Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Tuesday poem #360 : MLA Chernoff : 4am Squelch (Building Most Hidden Underground Tunnel House By Ancient Skills In Deep Jungle TIMELAPSE)



























[click to enlarge]


MLA Chernoff (@citation_bb) is a non-binary Jewish pome machine, a postmodern neomarxist, and somehow a PhD candidate at The Neoliberal University of York University. Their first collection of pomes, delet this, was released by Bad Books in 2018. Their second collection, TERSE THIRSTY, is now available through Gap Riot Press. Have a nice day and please stay hydrated.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Tuesday poem #359 : Jónína Kirton : his and hers



his…

to be invited and then uninvited
to his grandson’s birthday
how long must one pay
for youthful transgressions
for not measuring up
to expectations
forged in late night chats
with girlfriends
before texting
before email
before he knew better

hers…

no one wants to know her body aches
that her shoes are not a fashion statement
that words, without a home, linger on her tongue
that between dreams a dampening has taken place
and there is a garden path between them
his love now expressed in the form of a cheque

theirs…

between them there is enough regret to go around
there are the blameless    grandchildren    victims
of a crime no one committed
but all witnessed




Jónína Kirtona Red River Métis/Icelandic poet, author, facilitator and manuscript consultant currently lives in the unceded territory of the Musqueam, Swxwú7mesh, and Tsleil-Waututh. A graduate of the SFU Writer’s Studio in 2007, her first collection of poetry, page as bone ~ ink as blood, was released in April 2015 with Talonbooks. It has been described as “restorative, intimate poetry, drawing down ancestral ideas into the current moment’s breath.” A late blooming poet she was sixty-one when she received the 2016 Vancouver’s Mayor’s Arts Award for an Emerging Artist in the Literary Arts category. Her second collection of poetry, An Honest Woman, was a finalist in the 2018 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize. 

The Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

Tuesday poem #358 : Henry Israeli : CAPITALIST DREAM SONG


It was never personal, just business
and we all know business must be free
for that’s the meaning of liberty

That’s the way the buildings reach the sky
That’s the way Wall Street scores its high
That’s the way to make a billion while a billion die

I like it when my stocks pay dividends
I like it when I crush my friends
I need to know how the world ends

To watch it in its final throws is a miracle
hurricanes rising like giant ghosts from the sea

half the nation drowning in water
the other half in debt

          My pastor climbs the pulpit
and praises my donation
He assures me of divine coronation

I climb to heaven
on the corpses of lesser men



Henry Israeli is a dual citizen of Canada and the United States and lives in Philadelphia with his wife and daughters. His latest book is Our Age of Anxiety, is the winner of the White Pine Press Poetry Prize. His previous books are god’s breath hovering across the waters, (Four Way Books: 2016), Praying to the Black Cat (Del Sol: 2010), and New Messiahs (Four Way Books: 2002). He is also the translator of three books by Albanian poet Luljeta Lleshanaku, and the founder and publisher of Saturnalia Books.

the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan

Tuesday, February 04, 2020

Tuesday poem #357 : Emily Lu : SUPER EASY



Consider this my letter of resignation.
I have collapsed semi-prone into resting
orbitals of a runny yolk disposition
I never asked for. This
complete neglect in finding hard targets.
What else do you want
me to explain? Every meal I eat
alone is severance
is rice-hydrate, irreversible. Already
mid-month by the windowsill I remain non-fixed
hyperproductive still life overgrown. Can I
protest what            I see sprouted out from
sunstruck                        skin. I won’t dress-up
part-time.                          My next steps        
slow                                  brimming, brush
slack                              -jawed. I don’t
even                             have
to think
to get
this
right.






This poem first appeared in Sine Theta Mag


Emily Lu earned her B.Sc. at the University of Toronto and her M.D. at Queen’s University. Currently completing her postgraduate training in psychiatry, she lives in London, Ontario. Night Leaves Nothing New (Baseline Press) is her first chapbook.

The Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan