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The Distance by Ross Thompson

  In the dream you are tearing up the beach at full steam, scampering hell for leather  towards some magical spot that has caught your eye. You have forgotten your parents and the leash you were in charge of holding.  The dog, emboldened by newfound freedom,  tries to bolt but I grab hold of her nape before she can escape. You, however,  have become a sun-blurred whirr of motion, rattling pell-mell, your outline turned golden and fuzzy, indistinct. I foolishly  think that you will soon turn and wave and shout, “Daddy, keep up!” but your legs have become a pinwheel of bare skin, your arms churning, your determined fists punching through air, clouds  and the stratosphere towards Rainbow Road,  Columbia, Endor and Solitude.  The universe is yours to grab and hold with both hands. Never come back down to land. --- Ross Thompson is a writer from Bangor, Northern Ireland. His debut poetry collection  Threadi...

Where We Fight by John Grey

These are the options.  Volunteer for another mission with real desert and real snipers and real roadside bombs or stay in his room, turn down the lights, guzzle beer after beer. Of course, he could always date cheerleaders. He was friendly with one or two before he signed up. Pretty blondes in short skirts doing backflips in the end-zone. But he’s lost their numbers.  He’s also lost the kid that scribbled them down. Why not get a job? He had one stacking shelves in school vacations. He could pick up where he left off, stacking coup cans  one atop the other, constructing the first Heinz skyscraper  in all of creation. But the damn thing toppled, crashed to the floor, made a noise louder than a rear-ender.  And he was fired. So that wouldn’t work. But he could always move back with his folks. They’d take him in for sure. At least, they would if it was ten years ago.  But now, the choice is a nursing home or a cemetery.  So it’s sign up again or stay put...

Judy's Hand by Jennie Farley

It was a wooden hand poking out from a box of rags in the sale room on viewing day that made her pause.  She lifted a rag and saw a painted doll with bold blue eyes which seemed to follow her around as she paused to admire pretty brooches, pictures, a silver vase. Drawn back to the box for another look, this time she saw a face she knew from childhood summers on Filey beach - that florid-faced creature  inside the striped pink kiosk,  his hooked red nose, chin sharp as a knife. --- Jennie Farley  is a published poet, teacher and workshop leader living in Cheltenham. Her work has featured in many poetry magazines and been performed at Festivals. Her first  collection is  My Grandmother Skating (Indigo Dreams Publishing 2016)  followed by  Hex (IDP 2018).  She founded and runs  NewBohemians@CharltonKings,  a popular arts club providing poetry, performance and music throughout the year. You can find out more information about Jennie's ...

Box by Andrew Shields

Our food is in a triple-layered box that we can't open. Each layer has a hole for things to fall through, while the sides have slits that we can put our fingers in, or sticks we've stripped the bark from with our teeth. We poke at carrots or at apples left inside, to slide them to the holes so they will fall and fall and fall into our waiting hands. And so we live on fruit and vegetables and bark, until the box is finally empty. Later, it's full again, and we begin our fingering and poking work once more. --- Andrew Shields lives in Basel, Switzerland. His collection of poems "Thomas Hardy Listens to Louis Armstrong" was published by Eyewear in 2015. His band Human Shields released the album "Somebody's Hometown" in 2015 and the EP "Défense de jouer" in 2016.

Disappearing Act by Sue Finch

Your disappearing act is staged for the time when clouds of cow breath  rise above early Autumn mists. It begins beneath seven geese  flying a low ‘v’. That breath  and those birds  are your conjurors. What they puff and drop will take hold in you, carry you to the coast where your edge waits where lonely people stand to send out their cries. What is shallow now in your lungs can be flung wide above the sea, made small between water and air. --- Sue Finch lives with her wife in North Wales. Her first published poem appeared in  A New Manchester Alphabet  in 2015 whilst studying for her MA with Manchester Metropolitan University. Her work has also appeared in a number of online magazines including:  The Interpreter’s House ,  Ink, Sweat and Tears, Dear Reader  and  One Hand Clapping . Her debut collection, ‘ Magnifying Glass’ , was published in October 2020 with  Black Eyes Publishing UK .

Metamorphosis by Michele Witthaus

She’s letting herself go,  unsettling her friends with the bare-faced smile she deploys  these days. She’s dropping the habits that fenced her in for years, ignoring her scales and letting those killer heels  gather dust. She’s letting herself go further than she’s ever dared, right on out the door, back to the self she’d left  behind. --- Michele comes to poetry from a journalistic background. Her first short collection, ‘From a Sheltered Place’, was published in August 2020 by Wild Pressed Books. She also has poems in a variety of anthologies and other publications. She is a member of Leicester Writers’ Club and is the 2020 winner of both the Club’s Ena Young Award for Poetry and the Chris D’Lacy Endeavour Award.

Her way by Michele Witthaus

(a poem for Ella Fitzgerald)   Her voice is a way out of the ghetto, the gutter, the likely fate of a poor black girl in New York City.   Her voice is a way in to the sounds she’s already formed in her head, the rhythms that beat, beat, beat in her heart.   Her voice is a way past the doormen who would block her path, questioning her right to own the night.   Her voice is a way through pain and loss and despair, connecting her to the pulse of life.   Her voice is her way of speaking to the world depths of meaning beyond words.   Her voice is her way. --- Michele comes to poetry from a journalistic background. Her first short collection, ‘From a Sheltered Place’, was published in August 2020 by Wild Pressed Books. She also has poems in a variety of anthologies and other publications. She is a member of Leicester Writers’ Club and is the 2020 winner of both the Club’s Ena Young Award for Poetry and the Chris D’Lacy Endeavour Award. ...