Issue > Poetry
Mark Zelman

Mark Zelman

Mark Zelman teaches biology and interdisciplinary studies at Aurora University. Mark's poems have appeared in regional magazines, and he is working on a chapbook illustrated by his son. Mark lives in Aurora, Illinois with his wife Carrie. When not teaching, Mark paddles and swims the cold waters of Ontario.

I Could Say

I could say how sweet summer peach honey streams    
to your heart, or that jewel weed bobs like oak
leaves on new spring pools, and one Mayfly's day holds
   one eternity.
           
How can you see bleeding ripe peaches, murky ponds, decay?
I could say that May grows rooted
in decay, and lays drained green corpses sleeping
   at the feet of June.  
       
We could say the truth is murk and mould are wed
to green and gold, and without these lovers a
poet hears no chorus and reads no living
   lyric in cold ground.

Poetry

Bruce Willard

Bruce Willard
January Bus Ride

Fiction

Mary Ann McGuigan

Mary Ann McGuigan
The Broken Place

Poetry

Catherine Pond

Catherine Pond
Eidolon