

And why she was gone so long,

Sometimes for weeks, at

Some place called a mental hospital.

I understood nothing of all this

Back then, and little more now.

I only know that I felt we

Lived at the edge of a steep cliff.

 

But then . . . there were those

Occasional baked eggplant days

With mom in the kitchen,                  

Lighthearted exchanges,

Or no need for words at all.

Gentle dotted lines connected us –

Us, my lifeline.

I knew only that in the kitchen,

I felt alive again,

No menace, no vigilance,

A brief spell of joy and relief –

At least for an instant,

I had my mom back.

 

Poet’s Notes:  When I learned of the Kitchen theme, a memory--image, followed by a virtual reliving, entered my mind. It soon took the form of this poem. As a boy in the 1950's, I would help my mom make baked eggplant salad a couple of times each year.  Those were moments of simple, pleasant ordinariness in our often emotionally trying lives. The poem could not end without a descent into that terrible darkness. The poem turned into an unbearable contrast between the quiet bliss in the kitchen and the long spells of deep depression that engulfed her, and made her unreachable.

 

Editor’s Notes: “I despaired at her despair,” so writes Stein.  That feeling of unrelieved helplessness has overwhelmed me on more than one occasion.  This is a poem to make a reader ponder.  This is a poem to make a reader sad.  This is a poem to make a reader hunger for a redeemer.  CAS

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World War II Weekly Food Ration

Per Person Per Week, Great Britain 1940-1954

free verse / prose poem

Terri Lynn Cummings

 

“Yes, we have no bananas!”

--lyrics written by Frank Silver & Irving Cohn*

 

a 1923 novelty song about a greengrocer

that Mr. Silver had met, who started every sentence

with “yes,” even if the answer was “no”

 

 

In Belfast, Ireland, Granny walked

to the greengrocer every Friday,

ration books in hand.

 

Mr. Murphy, do you have bananas this week?

 

Och, did you not read the sign, luv?

It’s posted on every grocer’s window

in Belfast. It reads, “Yes, we have no bananas;

We have no bananas today.”And before ye ask,

yes, we have no lemons, oranges, pineapples,

grapes, apples, or onions, though we fare better

than those poor souls starving on the continent.”

 

Every week, Granny partially filled her kitchen larder with food allotted to those living under her roof. That meant my mother was allowed:

 

1 egg

2 oz. tea

2 oz. butter

1 oz. cheese

8 oz. sugar

4 oz. ea. bacon, ham, margarine, cooking fat

1/2 lb. of jam (per month, mind you)

3 pints of milk (plus a wee extra as a growing child)

0 bottles of wine (for cooking or otherwise)

 

Breakfasts were the highlight of the week. Before church, Mother and Aunt Annie sat at the kitchen table their father had built and shared an egg ration--yoke for one, white

for the other. A tradition was born, and it never varied.

 

In our kitchens today, our mothers’ grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren share fried eggs amongst themselves, only eating the yolks or whites.

 

When bananas finally arrived in the shipyard after the war, Mother, ‘sweet sixteen,’ appeared front page in Belfast Telegraph, banana in hand.

 

Granny held a cup of steaming tea

(with a proper pour of milk and a dash

of sugar, mind you), newspaper spread

on the kitchen table, a dish of butter

proud in the center, and read

 

“Yes, we have some bananas;

We have some bananas today!”

 

Poet’s Notes:   “Yes, we have no bananas” was the theme song used during food relief protests against the crown in Belfast, 1932. During that depression, Catholics and Protestants were united in protest, a rarity. The non-sectarian song was widely known in both communities. The term was used repeatedly, including the mandatory rationing in WWII.

 

* The song’s sheet music entered the public domain in the United States, January 1, 2019. The 1923 recordings entered the public domain in the United States on January 1, 2024.

 

Editor’s Notes:  Give me history.  Give me a song.  Give me something to eat.  What a glorious mixture in one poem!  CAS

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Brown Bread

haiku stanzas (5-7-5 syllabic poem)

Charles A. Swanson

 

Basement apartment

in Chatmoss, unlike Grandma’s

hole of a cellar.

 

This one, full kitchen,

living space, sliding glass doors

onto a green lawn.

 

Ed Kinser, bachelor,

young botany professor,

set out the dinner,

 

Swiss cheese and crackers—

Chicken in a Biskit, odd,

delicious tid-bits,

 

two strong tastes married,

but that wasn’t all.  Brown loaves

rich with molasses,

 

corn meal, plump raisins,

shaped brown loaves like cylinders,

scores laid evenly,

 

a coffee can’s marks.

I couldn’t get enough bread,

the earthy whole wheat,

 

juicy, sweet raisins,

sulfur of dark molasses.

And the weirdest thing,

 

the loaves, not baked, boiled

two and a half, three hours

in a stovetop pot,

 

the steam rising high,

heating inexpensive cans.

I think of campfires,

 

coals, iron kettles,

a hiker shrewd in old ways,

wild greens, rustic bread.

 

It smacked a wild, strange

disconnect--to taste the old

in a new kitchen.

 

Poet’s Notes: I begged this recipe, and I still make it from time to time.  Coffee cans are harder to find than they used to be.  I especially like to boil the brown bread on a woodstove (not a true wood cookstove), although the temperature of such a primitive stove is hard to control.

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Meal Planning

syllabic poem (seven syllables per line)

Charles A. Swanson

 

I filled each meal, breakfast, lunch,

supper, a calendar month—

menu on the kitchen wall.

 

Fried rabbit, gravy, biscuits.

Turnip greens, new potatoes.

Brunswick stew, canned tomatoes.

 

Silver dollar pancakes, jam.

King’s syrup, butter, fresh bread.

Million dollar fudge, cookies.

 

Milk, Ovaltine malt powder.

Jello, fruit cocktail, cherries.

Peanuts, walnuts, strawberries.

 

Something to eat every day,

something good three times a day,

something nutritious to serve.

 

So I filled a calendar,

breakfast, lunch, early supper,

meat, vegetables, fruit, drink.

 

I took the ache from planning

and you followed my menu

as if I, a teenager,

 

were wise.  And I must tell you

I was tempted by desserts

and spaghetti.  Every day

 

I wanted rich meaty sauce,

spaghetti noodles piled high,

crisp-toasted bread and butter.

 

Mom, you trusted me to have

brains.  Oh, I tried so hard not

to script each day with sugar.

 

Poet’s Notes: In a Progressive Insurance commercial, a representative for the company gives a commencement speech to graduates.  She says, “Today, you enter the real world.”  Then she names chore after chore that forewarns the graduates.  Life is hard.  Their lives will be full of tedium and repetition.  The last chore she names is this: “Deciding what’s for dinner every night, for the rest of your life.”  That was one of my mother’s complaints, deciding what to cook.  She said she didn’t mind cooking, but she hated meal planning.  Oddly, she welcomed the calendar I made for her one month, even though I was only a ravenous teenager.  I couldn’t believe how assiduously she stuck to the meals I listed, especially since she knew so much more about cooking than I did.

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Wild Gatherings: Persimmon Pulp

free verse

Charles A. Swanson

 

The orange that oozes from the colander,

more burnt orange than plastic pumpkin

orange, more jeweled and more deep,

more translucent and more thick, pulp,

pulp thicker than apple butter, sweeter

than peaches, more bitter than the bite

of lemon rind.  American persimmons,

wild for the finding, finding before dogs

and raccoons and foxes and possums and

skunks and deer and crows and mockingbirds and

did I say dogs, yes, dogs eat them up.

Persimmons that make the best pudding—

if you can use the pulp like Mama did—

pudding deep, dark, layered, spicy, sweet,

with texture and tenderness in each bite.

Oh, it looked like brownies, and fooled

the help, the teenagers who came to pull

the late summer and early fall harvest—

the yellowing tobacco leaves.  The pudding—

cake-like but moist and succulent—looked

like brownies, but the help had never, never

had a brownie that took them so deep

into the lore, into eating from the land. 

 

Poet’s Notes: I’m working on a series of “wild gatherings” poems.  Most of them involve some food item, whether vegetable, animal, or fruit.  A few delve into food history.  Not all of the poems reach the kitchen.  Some stay in the field, in the place even wilder than the kitchen.

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Guest Poets




   


So…We Bake Cakes Then…

free verse

Sean Whalen

 

In our lead story… today’s Combat Cake Wars

winner crafted a lime mint Tabasco frosting

over a delicate cocoa sponge. A strong uppercut,

along with heat and sweet, won the day.

 

Meanwhile, in other news… multiple

shots were fired and responders removed

bodies from in front of the Safeway,

allowing procurement of critical baking ingredients.

 

Overseas… reports were received of various “isms”

in developed and developing nations, along with

riots and deaths and tariffs, leading to unconscionable

price increases for cocoa and vanilla.

 

In the weather… drought and heat waves

are negatively impacting crop production. Farming towns

are shuttering and folks are migrating to the suburbs,

further driving up the cost of masa and flour.

 

On a brighter note… record tropical rainfall

caused catastrophic flooding and wiped out houses,

buildings, and people, thereby dramatically

increasing the sugar cane yield.

 

And finally, in sports… Combat Cake Wars

has been renewed for another season,

though most previous winners are unable to return

due to death or serious injury.

 

Poet’s Notes: Entertainment parallels society. Rousseau (not Marie A.) introduced eating brioche in lieu of bread when starving. We’ve taken that cliché to heart. We look for alternatives to reality, and while our reality gets darker so do our alternatives. I figure it’s just a matter of time before CCW [carry a concealed weapon, ed. note] gets green-lighted. I don’t expect credit or residuals. 

 

Editor’s Notes: News reporting has often striven for an objective tone.  The cold hard facts have subjective power.  How do we receive the news?  How do we place the news in context so that we then examine our own failings, our own utterly limited view of the world?  Whalen’s poem strikes an objective tone, but it comes across with subjective force.  The poem is an excellent example of dramatic irony.  CAS

 

About the Poet: Sean Whalen lives near Pilot Mound, Iowa, with his exceptional wife, Bonnie, five house cats, and a wild three-legged barn cat named Frodo. He is a retired health and safety professional, current volunteer fire chief, and bales hay for bait money. He received his MA from Iowa State in Creative Writing. Recent poems have appeared in multiple publications, including Last Leaves, The Ocotillo Review, Unbroken, New Feathers, Thimble, The Avenue Journal, The Chiron Review, and Songs of Eretz.

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Preservation

free verse

Melanie Faith





A friend
whose mother has passed on
turns the front door with the old key
her mother once wore on her wrist
on a little plastic bracelet
made like curly old telephone cord.

She says a water pipe burst
recently while she was at
her other home with her husband and children
and the water from the burst pipe rained upon
all the beautiful glass jars
in the empty house:

peaches
pears
grapes made into juices
strawberry jams and blackberry jellies
plums sweeter than
bread-and-butter pickles, and some of those,
too, along with slaws, peas, and green beans
grown in the backyard

all of it sealed
in heavy glass Ball jars
in orderly rows on basement shelving
her father built
awaiting future weekday lunches, dinners, birthday
get-togethers, engagements, church suppers,
anniversary
parties decades
ago.

All of it, my friend says, she found last week
when she came to check the furnace,
all of it she found ruined, a feast
for no one, and she’s come to clean it
with bucket, soap, sponges, and black bags
she’ll cart back with her.

I want to say, Can we still feast
upon remembrances of your mother’s handiwork
in the kitchen before air conditioning
in her short green shorts, sometimes
on a stepstool to reach the spice cupboard?
She’d clipped her hair up at the nape
and stand, glasses fogging over, before steam
her face bathed dewy
in July and August perspiration

and yet persevered at her task:
hand-cutting
each peel, carving out
each pit, removing
every soft spot and tan bruise so that
each sip, gulp, chew, and
chomp was easy to enjoy,
was more than fit to celebrate,
was a story kind of sustenance.

I, who am so lucky to still have my mother
and someday too soon—always too soon—won’t,
I know, though, what my friend wants back,
more than canned sweets and savories
has nothing to do with ruined food,
has no way of ever returning
to give her a hug, to give her
what she hungers for. So she’ll
sweep up the sticky syrups, bits of rust and glass,
she’ll sigh again as she locks the door
with the bracelet key on her way out.

 

Poet Notes: I have many memories of my mother, grandmother, and friends’ moms canning fruits and vegetables. The beautiful sights, scents, and sounds of the long process always yielded kitchen counters full of the glistening, gorgeous produce in see-through glass jars, They were a work of art, momentarily cooling with towels folded underneath them to catch
any glass breaks or spills.
        Later, the jars were jewels lined up on basement shelving. They were sustenance for the long, harsh winter months. My guess is that many homes with basements built in the 1950s to early 1990s most likely still have a few jars hanging around, whether empty or filled with food. The little thwupping pop when prying open the jars with a fork handle for a snack or as part of supper is a sense memory that will resonate forever.
        It was never lost on me, however, the amount of tough labor, heat, patience, monotony, nicks and scrapes, and frustration involved in canning, not to mention the huge investment of time, so it wasn’t something I wanted to learn how to do. My mom stopped canning when I was in college or grad school. She tells me she doesn’t miss the sweaty summer toil of it, but we both still reminisce about her delicious homemade grape juice. No store-bought juice will ever quite compare.

 

Editor’s Notes:  Faith’s poem has many cinematic moments.  The poem’s camera eye first zeroes in on the unlocking of a door, to the key attached to a curly bracelet like an old telephone cord.  It is a great defining shot.  Immediately, I know this poem will be about a mother, about a daughter, about a house empty of its long-time occupant.  Immediately, I know that some element of loss will unfold.  Soon I’m drawn into the passion and heartache of many more clearly rendered moments.  The narrative in the poem floats on these excellent, well-rendered scenes.  CAS

 

About the Poet:  Melanie Faith is a writer, educator, photographer, and frequent doodler. In 2024, she completed a draw-daily-for-a-year journal and she likes making short comics. Her latest poetry collection, Does It Look Like Her?, follows Alix, a forty-something artist, new educator, and mom, and the famous painting she sits for. Her craft books for authors through Vine Leaves Press offer tips on writing flash fiction, poetry, teaching creative writing, writing a reference book, and photography. Learn more about her writing, teaching, and creative work at: https://www.melaniedfaith.com/

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My Neighbor’s Cooking Haleem

free verse

Shikhandin

 

She is the matriarch of her household, and she is

cooking Haleem. But I cannot not go.

Even though she’s a generous soul, I cannot go.

 

Her kitchen overflows with the riches

of her ladle. To add to my woes, she’s left

her windows and doors wide open. “Come in,”

they seem to say. “Just walk in. Walk in, no?!”

 

Her table groans, begging to be freed

of its load. The aroma roams around, stoking

belly fires everywhere. This is so unfair.

 

I’ve a good mind to go down to where the feast

awaits the deserving. Even though

I don’t own a single pious bone in my body.

She won’t mind. I know. She will embrace me.

 

She will say, “Eat. Eat! Eat some more!” I

can’t bear this anymore. Just twenty

steps below, I can hear them gathering.

 

The patriarch and she, her sons, her daughters

and their spouses. Throw in a troupe

of itinerant cousins, a couple of friends. Faces

aglow. Head scarves askew. Beards spotted with food.

 

Oh, woe to my soul! Woe to my ill-timed

resolution to shed the kilos. When I could be saying,

“Bas bas, Shukriya! Only one more helping. No more.” 

 

Poet’s Notes:  Here in India, at least in my experience, we celebrate the feast days of all religions. As a Bengali Hindu, I have grown up eating Easter Sunday brunches and Christmas dinners at the homes of Christian friends, and breaking evening fasts with Muslim friends during the month of Ramzan/Ramadan, and being an absolute glutton during their Eid dinners and weddings too. Haleem is a popular dish which is eaten during 'Iftar,' the fast breaking evening meal during Ramzan/Ramadan. It is a nutritious dish, aromatic and with a silky texture, that is slow-cooked with lentils and meat as the main ingredients. I have never met a Muslim who will not readily share his/her meal with a hungry soul. Their doors are always open, and during festive times especially, their homes overflow with family, as well as friends and neighbours regardless of their religion. There was one time though when I had to deny myself the pleasure and honour of joining a neighbour's 'iftar' banquet due to a foolish attempt at losing weight through diet. Never again!

 

Editor’s Notes:  Not only is Shikhandin’s poem brimming with the enticement of food, but it is also culturally enticing.  An invitation to eat in the home of the host or hostess is a significant way of inviting the guest into the family circle.  It is an intimate invitation.  CAS

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From My Kitchen Window

free verse

Shikhandin

 



Beyond my little herb garden on the sill,

out of reach of my mundane routine, my dutiful

morning tick-tocks, detailing with excruciating

precision what I try to gloss over each day:

 

An old man in a pair of khaki shorts,

newspaper under one arm, plastic bag

in the other, urinating against the “No Nuisance Please”

sign on my neighbour’s compound wall.

 

A stout garden lizard’s failed

splotch of a dodge

in the path of a school boy’s

determined bicycle.

 

Two united street dogs fox-trotting

first on the path and then among the refuse

and the weeds. Unable to extricate

themselves despite the poorly aimed stone.

 

A raggedy old woman breathing

her last on the wild with grass

sidewalk. A bottle on its belly draining

its contents beside her.

 

Just another day

outside my kitchen. The world

rolling on endlessly. Searching

for everything and coming up blank.

 

I always find time to sit down

with a soothing cup of tea. Inside

its pot, the lentils bubble. I am good

at serving hot and wholesome meals.

 

Poet's Notes: I love open windows in my kitchen. The sunlight flooding in, plants growing out of chipped pottery on the sills and cupboard tops. An errant butterfly, and on occasion a sunbird or sparrow zipping in and then out. I can also see the world outside. Sometimes it is a happy world. A funny world. An indifferent world. Or a sad world. I let the emotion seep into my skin. And I sit at my dining table with my 'roughbook' for poetry, and let the ink spill. It is my way of dealing with a world I cannot change. Poetry is also a form of prayer, a way to connect with something higher than us. Chronicling one such day in my kitchen life is how I tried to make amendments on this occasion. And also, offer up my gratitude to whoever is listening out there.

 

Editor’s Notes:  A writer I much admire has advised us poets to “write cold.”  By this, she means to present the images without commentary.  The cold view out the window in this poem strikes me with pity.  The view inside the kitchen, where everything is warm and inviting, strikes me with a similar pity.  I am often confronted with the sad realization that there is little I can do to bring change.  (Sometimes, however, a little goes a long way.)  CAS

 

About the Poet: Shikhandin is the pen name of an Indian author. Her published books include, Impetuous Women (Penguin-Random House India), Immoderate Men (Speaking Tiger), The Woman on the Red Oxide Floor (Red River Story, India), After Grief – Poems (Red River, India), and Vibhuti Cat (Duckbill-Penguin-Random House India). In 2024 she was shortlisted for the Asian Prize for Short Fiction. She is a two times Pushcart nominee – Aeolian Harp 2019 (USA) and Cha: An Asian Literary Journal 2011 (Hong Kong), and a Best of the Net nominee – Yellow Arrow Publishing 2023 (USA). Her other honours include, runner up - George Floyd Short Story Contest 2020 (UK), winner - Children First Contest curated by Duckbill in association with Parag an initiative of Tata Trust in 2017, first prize - Brilliant Flash Fiction Contest 2019 (USA), runner up - Erbacce Poetry Prize 2018 (UK), winner 35th Moon Prize (Writing in a Woman's Voice: USA), first Runner up - The DNA-OoP Short Story Contest 2016 (India), second prize - India Currents Katha Short Story Contest 2016 (USA), first prize winner Anam Cara Short Fiction Competition 2012 (Ireland), long list - Bridport Poetry Prize 2006 (UK) and finalist - Aesthetica Poetry Contest 2010 (UK). Shikhandin’s prose and poetry have been widely published in India and abroad in online and print journals and anthologies.

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Halfway House

couplets

Salvatore Difalco

 

Humility chose the color scheme.

Dry catsup and gallbladder green.

 

The floors bear tarry skid marks.

A dark figure hunches at the grill.

 

Scorched garlic themes the air

and a greasy prickly scum-mist.

 

Please, maintain your sensitivity.

But also maintain objectivity.

 

Break bread with these artists 

of misery but say nothing to them.

 

Let the master of sanctimony

mutter grace before you feast.

 

He holds all the keys.

He keeps all tongues beating.

 

An honest study of everyday

half-life comes with a price.

 

Would that art could portray

the poverty of spirit without one.

 

Editor’s Notes:  Many sentences in this poem stop me.  I go back and read them again.  I find the imperatives, as well as the philosophic musings, well worth pondering.  CAS

 

Poet’s Notes:  For years I worked with at-risk youth and young adults in several institutions and facilities. The kitchen experience for them was a little different than the one I enjoyed growing up in a loving and warm Sicilian family. As I was writing another piece commemorating that very childhood, I thought about the shattered young lives I encountered in my work and how as a society and a species we have failed them.

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Summer

free verse

Salvatore Difalco

 

My mother is summer.

She stands in the kitchen smiling sweet green peas.

Her cucumber nose is not the zucchini

it seems. Ears of corn, yes, yes,

and husky garlic bulbs for earrings.

O to be blessed with her splendid hearing.

 

Her cheeks are Grimsby peaches,

rosy in fuzz and fragrant as the sun.

Her raspberry lips set off the reddening pear

of her chin. Where do I begin 

with the hair? mounted thick with vetch

and cabbage leaf and crispy cresses.

 

When she waves me into the kitchen 

with her fleshy artichoke hands 

and offers me nectarines yanked from her back, 

I feel strange but full

of thanks for my horn of plenty mother,

more summer in summer than summer.

 

Poet’s Notes:  This poem emerged from a fusion of fond memories of my childhood summers in southern Ontario and the strange fruit and vegetable paintings of the Italian artist Giuseppe Arcimboldo. My Sicilian mother had a fruit and vegetable garden in our backyard that always yielded an astonishing amount of produce for such a tiny plot. I've always associated her with warmth and bounty and something profoundly organic and real. But also fun. My mother, rest her soul, was a lot of fun.

 

Editor’s Notes: When this poem arrived in my inbox, the date coincided with Mother’s Day.  I thought, “How delightful that Difalco’s poem should meet the kitchen theme but also pay such wonderful tribute to his mother.”  This is my kind of magical realism.  I see the mother, not despite the fruits and vegetables, but because of the fruits and vegetables.  (Terri Cummings and I allowed ourselves one “editor’s pick,” and this poem is mine.)  CAS

 

About the Poet:  Salvatore Difalco is the author of five books, including The Mountie at Niagara Falls (Anvil Press), an illustrated collection of microfiction. He lives in Toronto, Canada.

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Sweeping Conjugation

free verse

Robin Woolman

 

Brushing away

the granular history

of my kitchen:

Bread crumbs, Broken glass,

Coffee grounds, Bandaid,

Your hair, My nail, Spills

from interrupted Meals,

                                Silverfish, Spider leg

I take it all in

in repeated strokes,

mediating details

into one story

to be tossed.

Sweeping

Wept

Swept

 

Poet’s Notes: The kitchen: Heart of the house. Sweeping: a meditative or nervous response to experience. Sweeping my kitchen was one of the ways I processed the heartache of a scrapped marriage.

 

Editor’s Notes:  Kitchens and bathrooms, the two rooms that require the most cleaning.  How appropriate that Woolman should remind us of the mess, the mess full of daily living and not just cooking, that fills the kitchen floor.  I also applaud the reminder of sorrow we get with the word “wept.”  The broom sweeps out the mess, but not the ache.  CAS

 

About the Poet: Robin Woolman is a teacher of physical theater in Portland, Oregon. She dates her passion for writing back to Miss Mataroli’s second grade class…More recent poems and plays have appeared in Cirque, Deep Wild, Poeming Pigeon, Westchester Review, Of a Certain Age, Tiny Seed, Ecotheo, and Oregon Poetry Calendars.

 

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What She Knows

free verse

Llewellyn McKernan

 

Tonight when the window pane

tells the moon hello, the

bread in the loaf

swells a little, though not

with pride.

 

Her hands revel in how

it feels to knead its knots,

flatten its dough, roll it from

hand to hand until

it is covered by

her signature strokes.

 

When she slips it

in the oven, she sees through

the picture window

how the heat goes on and on

in a constant current like a heart,

one that transports what's raw

to another country, where

the air is always warm and heavy

and the scent is, in this special

bread, apple-smart,

cinnamon-taught, ready for

its true-blue plate and

the steady tongue

where it sits

like the sun going down. 

 

Poet's Note:  "What She Knows" is a meditation on what the making of bread means to the author.

 

Editor’s Notes: In this quiet poem, I catch notes of hope and longing.  What is “raw” is soothed a bit, given lift and faith, in the humble task of making bread.  The poem makes me think of Robert Frost’s “Bereft,” a poem I have long admired.     CAS

 

About the Poet:  Llewellyn McKernan is a poet and children’s book writer.  She has a Master’s Degree in English

from the University of Arkansas and a Master’s Degree in Creative Writing from Brown University.  She has authored seven poetry books for adults:  Short and Simple AnnalsMany WatersLlewellyn McKernan’s Greatest HitsPencil MemoryGetting Ready To TravelThe Sound of One Tree Falling, and The Manifesto and Its Blue Ball.  Her poems have been published in many literary magazines, sixty anthologies, and has won 101 prizes, awards, and honors on state, regional, and national levels. Her writing mantra is based on a quote from the French author, Colette:  “Look long and hard at what

gives you the most pleasure, but look even longer and harder at what gives you the most pain.”

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Tehran: Friday Lunches Before and After the Revolution

free verse

Ellen Estilai 

 

Before, we kept our windows wide open.

Curtains billowed, bellowing befarma’id—welcome!

Before, together, we stemmed bunches of herbs

for braises—best of all, fenugreek for ghormeh sabzi.

Bitter if you use too much.

Better if it’s someone else’s offering,

freeing you to bask in familial bonds and banter,

besotted by fenugreek’s inviting aroma drifting

into the bustling street below,

becoming one with the neighbors’ fenugreek,

an olfactory sisterhood.

Fenugreek became a lingering guest,

Burrowing into crevices,

oozing out of pores the next day—

small bother for a blessed memory. 

 

After, windows remain closed—basteh.

No billowing, no bellowing.

A bitter taste lingers at the back of the throat,

bile of regret,

bile of what if,

bile of if only.

Bas e—enough!

Boro—begone!

Open the borrowed microwave

in the borrowed country.

Breathe in fenugreek. Blessed memory.

Befarma’id.

 

Editor’s Notes:  The kitchen, no matter its size or its appliances, is the kitchen around the world.  I am invited to smell and taste the notes the kitchen sends as offerings.  I am invited to sorrow when the kitchen is closed off, when its gift of fellowship is shuttered.  I become a citizen, however briefly, of a war-torn country.  CAS

 

About the Poet:  Ellen Estilai received her bachelor’s degree in art from the University of California at Davis and her master’s degree in English language and literature from the University of Tehran (Iran). Formerly the executive director of the Riverside Arts Council and the Arts Council for San Bernardino County, she has taught English in universities in Iran and California. A three-time Pushcart Prize nominee, she has published in numerous journals and anthologies, including New California Writing 2011Snapdragon; Ink & Letters; Heron Tree; (In)Visible Memoirs 2; HOME: Tall Grass Writers Guild AnthologyShark ReefLady Liberty LitRiddled with ArrowsSheila-Na-GigVerse Virtual, and Fiolet & Wing: An Anthology of Domestic Fabulist Poetry, among others. In 2023, she published Exit Prohibited, a memoir (Inlandia Institute) and a chapbook, The Museum of Missing Things (Jamii Publishing). Because Estilai and her husband have been immigrants in each other's countries, her writing frequently explores the joys and tribulations of the immigrant experience. 

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Long-Gone Kitchen

iambic quatrains, ABAB rhyme

Paul A. Freeman

 




Great wonders in the kitchen once occurred,

like homemade rhubarb crumble, Christmas pud,

a Sunday roast, the festive season bird

with veggies from the garden, fresh and good.

 

I washed and dried and put away the plates,

the cutlery and pots and pans to get

a schoolboy’s small allowance, then the Fates

that fixed the bonds of family, reset.

 

Canned foods for our convenience replaced

the pantry jars, while chips came ready cut;

preparing meals became a chore as taste

for junk food swelled the West’s collective gut.

 

Fast food, dishwashers, microwaves conspired

to kill the kitchen ethos of the past,

as did life’s frantic pace which has retired

those memories a bygone era cast.

 

Poet’s Notes: “Long Gone Kitchen” is an autobiographical piece. My mother used to bake from handed-down recipes, and make Sunday roast with vegetables grown in the garden, while I earned a modest amount of pocket money cleaning up the kitchen and washing up. The modern, pre-packaged world put paid to this, though I'm glad to say my son is turning out to be an accomplished cook.

 

Editor’s Notes: Freeman casts this poem in a traditional form, and that form echoes the note of change that drives his poem.  As intensely structured poems, carefully metered and rhymed, are no longer the going thing, so meals prepared from scratch, with home grown and home processed ingredients, are rarer and rarer in this hectic, somewhat tasteless, world.  CAS

 

About the Poet:  Paul A. Freeman is an English teacher. He is the author of The Movement, a dystopia-Americana novel set in a future United States. It is available from Amazon as an ebook download and as a paperback.

His first book, Rumours of Ophir, a crime novel taught at ‘O’ level in Zimbabwean high schools, was also translated into German.

In addition to having two novels, a children’s book and an 18,000-word narrative poem (Robin Hood and Friar Tuck: Zombie Killers!) commercially published, Paul is the author of numerous published short stories, poems and articles.

He works and resides in Mauritania, Africa

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Kitchen Courtroom

free verse

Dana I. Hunter

 

My father held court at the dinner table

and dictated that only chewing was allowed, 

we had to sit up straight and eat with our

right hand, even my brother, the lefty.

“Homework done?” his voice would boom, 

a choir of “yes, sir,” would rise from the four of us

as his judgmental drooping eye bore down on me

and onto my siblings, one at a time.

 

A grade below B, and you’re evicted from the table

and sent to sit in the kitchen corner without supper.

Sometimes, I wanted to plead, “Please, sir, may I have

some more?”, preferring a workhouse over his cruelty.

Being the youngest, usually, I was safe. The grade

of ‘S’ was satisfactory and sufficient for Father’s 

ears; he would pass me over and hunt the next victim,

but today was different.

 

I silently chewed with my head down until I heard

the words ‘Spelling Bee’ echo off the dingy yellow

kitchen walls. My eyes widened with fear; I knew what

came next. He stumbled over the words written on my taped-up

award that he held in his hands. I thought I had ripped it up

before I got home, hoping to save myself from his vile voice.

He began with, “This means nothing, you’re nothing!”

 

“Don’t get above yourself!” he bellowed. “You’re just

another stupid little girl.” He balled up the wrinkly, sticky

paper. He handed it to my older brother, who got up from

the kitchen table, walked to the garbage, lifted the lid,

 

and into the trash, I fell.

 

Poet’s Notes: A mixture of memories created “Kitchen Courtroom.” It was one of those poems or prose pieces that seemed to write themselves. I am grateful to be able to share this with others who may have experienced unfortunate moments. Offering the knowledge that they were not the only ones.

 

Editor’s Notes:  In a poem already tense with leashed anger, where a child’s under-performance will not be accepted, the turn in the poem astonishes me.  The little sister, who has succeeded, is berated and belittled for her success.  How does this poem make me feel?  Shaken.  CAS

 

About the Poet: Dana I. Hunter (she/her), a top poet in the NAMI NJ: Dara Axelrod Expressive Arts Poetry Contest, has been featured in Heather Stivison's Ekphrasis! Poets Respond to Art in the Gallery; featured at Pleiades Gallery in NYC; published in The Decolonial Passage Literary Magazine, The National & International Goddess Anthology 2024, and The Journal of Undiscovered Poetstable/FEAST Literary Magazine, New Jersey Bards Poetry Review, and Open Minds Quarterly. Dana has a B.A. in Communications from Upsala College. She is an African American poet living and writing in New Jersey, U.S.A.

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Reprieve

free verse

Diane Gottlieb

 



Sunday mornings,

everyone still

asleep. Dad and I would

sneak into the kitchen

to make breakfast:

Hershey’s bar, Wonder

Whites, butter in a cast iron

pan. Oh, the sweet smell

of chocolate melting between  

browning bread. I believe in God

because of those mornings. It was God

who came to me in bold bursts of flavor. God

letting me know the world is not wholly

unkind. How could it be,

when Mom was still asleep

when Dad and I were in the kitchen

bringing heaven to earth?

 

Editor’s Notes: I wonder what Mom would have said if she were awake.  Therein lies the tension in the poem.  The poem is beautiful in the simplicity of its cherished scene, but it is deepened by the possibility that this earthly heaven could be shattered by the voice of disapproval.  I’m glad, however, that faith wins out.  CAS 

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Hope

free verse

Diane Gottlieb

 

   breathes,

like batter in the bowl, 

chocolate chips 

folded into the mix,

 

        rises

like pancakes 

browning over heat 

 

        tastes

like warmth 

and late winter’s sap, 

 

        tapped

from deep 

forest maples,

 

        fills

that part of us, hungry 

for the thing with feathers 

 

        caged

in our prisons

of sadness, despair. 

What else 

 

        awakens

the Bird in the soul

stirring light, shining 

 

        love

a buttered pan, 

sweet and

 

sizzling by the stove. 

~after Emily Dickinson

 

Editor’s Notes: Gottlieb’s two poems are complementary.  They sing, it seems to me, harmony parts.  I enjoy the nod to Emily Dickinson’s poem about hope: “’Hope’ is the thing with feathers--/That perches in the soul—". (This is the poem Terri Cummings chose as her editor’s pick.)  CAS   Sometimes the past seems lost to me, but this poem reminded me that love never loses its connection to the present. So beautiful.

 

About the Poet: Diane Gottlieb is the editor of Awakenings: Stories of Body & Consciousness and the forthcoming Manna Songs: Stories of Jewish Culture & Heritage and Grieving Hope. Her writing appears in Brevity, Witness, River Teeth, Florida Review, and Huffington Post, among many other lovely places. She is the winner of Tiferet Journal’s 2021 Writing Contest in nonfiction, longlisted in 2023 and 2024 at Wigleaf Top 50, and a finalist for Hole in the Head Review’s 2024 Charles Simic Poetry Prize

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A Smoke in the Kitchen

free verse

Chrissie Anderson Peters

 

Her dishes washed,

the cornbread baking,

the next pot of coffee

percolating on the stove,

Daisy shuffles over

to the Formica table,

pulls out her rolling papers

and Prince Albert in a can.

Raises the rolling paper

to her cracked and aging lips,

she licks the edge,

wetting it down,

lifts the bright red tin,

dribbles out a thin line

of aromatic tobacco,

commences rolling,

adjusting the edge as she goes,

keeping the line taut.

Dragging a moistened finger

and pulling the end shut,

she lights it with a kitchen match,

finally time to take her smoke.

Stroking her knee,

where the prosthetic leg fits,

sparks of tobacco flying

as she inhales deeply,

dreaming for a moment

of a redbird she can wish on,

then she crushes out the cigarette

and moves on to her next chore,

because wishing and waiting

never get things done.

 

Poet’s Notes:  My great-grandmother, Granny Vance, inhabits two rooms in my memory -- her bedroom (which doubled as a sitting room), and her kitchen. That kitchen was a room of wonderment where her Hoosier cabinet became my general store and we watched for redbirds to wish on out the kitchen windows during her cigarette breaks. My great-grandfather wouldn't buy her packs of cigarettes because he said they were too expensive, so she rolled her own -- meticulously -- the same way she did everything in that kitchen.

 

Editor’s Notes:  I admire the immediacy of this scene, the accuracy of detail.  Daisy inhabits the space.  The kitchen is hers.  I’m intrigued by the way she rewards her many labors with a smoke break. CAS

 

About the Poet: Chrissie Anderson Peters lives in Bristol, Tennessee. She holds degrees from Emory & Henry College and the University of Tennessee. She has been published in or is forthcoming in Women of Appalachia Project, Red Branch Review, Untelling, Salvation South, Chicken Soup for the Soul, Cutleaf, and others. Read more at www.CAPWrites.com.

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Cooking for the Cat

free verse

Janet McCann

 

could never cook for myself,

(I) (it) did not seem worth the trouble

to chop up onions and garlic,

 

to look for seasonings on the pantry shelf,

to set out a place mat, plate, knife and fork, 

to serve myself

 

when there are so many drive through windows,

quick anonymous transactions:

here, ma’am, is your change--

 

so I tried to throw out my wok

but it sat there on top of the trash bin

like a rejected pet,

 

its surface scarred and dented

seasoned with old oils,

the handles that always were too hot to touch

 

poking out from yesterday’s news,

so I thought I would give it one more go

and I chopped up onions and garlic

 

threw in shrimp, noodles

ginger, celery, a wilted pepper,

and a burst of festive scent filled the house

 

and I said ohhh, how good to the cat,

slipped her slivers of shrimp while we watched the news--

then she played with a noodle  

 

as I wiped dry the battered wok,

put it back into the cabinet.

we were worth it.


Poet’s Note: As a solo widow who likes to cook, I often plan my dinner around the pets' preferences...


Editor’s Notes: I like how this poem catches both the tedium and the joy in cooking.  The struggle is a real one, to overcome apathy in order to experience ecstasy.  After any put-off task is resumed and completed well, a small burst of pride pays the achiever.  CAS


About the Poet: I am an ancient Texas poet who taught creative writing and other vices at Texas A&M for 47 years, retired in 2014.  My most recent book:  LIFE LIST, Wipf and Stock, 2022.

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General Submission

 





Smoke Break

free verse

John Wise

 

Dawa’s fingers, sheened black with ink,

sketch as swiftly

as eyes blink

 

when filled with cathedral dust— 

 

sketch to beat the dinner rush.

Dawa’s fingers, jet-black, jet-propulsed, 

sketch flowers lush:

 

squid tentacle orchids

that even I,

flower-blight,

can keep alive.

 

Editor’s Notes:  This poem sings to me.  How fitting that Dawa creates flowers with his inky art.  How transformational these flowers, sprinkled with a bit of cathedral dust!  CAS

 

About the Poet:  John Wise is a middle school English teacher living in Florida. Whether writing on his own or working with his students, he promotes writing that is deeply rooted in curiosity, collaboration, and the sheer joy of creating. John has poems published in Seedlings, JAKE, and Moonlit Getaway, among other publications. You can find him on BlueSky @central2nowhere.


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Frequent Contributor News

Current & Former FCs

May Soon Lee’s poem “The Emperor Penguins of Mars” appeared in DreamForge:  https://dreamforgemagazine.com/story./the-emperor-penguins-of-mars/

Also, “Reaper” appeared in Strange Horizons:  http://strangehorizons.com/wordpress/poetry/reaper.

And, “Rules for a Magic Sword” appeared in Heroic Fantasy Quarterly:  https://www.heroicfantasyquarterly.com/?p=4417.

 

Alessio Zanelli’s magazine acceptances include The Berlin Review (Germany), The Shanghai Literary Review (China), and Statement (California).

 

John C. Mannone’s awards and acceptances include Accolades for Sacred Flute (Iris Press, Feb 2024):  It is currently a top-eight-finalist for the 2025 Tennessee Book Award (also nominated for the 2025 Elgin Book Award (Science Fiction & Fantasy Poetry Association). Sacred Flute is a collection of poems infused with and inspired by Native American Indian culture, history, and legend.

https://irisbooks.com/product/sacred-flute/

 

A new release, Coffee Poems: The Art of Waking (Island of Wak-Wak Press, Apr 2025):  Coffee Poems is a chapbook collection that includes the origin of coffee, traditions, obsessions or rituals, common associations (and uncommon ones), a bit of science, mixology, metaphor, and others. https://islandofwakwak.com/coffee-poems.html

 

Awards for the 68th annual Poetry Society of Tennessee Festival poetry competitions:  4 First Place winners, 1 Second Place winner, and 4 Honorable mentions (out of 22 contests) were announced on April 26, 2025. (The 4 winning poems will be published in the anthology Tennessee Voices).

 

Charles A. Swanson has two poems in the Cur(rent) Is(sue), Is(sue) 17, of AvantAppal(achia), an ezine dedicated to avant-garde poetry, fiction, and art. https://www.avantappalachia.com

 

Terri Cummings’ narrative poem, “Moon Jumping” appeared in the Last Stanza Poetry Journal Issue 20:  Games print and ebook, Spring 2025. The book is available on Amazon.



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Forthcoming

"Digging" theme -- what we are looking for

2025 Themes and Deadlines

(Please note the new submissions' address, both here and on our Guidelines page.  The correct submissionsaddress is submissionssofe@gmail.com)


Some Guidance for the Fall "Digging" Submission Call (What We’re Looking For): 

        Our fall theme is “digging,” and the submission window opens August 1 and closes August 15 at midnight.  I’ve learned that I don’t know exactly what we’re looking for until we start reading poems.  Each time we read for a new theme, my horizons are broadened, for poets have a way of seeing a theme in ways I haven’t imagined beforehand.

Nevertheless, the safest course is always to make the theme explicit in some way.  A digger might be moving dirt with an excavator, or she might be moving clutter—inexpensive jewelry, for example—as she searches for the cameo her grandmother left her.  A digger could unearth ideas as another digger might unearth potatoes.

        I would love to see some good poems about dirt.  But I also would cherish poems that delve into history or family lore.

        The danger may lie in employing the theme as an excuse to write about something else.  Sometimes that sidewise approach seems obvious to us as readers.  We say (to ourselves) that the poem might touch on digging, but digging is not at the roots of the poem.  As we choose between many good poems, the ones that truly represent the theme of digging are the ones we dig the most.

        By the way, “digging” is also a term used in volleyball.  Who doesn’t love a good sports poem?

 

2025 Themes & Deadlines


    Season           Theme                          Submission Period


    Spring            Artifacts                        February 1-15  

(objects that carry history, memory, identification, such as message in a bottle from the past, etc.)

****



    Summer          In the Kitchen               May 1-15

(foods, customs, kitchen talk, preparation, teaching, etc.)


***


 

   Fall                  Digging                         August 1-15

(literal or figurative)

***

 

   Winter              Tension                         November 1-15

(literal or figurative, life situations, the push and pull, tension within the poem itself, the complexity of situations, etc.)


 

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SONGS OF ERETZ POETRY REVIEW

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