New Directions, 2026
daydreaming w/ Bob Arnold
Instructions on How to Assemble
Your Diagnostic Potato
After I inflated the car and watched it float over the
meadow, I heard a hissing in my left foot.
*
Then the streetlight buried its face in a blanket of moths.
*
Unable to find a spare bed, he spread out on a slice of
bread, pulling the leaf of wilted lettuce over him.
*
That minute has been following me for three days.
*
Once you've unloaded my voice into your speech program,
I can assure you that we'll become the best of friends.
*
Hair will tolerate nearly anything— except atonal weather.
*
He would often talk to his money. At the vending machine,
before he slid his dollar bill into the slot he'd say, Reggie want
to take a little ride?
*
For some unknown reason, Van Gogh never painted a
portrait of his kidney.
*
Even as we chatted, we could hear our teeth aging faster
than our words.
*
Should you find me slumped and shrinking, please plug my
body-unit into the nearest electric outlet.
*
I speak crooked not because I fear the straight razor, but for
all the mangled shapes left along the oral highway.
*
The instruction manual for assembling the diagnostic potato
said nothing about how to blind its eyes.
*
List my accomplishments now, before the night lays its eggs
in the seam on my coat.
____________________________________
John Bradley
Planetary Sway
Aphorisms for the
Everyday Emergency
Bottlecap Press 2026
Photo by Jana Brubaker
If the End of the World
through an open window
smoke settling in the leaves
like a bell ringing
Coming Across A Horned Toad
when I saw a horned toad
watch wildfire on juniper corpse
its eyes mattered pitched
and smoldered open
its name echoed small blood
a room full of breathing
a fire-caught voice
the body is a river is a body
horizon shrouded suddenly
tongue carried into mountain
into memory veined dusk bone spur
a moon trail touch-lit
another cathedral
another paint coat cracking
another
another
I have a tin can for sky
settled in open prisms
prisms between storm
and a god
I still see clouds still
over valley dirt afternoons
in December
when evening turns a dark shore
everything tall
through the pinons
I take note
because it comes back
comes lunar becomes
ash altered in spilled morning
because bloom
because white trees
because rope soot
a river's winded teeth
placid silver
and ankle-deep
under baptized skies
of black dirt
I hear morning
shell blue
and there a horned toad
its skin its flat time
its spine its arrowhead
pollen on its back
or is it sleet rain
braiding along
a dense prayer
I carry morning
_______________________
Jake Skeets
Horses
Milkweed Editions 2026
IN THE NORDIC
palm grove of deconsecrated churches,
forced laughter
the city in the palm,
charred life
YOU CAN'T WITHSTAND this winter
modestly
that innocent mud
and with shoes in hand
and naked you cross
that square,
traveling across squares.
LERMON HILL: IMPECCABLE
solitude! imbued with light
I am tonight: not dark
the green estate or ecstatic
the violet march towards
vendetta . . .
THE YOUNG, THEIR roses
akin to you: the young
their roses, akin
to me: the young, their
faults, akin to ours
YOUR WHITE HANDS
forgiving complaints of the poor
or forcing complaints
I play mute bells.
ROSES TIDIED UP
forgettable loneliness
meticulous farmer
best in the world
recognizing yourself as a tank
of covert nullity
spent crushing
death solitude
all the more valuable
if thinly I'm marble.
I'VE REMOVED EACH light
downplayed your spring
his combing his hair.
That indifferent land
and where are you,
born with science.
Seeing myself written on the walls
I crossed the islet.
OUT OF TUNE life,
it blows itself out
hope is plucked
hard to piece itself together
wants nothing to do with it
thoughts are oval then, or opaque.
ONCE THE GOAL is achieved
little refuge in my candid sky
splendid unused sun
our life shivering
with borrowed dismay
if he doesn't speed up I'll compete.
______________________________________
Amelia Rosselli
Document
translated from the Italian by
Roberta Antognini & Deborah Woodard
World Poetry, 2025
_____________________________________
Many of the usual suspects show forth and are treated with
Robbie camaraderie — although Robertson's sweet-talk
doesn't move an inch with Hells Angel Sweet William
(Bill Fritsch) and lover of poet Lenore Kandel and a
somewhat troubadour of two wheels himself, who isn't
taking kindly learning that his poem has been withdrawn
from a tribute reading during the concert film "The Last Waltz,"
whereas both fellow San Fransisco laureates
Lawrence Ferlinghetti & Michael McClure
remain on board. If you are interested,
you can dig up on-line the full reading
by Sweet William, and later in Robertson's book
find out just why Fritsch is dragging his leg across
the stage to the microphone. For more of Sweet
William, see the Maysles brothers film "Gimme
Shelter" where the Angel, once again,
captivates the stage.
[BA]
Crown 2026