Perspectives
My poem for Day 7 of Paul Brookes’ April poetry challenge, based on all three images. You can see them here, and of course, read the poetry.
Perspectives
It’s rarely black or white,
blazing summer or winter frost,
a burst of life or cold death.
glasses are both half full and half empty,
the past is with us and gone,
the aurore butterfly is snow and sunshine,
birth is the start of dying,
dawn the prelude to sunset,
laughter what comes after tears (and vice versa).
Everything is nuanced,
a subtle shade,
a declension of hues,
Nothing is so deep and dark,
solidly steadfast, so unambiguous
and unflinchingly certain that it never changes,
except crows.
Day 7, Ekphrastic Challenge, My Poem Butterflies and Crows
Yesterday and today: Merril's historical musings
Inspired by all three works of art by artists Gaynor Kane, John Phandal Law, and Anjum Wasim Dar.
Butterflies and Crows
In the time of before
when color emerged from grey,
and butterflies swayed, seeing
blue, green, red, and yellow,
when storms erupted, and branches grew
and everything had a counterpart
in nature’s art of fractals, circles, and stars–
the sun and moon, the night and day
kept earth balanced, though
a small-winged tipped could cause a shift,
but mostly that was righted.
Now ice drips, and winds drift
in wayward tempest gales,
the trees are split, their roots cry out
and mycelium networks ache as they transmit
arboreal dying sounds.
You dream of the past, you dream of now
and in your dreams, you understand
that crows carry wisdom’s key—they warn
with caws–
even if nobody listens.
I am once again participating in Paul Brookes’ April Ekphrastic Challenge. Each…
View original post 43 more words
Day 7. Congratulations to all for achieving 7days of creativity. My annual National Poetry Month 2022 ekphrastic challenge is a collaboration between artists Gaynor Kane, John Phandal Law, Jane Dougherty, Charlotte Hamrick, Anjum Wasim Dar, and writers, Angi Plant, Tim Fellows, Math Jones, Merril D. Smith, Carrie Ann Golden, Jamie Woods, Lesley James, Lesley Curwen, Peter A., Eloise Birnam-Wood, Jen Feroze, Vicky Allen, Simon Williams, Jona Roy, Beth Brooke, Caroline Johnstone, Lynne Jensen Lampe and myself. April 7th.
Day 7.

-Gaynor Kane – Crow And Key Sculpture

-Anjum Wasim Dar – Gemini

-John Phandal Law
Perspectives
(inspired by all three images)
It’s rarely black or white,
blazing summer or winter frost,
a burst of life or cold death,
glasses are both half full and half empty,
the past is with us and gone,
the aurore butterfly is snow and sunshine,
birth is the start of dying,
dawn the prelude to sunset,
laughter what comes after tears (and vice versa).
Everything is nuanced,
a subtle shade,
a declension of hues,
nothing is so deep and dark,
solidly steadfast, so unambiguous
and unflinchingly certain that it never changes,
except crows.
-Jane Dougherty
Butterfly (JPL7)
A flash of colour
catches my distracted eye;
a trick of the light.
-Tim Fellows
AWD7 Gemini
Twins
My sis and I
Identical in every way
Except for her
Multi-personalities
-Carrie Ann Golden
Gemini
(After Anjum Wasim Dar)
This garden guardian contains multitudes –
its age rings planetary.
Oh, to be able to hold so much
With so much grace.
To be both lightning rod
and blossom cloud.
To harbour storm traumas, and yet
to be a safe place for the birds.
-Jen Feroze
In the Basement Playroom (JLP7)
Our daughter litters card table
and concrete with Barbie dolls, plastic
wigs, and a paint by number kit—
black outlines on canvas and cardboard.
Each cellophane leaf, stalk, and
flower petal waves its ticket to glory,
to paint puddled in numbered
plastic pots. But Thursdays, when
the peace lilies and hawkweed
refuse their colors, she stains glass
wing butterflies, transforms
them to yellow orange-tips
that whisper-kiss the sky.
—Lynne Jensen Lampe
The key
You battle through life
like it is purpose, intention
You break through the doors
that stand in your way
Yet sometimes it seems
you’ve forgotten to notice
When welcome awaits
where accord turns a key
-Vicky Allen
AWD7
On the eighty-third day
spring sun split black winter’s heart
goldfinch, chaffinch, wren
outsinging the popping of buds
-Simon Williams
Crow with Key
To Gaynor Kane – Crow And Key Sculpture
Key to the car
Where am I driving
Key to the door
Am I coming or going
Key to a solution
What am I solving
Key to healing
What made me sick
Key to a cell
What was my crime
Key to a gate
What am I protecting
Key to success
Why am I failing
What counts more
The key or the lock
-Barbara Leonhard
AWD, GK 7
Sheltering in a theatre, surrounded by children,
And declaring sanctuary writ large for those whose satellites know it all,
the columns topple on us,
Holding our children, even as they are written all around us.
-Lesley James
Distracted
(after JPL7)
I’m easily distracted.
And I’m genuinely sorry.
You can put in all this detail
and choose the finest vellum
it won’t matter to me
what you do in monochrome.
You know how kids will sometimes
choose the box instead of the toy?,
If you show me something bright and bold,
orange, in motion, I fly away with it:
drunken stumbling on the breeze
leaves the ground just a backdrop to wonder.
-Jamie Woods

-Math Jones
Butterflies and Crows (Inspired by all three works of art)
In the time of before
when color emerged from grey,
and butterflies swayed, seeing
blue, green, red, and yellow,
when storms erupted, and branches grew
and everything had a counterpart
in nature’s art of fractals, circles, and stars–
the sun and moon, the night and day
kept earth balanced, though
a small-winged tipped could cause a shift,
but mostly that was righted.
Now ice drips, and winds drift
in wayward tempest gales,
the trees are split, their roots cry out
and mycelium networks ache as they transmit
arboreal dying sounds.
You dream of the past, you dream of now
and in your dreams, you understand
that crows carry wisdom’s key—they warn
with caws–
even if nobody listens.
-Merril D. Smith
GK7 crow and key
No one claimed it an easy task
to find enduring truth
Neither were you told mysteries
would be unknowable
Do not carelessly miss clues which
unlock enlightenment
-Peter A.
Bios And Links
-John Phandal Law
is 68. Lives in Mexborough. Retired teacher. Artist; musician; poet. Recently included in ‘Viral Verses‘ poetry volume. Married. 2 kids; 3 grandkids
-Gaynor Kane
Gaynor Kane lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where she is a part-time creative, involved in the local arts scene. She writes poetry and is an amateur artist and photographer. In all her creative activities she is looking to capture moments that might otherwise be missed. Discover more at gaynorkane.com
Twitter @gaynorkane
Facebook @gaynorkanepoet
Instagram @gaynorkanepoet
-Anjum Wasim Dar
started drawing at St Anne’s Presentation Convent High School, Rawalpindi.
Drawing was taught as a Core subject from Kindergarten.
Anjum learnt the skill of Still Life, Sketching, Landscape Drawing, Coloring and Shading She recalled the scented wax crayons and black paper sketch books vividly.
Subject of Fine Arts at Intermediate level at Govt.College for Women Rawalpindi, was stopped by the Indo Pak War of 1965. Anjum continued her passion for art privately.
Her job as a Teacher Instructor allowed her to pursue Art work designing and preparing Thematic Bulletin Boards and Low cost teaching Aids with the Fauji Foundation Teacher’s Training Institute Rawalpindi. www.faujifoundation.org.
This won her the National Education Award 1998.
Completing a Course in Graphic Designing at NICON Academy Rawalpindi , Anjum began working as a Digital Artist, On Line, registered her Own Firm CER Creative Education Resources 2004 and is a Member of DRN Drawing Research Network UK and www.bigdraw.org.uk
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/tracey/drn/
https://sites.google.com/site/cerprofessionaldevelopment/
With her artistic skills she plans and conducts “Environment Awareness Workshops for Children” and is a member of www.unep.org and www.earthday.org
CER Participated in World Environment Day and Earth Day Programs 2011-2013
“Face of Climate Change”
Anjum loves Nature, landscapes and abstract imagery. Works with pencils, crayons and the Software ArtRage 2.0 and MyPaint.
Anjum Wasim Dar’s Art Portfolio can be accessed here:
https://www.artwanted.com/anjuartwriter/gallery/
-Merril D. Smith
lives in southern New Jersey near the Delaware River. Her poetry has been published in several poetry journals and anthologies, including Black Bough Poetry, Anti-Heroin Chic, Fevers of the Mind, and Nightingale and Sparrow. Her first full-length poetry collection, River Ghosts, is forthcoming from Nightingale & Sparrow Press. Twitter: @merril_mds Instagram: mdsmithnj Website/blog: merrildsmith.com
-Lesley James(she/her)
is a teacher and writer. She was shortlisted for Love Reading UK’s 2022 Very Short Story Award. Featured flash can be found in The Broken Spine, FullHouseLitMag and RoiFaineant. Kathryn O’Driscoll selected her poem Empty for Full House’s 2021 mental health live reading and forthcoming podcast. Brian Moses, The Dirigible Balloon and Parakeet Magazine have published some of her writing for children.
-Lynne Jensen Lampe
has poems in or forthcoming from Figure 1, Olney Magazine, Yemassee, Moist Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. Also to come is her chapbook Talk Smack to a Hurricane (Ice Floe Press, 2022) about mothers, daughters, and mental illness. She was a 2020 Red Wheelbarrow Poetry Prize finalist. Born in Newfoundland and raised in the Deep South, she lives in mid-Missouri where she edits academic books and journals. Visit her at https://lynnejensenlampe.com. Twitter: @LJensenLampe.
-Math Jones
is London-born, but is now based in Oxford. He has two books published: Sabrina Bridge, a poetry collection, from Black Pear Press (2017), and The Knotsman, a collection of verse, rhyme, prose and poetic monologue, which tell of the life and times of a C17th cunning-man. Much of his verse comes out of mythology and folklore: encounters with the uncanny and unseen. Also, as words written for Pagan ritual or as praise poems for a multitude of goddesses and gods. He is a trained actor and performs his poems widely.
-Jamie Woods
Jamie Woods is a writer from Swansea. He has had work published by Poetry Wales, Evergreen Review and The Lonely Crowd, and his poem ‘Ring the Bell’ was commended in the Hippocrates International Prize for Poetry and Medicine 2021. www.jamiewoods77.com
-Lesley James (she/her)
is a teacher and writer. She was shortlisted for Love Reading UK’s 2022 Very Short Story Award. Featured flash can be found in The Broken Spine, FullHouseLitMag and RoiFaineant. Kathryn O’Driscoll selected her poem Empty for Full House’s 2021 mental health live reading and forthcoming podcast. Brian Moses, The Dirigible Balloon and Parakeet Magazine have published some of her writing for children.
-Tim Fellows
is a writer based in Derbyshire. His debut pamphlet, Heritage, was published in 2019 by Glass Head Press.
-Carrie Ann Golden
is from the mystical Adirondack Mountains now living on a farmstead in the Red River Valley of North Dakota (USA). She writes dark fiction and poetry. A Deafblind, her work has been published in places such as GFT Press, Doll Hospital Journal, The Hungry Chimera, Asylum Ink, Piker Press, Edify Fiction and others. You can find her on her writing blog as well as Medium and Twitter.
-Paul Brookes
is a shop asst in a supermarket. Lives in a cat house full of teddy bears. First play performed at The Gulbenkian Theatre, Hull. His chapbooks include The Fabulous Invention Of Barnsley, (Dearne Community Arts, 1993). A World Where and She Needs That Edge (Nixes Mate Press, 2017, 2018) The Spermbot Blues (OpPRESS, 2017), Please Take Change (Cyberwit.net, 2018), As Folk Over Yonder ( Afterworld Books, 2019). He is a contributing writer of Literati Magazine and Editor of Wombwell Rainbow Interviews, book reviews and challenges. Had work broadcast on BBC Radio 3 The Verb and, videos of his Self Isolation sonnet sequence featured by Barnsley Museums and Hear My Voice Barnsley. He also does photography commissions. Most recent is a poetry collaboration with artworker Jane Cornwell: “Wonderland in Alice, plus other ways of seeing”, (JCStudio Press, 2021)
NaPoWriMo 2022 Day 6
The ballad of the curious tourist
For Paul Brookes’ poetry challenge, a poem inspired by paintings by Anjum Wasim Dar

and Gaynor Kane. Visit Paul’s blog to read the rest of the responses.

The ballad of the curious tourist
I thought I saw a city, shining in the plain,
I thought I saw a desert, waiting for the rain,
I thought I found a paradise, but all I found was pain.
I saw a destination in a glossy magazine,
I saw exotic places where my friends have never been,
I looked behind the décor, saw what wasn’t to be seen.
Among neon lights and laughter hung a warning in the air,
Don’t stray. Beyond the glitter there is danger, so take care—
your happiness providers, in their misery laid bare.
Day 6 Ekphrastic Challenge, My Poem, Remember
Yesterday and today: Merril's historical musings
Inspired by GK6, “City Painting”
Remember
Remember the night sky, that night—
remember that night–
when the sky was filled with swirls of ancient light,
remember that ancient light spiraling,
like nautilus shells floating in a sunset sea,
remember the spirals’ colors reflected—gold, silver, blue, red–
a painting in the river,
remember the river,
with its upside-down world of buildings and light—
remember that light, that night, the colors
that night when we were in love–
remember.
I am once again participating in Paul Brookes’ April Ekphrastic Challenge. Each day, I will post my poem(s) here. You can see the art and read the other responses by going to Paul’s site here.
The artists are Gaynor Kane, John Phandal Law, and Anjum Wasim Dar. Thank you for your wonderful and inspiring art!
Also linking this to dVerse.
Legacy #Poetry #NaPoWriMo #NationalPoetryMonth
A writer & her adolescent muse
Throughout the month of April, I am taking part of the annual Ekphrastic Challenge over on The Wombwell Rainbow – hosted by Paul Brooks.
This Challenge is a collaboration between three artists and nearly a dozen writers including myself.
**********
April 5th

Legacy
I remember
A picture that hung on
My Grandmother’s wall
Of a tree on a farmstead
The photograph looked old, weathered
I’d studied it more closely
It was an image of days long gone
A time before my parents
Yet an intense nostalgia swept
Over me
I remember
Asking my grandmother about that tree
Was it still there?
Nay, she said, only its stump remained
That tree, she went on, was known as
The Pioneer – once a celebrated icon
Back in the day
It was already ancient when the territory was clearcut
Who knew what history it saw
Before man stepped…
View original post 87 more words
Day 6. My annual National Poetry Month 2022 ekphrastic challenge is a collaboration between artists Gaynor Kane, John Phandal Law, Anjum Wasim Dar, and writers, Angi Plant, Tim Fellows, Math Jones, Merril D. Smith, Carrie Ann Golden, Lesley James, Lesley Curwen, Peter A., Eloise Birnam-Wood, Jen Feroze, Vicky Allen, Simon Williams, Jamie Woods, Jona Roy, Beth Brooke, Caroline Johnstone, Lynne Jensen Lampe and myself. April 6th.
Day 6.

-John Phandal Law

-Gaynor Kane – City Painting

-Anjum Wasim Dar
The ballad of the curious tourist
(Inspired by paintings by Anjum Wasim Dar and Gaynor Kane)
I thought I saw a city, shining in the plain,
I thought I saw a desert, waiting for the rain,
I thought I found a paradise, but all I found was pain.
I saw a destination in a glossy magazine,
I saw exotic places where my friends have never been,
I looked behind the décor, saw what wasn’t to be seen.
Among neon lights and laughter hung a warning in the air,
Don’t stray. Beyond the glitter there is danger, so take care—
Your happiness providers, in their misery laid bare.
-Jane Dougherty
Mapping
I learned there was a map
leading to the heart of who you are, so
I followed
threads and trails
delicate spider silk
holloways
desire lines
currents and capillaries
every untouched way
each worn down path
opened before me
the ease of it
unanchored me, shook me
I chose a harder road
denied myself
over and over and over
I chose starvation brae
fell down on the upward trudge
to find you
picked gravel from proud wounds
a blackbird sang out laughter:
“so much agony and wreck –
I wonder
have you considered the lilies?”
-Vicky Allen
City
From the bridge the city seems remote,
lit but empty, reflected in the blackness
of the river.
It masks the stars, denies the moon.
-Tim Fellows
City Lights GK6
There is a mirror world that floats
on the surface of the river.
In it we see ourselves:
fragments of light;
we break and move on the
glassy darkness of the water,
swim, bask, like Narcissus,
in the reflection of ourselves.
Above us, stars blaze in the night sky,
-Beth Brooke
City on a Hill (AWD6 + GK6)
Sulfur dunes grasp at tsunami blue.
Morning sun sings of heaven.
The air bleeds white,
earth-powders the city—
an erasure. A watermark
on varnished wood. We hide
our faces from what we hope
heralds anything but God,
an urge to believe.
Sky and land meet, fold
into the only green we see
when bells ring, doors open,
we emerge from dwellings
slowly fading into dust.
—Lynne Jensen Lampe
GK6
city night the river reflecting
awake on the grass we watch the stars spiral
my hand in your hand
the morning need never come
-Simon Williams
Freudian Pollination
(after JPL6)
The deep purple blooms, open,
inviting, bees swarm to pollinate,
the iris pulls at my pupils,
widening, stretching.
Iris sibirica,
Rorschach, Freud:
I can’t unsee it.
My mind rolls
past the flower bed, into the gutter
with a decomposing rose,
still wrapped in cellophane,
that a man bought for a quid
and gave to a woman in a club
in the hope of having sex.
-Jamie Woods
IRIS (JPL6)
boudoir of dark velvet
offers louche caresses
in plush tones from plum
to mauve whose climax
is a striped threshold
seducing dazed bees
to venture where no
nectar dwells
-Lesley Curwen
Combined Response to GK6 and JPL6
After years of vigilance
avoiding the effect of the spores
finally they announce
on screens we are forced to watch indoors
that there is no defence —
nothing can be done to protect us any more.
The fortified appliances
which uproot the evil plants from forest floors
have proved impotent,
as accelerated reproduction outstrips their best efforts.
So, now the essence
of our leaders’ message is No longer hide —
they tell us it now makes sense
to take our masks off, breathe in the outside
air and accept the consequence,
which for some will be lethal – others will survive.
Those who live will experience
a permanent hallucinatory ride.
No longer capable of independent
thought but we, the fortunate living, shall have fireworks and colours.
-Peter A.
An Untitled Lune (AWD6)
Land is gold
Famers primed for the harvest
Gathering enemy tanks
-Carrie Ann Golden
The Rainbow Bridge
To AWD6’s abstract painting
You came to us, broken,
Probably tossed out because of your moods,
The grouchy nips,
The claws gently attached to our skin,
A reminder to pay attention,
Not to hold you too long,
Touch your back,
Or budge in the bed,
Disturbing your sleep.
Oh how you talked and talked,
Revealing your traumatic stories,
So we named you Saga,
Tolerated the outcries
Of your sad soul. Taught you to
Trust in us.
After my surgeries,
You stayed with me in bed,
Guarding the door.
The day you left the bed
Was the day I knew I could.
You loved the music students of all ages
And sometimes coiled up in their instrument cases
Or rested in a cushy pet bed by the front door
Watching them come and go.
We’d warn the kids to check with you first
Before petting you,
“We call him 2-Pet.”
One father didn’t listen,
Petted you a third time,
And you bitch slapped his
Three times on his face.
Whack! Whack! Whack!
Hard and fast, but without claws.
What you carried made you ill
With cancer and infections.
At one point you were down to two pounds,
So I fed you every hour
Until you were back up to ten.
But the My little old man.
You’ve fought so long. You stumble,
Looking for your glasses.
When I call for your name,
I speak to the deaf.
I coax you to keep eating,
Scratch your head,
Pet you. You still purr
But you’re too weak to stand.
You’re fighting the inevitable.
I say, “We love you. Let go
When it’s time.”
And maybe it’s time
For me
To let go.
-Barbara Leonhard
GK6
Civilian corridors. Good thing, right?
Firing will stop for Evacuation of Civilians.
Cease fire. Cease thought. Press resume.
War picks up its knitting:
The Old Man’s Back Again.
-Lesley James
Remember (Inspired by GK6, “City Painting”)
Remember the night sky, that night—
remember that night–
when the sky was filled with swirls of ancient light,
remember that ancient light spiraling,
like nautilus shells floating in a sunset sea,
remember the spirals’ colors reflected—gold, silver, blue, red–
a painting in the river,
remember the river,
with its upside-down world of buildings and light—
remember that light, that night, the colors
that night when we were in love–
remember.
-Merril D. Smith
6. [un(en)titled AWD6]
There’s a fire above the blue,
above the yellow wheat,
above the smeared rubble.
A vying of flags,
an intrusion of white,
monolith high over small town
made smaller.
The wide sky dominates,
calling fields to grow again.
-Math Jones
The Ruin (A version of the anglo-saxon)
Cracking wall-stone ragged wi yonks
Battlements brok, tall uns work laced.
Roofs a ruin, towers brought dahn,
brok barred gate, rimed plaster,
walls gob open, ragged up, destroyed,
age worn. Earth-grip holds
prahd builders, flitted, long since,
hard grasp o’ grave, past hundred generations
of folk passed. Yon wall outlasted,
lichen-hoary, red-raw, stood up t’batter,
one reign atter another; high arch nah felled
wall-stone still stands, weapon hacked,
by grim-grahnd flies.
…
Mood quickened mind, and mason,
skilled in rahned-building, bahned wall-base,
wondrously wi iron.
Bright were halls, many the baths,
High the gables, great the joyful yammer,
many mead-hall pleasures full
’til fate t’ grand o’erturned it all.
Slaughter spread wide, pestilence arose,
and death flitted wi all them brave men
Their bulwarks broken, their halls med desolate,
cities crumbled, menders int grahnd. And so halls are empty,
curved arch sheds its tiles,
ripped from roof. Decay brung dahn,
brok to rubble. Where once many a warrior,
heart held high, gold-bright, gleamin splendour,
prahd an wine-flushed, shone in armour,
scanned a treasure o’ silver, precious gems,
riches o’ pearl…
in yon bright city of broad rule.
Stone courts once stood, an hot streams fetched forth,
wide floods o’ watta, surrahnded by a wall,
in its bright breast, there where baths were,
hot in middle.
Hot streams ran o’er hoary stone
into ring
past allus a ruin
an now allus a ruin o’ past
-Paul Brookes
Bios And Links
-John Phandal Law
is 68. Lives in Mexborough. Retired teacher. Artist; musician; poet. Recently included in ‘Viral Verses‘ poetry volume. Married. 2 kids; 3 grandkids
-Gaynor Kane
Gaynor Kane lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where she is a part-time creative, involved in the local arts scene. She writes poetry and is an amateur artist and photographer. In all her creative activities she is looking to capture moments that might otherwise be missed. Discover more at gaynorkane.com
Twitter @gaynorkane
Facebook @gaynorkanepoet
Instagram @gaynorkanepoet
-Anjum Wasim Dar
started drawing at St Anne’s Presentation Convent High School, Rawalpindi.
Drawing was taught as a Core subject from Kindergarten.
Anjum learnt the skill of Still Life, Sketching, Landscape Drawing, Coloring and Shading She recalled the scented wax crayons and black paper sketch books vividly.
Subject of Fine Arts at Intermediate level at Govt.College for Women Rawalpindi, was stopped by the Indo Pak War of 1965. Anjum continued her passion for art privately.
Her job as a Teacher Instructor allowed her to pursue Art work designing and preparing Thematic Bulletin Boards and Low cost teaching Aids with the Fauji Foundation Teacher’s Training Institute Rawalpindi. www.faujifoundation.org.
This won her the National Education Award 1998.
Completing a Course in Graphic Designing at NICON Academy Rawalpindi , Anjum began working as a Digital Artist, On Line, registered her Own Firm CER Creative Education Resources 2004 and is a Member of DRN Drawing Research Network UK and www.bigdraw.org.uk
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/tracey/drn/
https://sites.google.com/site/cerprofessionaldevelopment/
With her artistic skills she plans and conducts “Environment Awareness Workshops for Children” and is a member of www.unep.org and www.earthday.org
CER Participated in World Environment Day and Earth Day Programs 2011-2013
“Face of Climate Change”
Anjum loves Nature, landscapes and abstract imagery. Works with pencils, crayons and the Software ArtRage 2.0 and MyPaint.
Anjum Wasim Dar’s Art Portfolio can be accessed here:
https://www.artwanted.com/anjuartwriter/gallery/
-Merril D. Smith
lives in southern New Jersey near the Delaware River. Her poetry has been published in several poetry journals and anthologies, including Black Bough Poetry, Anti-Heroin Chic, Fevers of the Mind, and Nightingale and Sparrow. Her first full-length poetry collection, River Ghosts, is forthcoming from Nightingale & Sparrow Press. Twitter: @merril_mds Instagram: mdsmithnj Website/blog: merrildsmith.com
-Lesley James(she/her)
is a teacher and writer. She was shortlisted for Love Reading UK’s 2022 Very Short Story Award. Featured flash can be found in The Broken Spine, FullHouseLitMag and RoiFaineant. Kathryn O’Driscoll selected her poem Empty for Full House’s 2021 mental health live reading and forthcoming podcast. Brian Moses, The Dirigible Balloon and Parakeet Magazine have published some of her writing for children.
-Lynne Jensen Lampe
has poems in or forthcoming from Figure 1, Olney Magazine, Yemassee, Moist Poetry Journal, and elsewhere. Also to come is her chapbook Talk Smack to a Hurricane (Ice Floe Press, 2022) about mothers, daughters, and mental illness. She was a 2020 Red Wheelbarrow Poetry Prize finalist. Born in Newfoundland and raised in the Deep South, she lives in mid-Missouri where she edits academic books and journals. Visit her at https://lynnejensenlampe.com. Twitter: @LJensenLampe.
-Math Jones
is London-born, but is now based in Oxford. He has two books published: Sabrina Bridge, a poetry collection, from Black Pear Press (2017), and The Knotsman, a collection of verse, rhyme, prose and poetic monologue, which tell of the life and times of a C17th cunning-man. Much of his verse comes out of mythology and folklore: encounters with the uncanny and unseen. Also, as words written for Pagan ritual or as praise poems for a multitude of goddesses and gods. He is a trained actor and performs his poems widely.
-Lesley James (she/her)
is a teacher and writer. She was shortlisted for Love Reading UK’s 2022 Very Short Story Award. Featured flash can be found in The Broken Spine, FullHouseLitMag and RoiFaineant. Kathryn O’Driscoll selected her poem Empty for Full House’s 2021 mental health live reading and forthcoming podcast. Brian Moses, The Dirigible Balloon and Parakeet Magazine have published some of her writing for children.
-Tim Fellows
is a writer based in Derbyshire. His debut pamphlet, Heritage, was published in 2019 by Glass Head Press.
-Carrie Ann Golden
is from the mystical Adirondack Mountains now living on a farmstead in the Red River Valley of North Dakota (USA). She writes dark fiction and poetry. A Deafblind, her work has been published in places such as GFT Press, Doll Hospital Journal, The Hungry Chimera, Asylum Ink, Piker Press, Edify Fiction and others. You can find her on her writing blog as well as Medium and Twitter.
-Paul Brookes
is a shop asst in a supermarket. Lives in a cat house full of teddy bears. First play performed at The Gulbenkian Theatre, Hull. His chapbooks include The Fabulous Invention Of Barnsley, (Dearne Community Arts, 1993). A World Where and She Needs That Edge (Nixes Mate Press, 2017, 2018) The Spermbot Blues (OpPRESS, 2017), Please Take Change (Cyberwit.net, 2018), As Folk Over Yonder ( Afterworld Books, 2019). He is a contributing writer of Literati Magazine and Editor of Wombwell Rainbow Interviews, book reviews and challenges. Had work broadcast on BBC Radio 3 The Verb and, videos of his Self Isolation sonnet sequence featured by Barnsley Museums and Hear My Voice Barnsley. He also does photography commissions. Most recent is a poetry collaboration with artworker Jane Cornwell: “Wonderland in Alice, plus other ways of seeing”, (JCStudio Press, 2021)
Badger moon
My contribution to Paul Brookes’ April poetry challenge. You can see the painting prompts and read the poetry here.
Badger moon
(a Badger’s hexastitch inspired by AWD’s Secret Flower and GK’s Badger)
No moon,
but pale flowers
shine among hedge shadows,
light the way for badger
and silver-coat
vixen.