The Fringe 999 Poetry Forum

Volume 3, Issue 1, October 2025

Submissions Open August 1 and continue up to 12 midnight on September 11, 2025.

Volume 2, Issue 1, April, 2025


Blood Oath
by Dee Allen

You're cradled in my arms now. You're safe from harm. Nothing will touch you now. I have to admit, this is the first time I ever had a human partner. Usually, your kind would run to the hills at the very sight of me. Even you were startled and thought of me as a monster when we first laid eyes on each other. Now you've accepted me. The whole being. Two horns, cloven hooves, shining eyes, animal face and all. I've come to know your true heart as you have seen mine. Look at what the other humans have done to your cat! Look at the damage they've done to your dress, your leg, your wrists! Is this how they treat their own? You could let it all go and live the rest of your days around them—as a cripple. But there's another way for you. Come to my world and live. Side by side. You must admit, the woods are quite enchanting, especially the oldest tree with its tall height and bright red leaves. The woods have a magic the cold, harsh human world lacks. And there's one way to be there: Drink. From the flowing gash in my hand. My blood mixed with your blood will renew your strength, renew your legs and body to working order and sharpen up your senses. You will finally be above this place of torment, this violent village. But I must warn you. Not to scare you, but to educate you on what lies ahead of this current path. The choice must be heartfelt and yours because

If you walk with the beast you become the beast.

Mother Earth has sent you something wild and deadly. Are you ready?  

W: 1.17.25
[ Inspired by the novel Slewfoot, written and illustrated by Brom. ]

Author Bio
African-Italian performance poet based in Oakland, California. Active in creative writing & Spoken Word since the early 1990s. Author of 10 books--including Elohi Unitsi, Discovery and his newest, The Mansion--and 78 anthology appearances.

The old library
by Joseph E. Arechavala

The old library stands on the corner
Ornately decorated stonework and cornices 
The cornerstone reads July 4, 1904 in Roman style script
I think of the elegance of the Era
Dark woodwork, elaborately carved Roman features 
But the inside is stripped down to bare brick
I see it as I peer through the space
That used to be a window

I get a feeling this is a metaphor for my life

Shortly before this I had met a prophet
Who told me, on this anniversary of 
My baby niece's death
That God has a plan for my life

I wonder if these are related

(Very depressed this day, walking somewhere from the homeless shelter, I met this man who greatly encouraged me.)

Author Bio
Joseph E. Arechavala is a lifelong resident of NJ and graduate of Rutgers University, and has had many poems and stories published, including the novel Darkness Persists, available on Amazon. He is currently working on an anthology of short stories and poems.

Earliest Snowfall Soup
by Tabitha Dial 

Mom loved how the snow made everything look.

Take one email and one August of wildfires.
Stir in a response about your mother dying.

Condolences are immediate necessary props. 

Allow one boyfriend to drive all night. 
Fly to Colorado and be forgiven for forgetting
to tell him to pack his jeans for his first visit.

Sit with your father.
Stay overnight.
Complete paperwork, review the catalog of urns, 
revise the wordcount on the obituary. 

Allow your brother to take you back
down the familiar stretch of road. 

At the last intersection, wait until one flake 
lands on the windshield.
Turn three times until stopping in the driveway.

Author Note: This poem chronicles the early process of sharing the death of my mother, confronting our loss with loved ones. The earliest snowfall on Colorado record began when we returned from the funeral home. Distilled over time, this poem finally took the language of a recipe. 

Author Bio
Tabitha Dial (she/her) lives an hour away from everywhere in Central Jersey. A Tarot and Tea Leaf Reader, she authored two metaphysical nonfiction books-- “Creative Divination: Read Tea Leaves and Develop your Personal Code” (2018) and “Cheese Astrology: A Weekly Guide” (2025). Find her at www.northstarmuse.com or @tabithadial on bluesky, etc.

Ricordo Fantasma
by Megan Duffy

                        Palazzo Chigi-Saracini, Siena
				                    after Montale

	    Today is the kind of day 
to pull some breath from 
the lungs of this city,
a bit of long-ago air
scented with grapevines 
             that once twisted here.

             Look, draped over 
the streetlamp there
stirs a memory
or a motion in limine.
             An infant roots for a nipple
between time.
	
              Listen, to what coils against 
the sheen of the reconstructed. 
There may be a voice hidden 
beneath broken phone booth.
              Soft touch of a finger,
              few noes on a lyre.
A singing that has never
really stopped.

Inspired by memories of Siena and Eugino Montale’s poem “In Limine.”

Author Bio
Megan Duffy is a poet, painter, and legal research librarian. She has been published in various print and digital journals and was a finalist for the 2024 Plenitudes Poetry Prize. She lives in New York City.

An Alternate Universe In Which My Dad Was Still Alive
by Wilson Elder

I am 16 and my mom is dropping me and my sister 
off at the airport for another summer with my dad.
It is time for awkward dinners with us and a woman 
he met after getting sober. 
For conversations that start with, 
“So…” For facetiming friends talking about how 
I wanna go home, just to get interrupted with a, 
“hey kiddo,” and sad eyes. We will get there and 
he will roll out the red carpet of hugs and kisses 
that are too real for me. He will talk of ideas that 
he has for us to do, maybe the zoo, maybe movies, 
maybe 4th of July camping. He will ask us about 
school and what plans we have for post graduation 
versions of us. We will stop by grandmas first so 
she can give us the obligatory old lady oohs and 
aahs as we talk of life being young. We will see 
cousins, aunts, and friends of his that are basically 
uncles. We will live this summer as if nothing is 
wrong. As if our life isn’t torn between two places, 
stretched so far we feel we might snap. I might snap. 
I might break if I don’t confront him. Yell at him 
at the top of my lungs that 
“I KNOW WHAT HAPPENED BETWEEN YOU AND MOM.” 
That I know about the beer bottles you used as 
baseballs against her, the fact that you were betrayed 
by your phone at 3 AM, the fact that she worked 
three jobs for you and you couldn’t be a decent man. 
I will tell him this and more this summer and at the end I’ll say. 
You should have died in that hospital bed.

-	This was written whilst on a walk in the park after reading Neil Hilborn's book, “The Future.” I read his poem titled, “Alternate Universe in Which My Father Did Not Leave but Died,” and thought, I have something I can say with this prompt.
 
Author Bio
Wilson Elder (he/they) is a 24 year old amateur poet from Greeley, Colorado. They were a writer and poet in college and participated in spoken word throughout Colorado. They are currently working at a gas station and writing with a local arts collective. They have been published in three volumes of Spit Poet Publishing’s zines.

New God
by Angela Gonzalez

My throat will bloom thunder
So it can match your octave 
Goliath, I will scrape my knuckles
on your knees
It will fail to make any difference 
But knowing that I tried 

Maybe my fists refuse percussion 
So I will rip out the rib that came from man 
And chisel a new one 
Because maybe the only revolution I can hold 
is reinvention 

I am built in the image of God I can’t recognize 
So I will build a new one in my image

Author’s Note: I grew up in a mega church with born-again Christian parents, and I was told often that I was made in God’s Image, but also I was a woman with a specific role in the world. Sometimes I feel hopeless against the way the world perceives me, and this poem was an exploration of those feelings.

Author Bio
Angela Gonzalez (She/They) is a queer emerging artist residing in South Florida. She is also a published freelance journalist. She owns two publications on Medium, Weird Hot Art Gurls and Echoloctr where she writes about her life experiences and the South Florida music scene. 

Light Pollution
by Spencer Keene

The Little Dipper hides
behind a halo of lamplight,
spooning morsels of space
onto the city skyline
like galactic molasses.

Meanwhile,
Orion tightens his belt
in the shade of a night screen;
the starry blush on his cheek
is invisible to the man
in the building.

Tomorrow
brings much of the same;
realms of cosmic majesty 
cloaked in electric coats, 
bathed in bulbs.

This poem touches on the author’s frustrating experience with light pollution, which often makes the stars in the night sky imperceptible to city dwellers.

Author Bio
Spencer Keene (he/him) is a writer and lawyer from Vancouver, BC. His poetry and short fiction have appeared in a variety of print and digital publications, including SAD Magazine, Sea to Sky Review, and Candlelit Chronicles. Find more of Spencer’s work at www.spencerkeene.ca.

Untitled Poem
by Moe Shapiro

On Bonny Doon Road half a mile from Highway 1
where it snakes through the coastal canyon
and I always go a little too fast
The morning after fall’s first rain
hitting a curve and starting to spin
I do what you don’t want to do
I step too hard on the brake and we start to skid
Spinning once, twice, three or was it four times?
Banging, bouncing
Off the road into rock and dirt
Airbags exploding like cap gun howitzers
Wife screaming, baby crying
and all I could think of was that time at San Clemente
when I was seven or eight
and a big wave caught me
bodysurfing a bit too far out in front of it
Whirling me furiously, churning up sand, sky and water in my head

We came to rest
in shock
in the middle of the road
My glasses gone
The smoke of the airbags burning my nostrils
The edge of panic
until I got the baby out of the car-seat, cuddled her
and for the first time ever, she laughed out loud

Author note
This untitled poem is a fairly straightforward report of an actual event in late 2001, about a year after moving to a home on seven forested acres in the Santa Cruz mountains. My first child, a daughter, was three or four months old at the time.

Author Bio
Moe Shapiro, born in 1953 in Los Angeles, educated mainly in history and writing, he has a graduate degree in library and information studies, has worked as a Teamster, an astrologer, a marketing researcher, and a book cataloger. He currently resides in San Francisco with his wife, daughter, and son.

Mahakumbh
by Ram Krishna Singh

i.

The Ganges condescended
to flow down from Shiva’s matted hair
with white laughter
from the Himalayas to Kashi
it shone so pure and bright
but failed to quench
the earthly thirst
or cleanse the human heart
their sinful mind
the goddess couldn’t change
I clearly see in its apparent grace
missing all turbulence
so necessary to wash out
the ills of ages it seems
it’s lifeless now
impotent to set right
the rotten state of man

ii.

The morning’s withered flesh
and swollen skin of the day
by bloody nullah in smoke 
tears shade tomorrow
like today, everyday they cry
but nobody hears groans, or sees
dark eruptions on naked walls
that hide maps of bones
and skeins of dreams piled
beside broken hearth fate
is a luxury of helplessness
they won’t  believe or accept
if there is a hell on earth
it’s here, it’s here, it’s here 

iii.

There’s nothing comfortable in the chilly gray wind and
what burns at the wintry end of Holi splash of colors
unglow what might have been left in ransacked ashes
they all witness the last shot of season in transition
like bare-branched trees unrelieving miseries of truth
in the unspirited sandbank and inscrutable shades

Author Note
Mahakumbh, which is in three parts… The poems derive from my observations during the recently concluded Mahakumbh in Allahabad and Varanasi. 

Author Bio
Ram Krishna Singh has published poems, articles and book reviews in various magazines and journals over the years and taught English Language skills at IIT-ISM, Dhanbad for four decades. His latest books of poems include Poems and Micropoems (2023) and Knocking Vistas And Other Poems (2024). Find him on Twitter @profrksingh and on Facebook www.facebook.com/profrksingh . More at https://pennyspoetry.fandom.com/wiki/R.K._Singh

Neurologically Diverse 
by Suzanne Glade

She touches the air
as if to surround 
herself with 

engraved patterns.
To glimpse her 
world we placed 

a pen in her hand 
prepared to let her
imprint what swirls

around her on the 
wall, but she flung it 
behind her. We feel 

the loss of what 
we cannot share.
We were told

she is almost blind,
but when fitted
with glasses

she did not just 
toss them away,
she stomped on them.

When the corrective
lens would not break,
she opened the door

and banished them
down the steps. 
Her body lead 

by the urgency 
for motion, careens
from room to room 

voided of furniture, 
minimalist for her 
protection. For a moment 

as she strained 
against me, her hands 
hushed in mine, 

I heard the touch 
of her thoughts.
My world is a mosaic

of movement
you can keep 
the stark and still.

This poem was inspired by my nieces-in-law who as Occupational Therapists work with children on the spectrum.  They explained the challenges they, the children and the children’s parents face each day.

Author Bio
Suzanne Glade (she/her) is a poet living in an attorney’s body in Chicago – waiting to be set free.  New to poetry, Suzanne’s work appears in  Synkroniciti Magazine, Volume 6, Number 1; For A Better World Volumes 2021, 2022 & 2023.   She is also a reader for Ex Ophidia Press.

Tread
by Ramiro Valdes 

Tread through
Every inch of my being,
I am a wasteland,
A city of ruins,
My ribs a
Labyrinth for you
To explore,
My lips,
Two gates
To the precipice
Of doom,
Kiss me and let our
Souls die into
The everlasting night 

Note:
This poem was created when I thought about love

Author Bio
Ramiro Valdes (he/him) is a disabled and aspiring poet from Miami.
Social Media Handle: rvald014 - Instagram

\(Please- read- submission- guidelines- for- more- information.\)

Volume 1, Issue 1, October, 2024

Tanzania
by Paulette Calasibetta

streets lined
with the dust 
of despair
rise 

in wrath,
settle under
folded
arms,

lowered 
heads, and
broken souls.
prayers 

of survival
echoing
ancestral
voices 

of courage
to have faith
in hope and
in peace,

swaddled in 
God’s cloak 
of grace,
awakening

benevolent
brothers
breaking bonds
of adversity

bearing 
the weight from
the shoulders 
of the oppressed.

Inspired by a friend witnessing oppression of females, crying for help. He is establishing a charitable organization to give them hope. (Hossein Hakim can be contacted at: hakim231@gmail.com)

Paulette Calasibetta (she/her) is a retired commercial interior designer residing
in northwest New Jersey.  Her inspiration comes from nature and the complexity of the human condition. She has been published in Ariel Chart, Spank the Carp, October Hill and various other journals and anthologies.

Until … 
by BOB DECKER

I never really understood the wonder of birth,
until she came along and showed me its worth.
I never really grasped the depths of my love,
until she came along and stole all my love.
I never really knew how happy I could be,
until she came along and smiled at me.
I never really understood the pangs of death …

“Until …” was written in 1960 to satisfy an assignment in Miss Franklin’s English Comp classes at Bloomfield (N.J.) College.

Bob Decker, 82, retired in 2009 after 45 years in sports print journalism, worked in sports at the NY Daily News (1974-89) and NY Post (1989-94). Lives in Rockaway Township, N.J., with Mary Ann, his wife of 61 years. They have two children, four grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

Horses
by Gil Gilbert

after John Haines

Through my high-rise sliding door I saw—
no, witnessed really—a low cloud bank above
Makaha Ridge, turning light from the west
into shapes in the sky below the mountain.

A horse was painted there before I stared, 
in part by sinking, flickering sun,
in part by prancing atmospheric canter, 
stroked by shifting wind and polar spin.

It is a running horse, its flame and umber mane
shaking, misting dusky sky with salty drops
prismed in the low sealight.

I think a heart beats in this cloud, pumping
full its billows; then a bellow, and the horse,
bolting from some unseen gate, aims eastward,
toward me, sprinting for the windward rain.

And from the fading droplets follow shadow
lives, shapeshifting, ancient dreams—from thick
Clydesdale to quarter horse, from pinto to a crimson
roan, forms unstill that we can never name.

Not photographs that freeze the sky, nor canvassed
paint, nor a mind muddled by a mundane brain
can stable them. They run their deeded prairie, 
fighting for their own proud flesh, fleeting, but free.

This poem interprets what I saw and felt during and after a light sunset rainstorm. Dating a horse rancher at the time likely helped.

Gil Gilbert (he/him) is a veteran who returned to writing after completing his tour of duty. He teaches, writes, and participates in state and U.S. writing organizations. He has been published by Pandora Press, Restoration Quarterly, and Cactus Alley. Gil lives with his wife, Cindy, near Ashburn, Virginia. 

Till Death
by Katrina Kaye

 
They serve time together. They sleep late on Sunday mornings and catch up with the chores on the weekends.  

They have the same small way of passing time and use the same phrases when no one else is around. They don’t need words half the time. The other half they do not have anything to say at all, but that’s okay, isn’t it? 

Time builds comfort into silence. How easy to serve time when you enjoy the company. How simple serving time has become when it asks so little. Just an insistence on attention every once in a while, here and there, and when they forget the weight time has over them, they are gifted a grey hair or two, a sore back, and a faded memory. 

Because time needs to remind us that it is still in charge. It is selfish that way. It is unapologetic for the days it takes and demands gratitude for all that it consents to give.

How easy to give yourself over, to lose identity and singularity to  the passing of time, the change of the calendar, the days and nights, the spring, winter, and eventual fall.

The inspiration is from finding relevance and comfort in routine as time passes. Sometimes people see ordinary life as boring or uninteresting, and maybe it is, but that doesn't mean there isn't happiness and contentment. Time may take the glory of a moment, but it doesn't take its value.

Katrina Kaye is a writer and educator living in Albuquerque, NM. She hoards her published writings on her website poetkatrinakaye.com and is seeking an audience for her ever-growing surplus of poetic meanderings. She is grateful to anyone who reads her work and in awe of those willing to share it.

Sand
by Melanie Civin Kenion

Sand. 
Granular
white sugar
glistening with mica
eroded from jagged mountains. 
Now filling seabeds with
entities of bone and shell.
Smoothed by eons of waves
air and stone.
Lapped by the seas,
warmed by the sun’s rays,
hot to the touch of bare feet,
my shoes off and cuffs rolled, 
I feel velvet between my toes.

Where did you begin, 
what land did you come from?
Were you swept from sea to sea,
riding the crab, the mollusk, the lobster 
that scour the ocean bottom.
Were you ridden by sea creatures
smaller than yourself,
smaller,
if possible,
then even one tiny grain of sand? 

Who walked on you in the desert?
Arabia and Persia, 
ancient sand which felt camels hooves,
three toes trudging  through endless, sun-baked miles, 
bedouins who made their homes among your hills,
Jews who wandered lost for forty years.
Did you blow across the steppes for centuries, 
twisting and turning in the arid air? 
How did you form the sand dunes where I walk?
Layer by layer swirled and 
drifted by the wind.

I scoop up handfuls,
let it flow between my fingers,
timeworn and worldly.
And though I ask to know your origin 
and your journey to this place,
I am content to walk among you
leaving footprints
that blow away with the ocean wind.

How this poem was created: An archaeologist at heart, I had questions about what sand had seen as it traveled the Earth. 

Melanie Civin Kenion (she/her) writes poetry and flash fiction from her home in Boston. She lives for travel, her grandsons, and craft cocktails. Her work can be found in The Prompt Magazine, Crocodile Quarterly, and Skink Beat Review. 

T I M E
by Dr. Juanita Kirton

shrunken and small 
you sit in a pasty yellow room
I’ve come to wrap you       in my arms
feed         nurture
change diapers
oil your ashen skin

the enormous clock ticks our time        away 
this place         unrecognizable
not yours       not mine
echoes from adjourning rooms 
bounce        invade the space
I never imagined us here

because        you did not see me 
your sight lost         to decades of blindness
the urge to be in mommies’ arms 
swaddled in your lap         of forgiveness and love
you must have held me there    
once

graying black and white photos
static smiles      set
untouched by the weariness of seasons
determined timber of your heart 
churns for me  
memories	reclaimed 	 evaporates        

The poem came to be born watching my mother wither away from Alzheimer and Parkinson. 2004

Dr. Juanita Kirton is published in several anthologies, journals and magazines and the author of 2-chapbooks. Juanita is a trained facilitator with Warrior Writers & is a teaching Artist with Crossing Point Arts. Juanita has new work in progress. She tours the US on her motorcycle, which keeps her sane.

Suspend My Love for Greenery
by Phineas Knowles

while I entomb myself in autumn woods
mud squishes between boot treads

overhead honeycomb drips
lemony thick and ember-red

the deciduous inspire severance
ignite this year’s doubts and fears

in a fierce display that’ll dissolve
like moth dust in gentle rain

ready for new growth
I settle in unfettered sleep 

This poem was inspired by hiking through forests in Vermont during the fall.

Phineas Knowles (he/him) obtained his MA in Creative and Critical Writing at University of Winchester. A Moth StorySLAM winner. Editor with Zig Zag Lit Mag. Primarily writes short stories and poetry. “Fern Feather”- 2023 Pushcart Prize nominee. Vermont resident who enjoys reading, cycling, hiking, playing harp, and meeting anyone’s pet.

Radio Roulette
by Donna Piken

Driving along playing radio roulette
when a press of a button brings 
you to mind and life is infused
into an old love song

There was a time when you 
were my diamond in the rough 
and I was your lady luck defying 
all odds and making magic in raindrops

While I’m now content and full
I wonder what’s become of you,
how you’ve lived and whether 
restless winds still call your name

The miles whiz by and the thought
of you fades into another love song
of a later time when your lady luck
transformed into a lucky lady


This poem was inspired by a car ride where I was surfing the radio when suddenly a song of the past brought an old boyfriend to mind. He was quickly forgotten when Debby Boone’s song, “You Light Up My Life", started playing, bringing me back to my happy life with my husband.

Donna Piken (she/her) is a multi-genre writer and mixed media artist based in New Jersey. When not creating, she enjoys spending time with her four grandchildren.

The Modern Art of Analyzing Freedom
by Tammy Smith

Since heaven isn’t real, why symbolize freedom as a sunrise? Color evokes strong emotions, guiding mortality’s gaze past the vanishing point. White rays of light bouncing off objects reflect what we see. Projections flood our senses. Why represent freedom as a golden bird with wings? Stop painting glowing pictures about free will as if you can gloss over inequality. Fury divides natural resources, punctuating primitive places with bold question marks. Rage reddens the landscape. Pollutes our water. Quit pretending to care about saving sick trees by hugging them. Freedom isn’t translucent. Should I exist in the brooding shadow of your memory? Nail down the moment body leaves breath. Living without you feels surreal. Purple light explodes across the sky, splitting fact from fable. To love deeply is to tremble in its shaky withdrawal, admitting anxiety is the dizziness of freedom. No one cares why a broken-winged bird feels less grounded. 

I created this poem for Rattle’s May 2024 Ekphrastic Challenge based on “Bird Ascending the Fire” by Barbara Hageman Sarvis. 

Tammy Smith (she/her/hers), a psychiatric social worker and a single mother from New Jersey, draws inspiration from her work in mental health. Her writing has been published in Grand Little Things, Poem Alone, and The Dewdrop. 

Deep Listening in Yosemite
by Liane Sousa

When camping in the forest
I am met with silence.
In the beginning, it is breathtaking.
I am accustomed to being
bombarded by civilization noises—
blaring music, trucks rumbling down streets,
dogs barking, and kids yelling.
Then, as I adjust, I begin to 
hear a whole new world of sounds—
a shriek of a bird, the wind blowing through the crowns of trees,
the distant thundering of a cascading waterfall, 
and the babbling of the nearby stream.
As I quiet myself, I notice a nail left in a tree trunk
to possibly hold one end of a previous camper’s clothesline.

This poem was inspired by a prompt in Nadia Colburn’s 5-Day Challenge, March 2022. After reading Rilke’s “Sonnets to Orpheus,” the prompt was: What do you want to build a temple for? What do you want to listen to? Possible words to include: silence, forest, beginning, shriek, nail, wind.

Liane Sousa (she/her) enjoys writing poetry about nature, her childhood, and everyday life. Her poems have appeared in Silver Birch Press, Scarlet Dragonfly Journal, multiple Local Gems Press anthologies, and both 2023 Poetry Marathon Anthologies. She lives in Northern California with her husband, son, and a very talkative cat. 

TWO HANDS
by Thomas Zampino

I have never been one to create or mold or fix things with these two hands
the gene (or is it just stick-to-it-tive-ness?) skipped a generation with me.
dad’s hands, combined with wood and metal and glass, just seemed to know
just seemed to work the magic of fashioning odds and ends into, well, art
our home is full of practical things like spice racks and organizers and shelves
all lovingly handcrafted from plans that I couldn’t decipher for the life of me
the best that I can come up with is tapping keys with my own two hands
to help me recall, to help me tell you just how much I still appreciate his
even after all these years

On the anniversary of my father’s passing, I recall his ability to fix anything with his two hands - something I cannot do

Thomas Zampino (he/him), a Manhattan attorney, has recently published three books of poetry - synchronicity among them. His work has also appeared in Silver Birch Press numerous times and once in The University of Chicago’s Memoryhouse Magazine. https://thomaszampino.wordpress.com/