Issue 34 March 2025

 Editor's Comments

Welcome to Issue 34 of Allegro Poetry Magazine which sees a selection of poems both from poets who are new to Allegro and those who have previously had work published here. I hope you enjoy reading them as much as I have.


Poems



Ode to Winter

 

The dead of winter

Leaves me thinking

Of my lover

He exists for me

The way the night owl

Perches on black spruce

Backlit by streetlight

grey against 
the Night sky

Just before taking flight

Ramesh Dohan





Laundry

 

The way you hang my clothes to dry          

is your own art

 

sock paired with sock

each t-shirt over two rails

 

so the air circulates and

there’s no hard crease.                                   

 

And when you’re happy it’s dry

you don’t ball the socks

 

but press them flat and fold them over

one spooning the other

 

turn in the sides and sleeves of tops

to make a perfect square

 

wrap each brief into a plumped pillow

and place it all

 

like a display of expensive gifts

on my side of the bed.

Paul Stephenson





Sweet Leaf


The last time we hugged,

the light scruff of Jay’s beard

locked into my own in a way 

I only remember much later,

when Ari, his oldest son, hugs me back

in the heat of that summer’s wrath

at the fresh edge of his grave. 

*

 

Years pass, the needle drops, 

“Sweet Leaf” coughs from the speakers   

and I scroll through our messages:

memes, brief recordings 

of his guitar noodling, brief  

news of each other’s kids. Heart 

emojis. Smile emojis. Silence. 

Barely any pictures, 

even less video. 

Doubts cloud even 

my clearest memories. 

Until that moment when

under that relentless sun

Ari softly says into my neck,

“He loved you so much.”

David Karpel 





Jugoslavija

The socialist republic, they said,  
was Marxist, half Karl,
half Groucho, Lenin  
meets Volt Dizni,  
the proletarian struggle
in technicolour, the black
and white of the Manifesto  
through a fantasia of cyan,
magenta, yellow.  
        The leader,
they said, the working class
hero, fascism’s foe,
handsome, hostile to Stalin.
Unity and brotherhood
they said, at last. The greatest
man alive, they said.
All the kings and queens
mourned him when he died.

Eamonn Shanahan





The Calculator

When someone suggest you think of a number,

resist, think of a tree in the snow,

think of the scent of your lover

or geese in formation, slipstreaming South.

When they propose you double the number,

don't fall into the trap, rather play

like a child, or sing, that will do.

They'll coax you to halve, then add four,

but you'll be ready to rhyme or to dance

or picture a wave breaking on some distant shore.

Why subtract your original thought

as they tell you to, when you can

imagine the opening notes of a song?

The problem, you see, is their result

will always, forever, be two.

Instead, you can have the wind

in a wheat field and infinite beauty

without being told what to do.

Basil Meyer





The Florists of Kyiv 

A sunflower is the national symbol

but today it’s the tulip’s turn,

that many-coloured flower,

a sign of spring to come.

 

Bulbs buried in the earth

emerge into daylight after winter

in the dark, packed tight

with incipient new life.

           

The florists have spread tulips

over Kyiv’s central square,

a sea of pale pink, mauve and red

shaped in the country’s coat of arms,

           

a gold trident on deep blue shield,

the image of a falcon on the wing.

Whenever I see tulips now

I think about the people of Ukraine.

Sue Wallace-Shaddad





I am trying to make peace with sleep,

but the moon keeps interfering and chatting to night predators trying to eat my mind. I offered them alternatives: canopies and crab. All they do is sniff the offering and move to the perimeter of my machinery. I try an alternative, a burger: but they are vegetarian; pineapples: citrus brings them out in hives; herbal tea : they convulse at my trying to make them sleep. They pause to probe my breathless thoughts like blown wind in a web of water. They search to rub raw trapped truths in the always black. I laugh a whisper to myself, my arrhythmias in tune such that I can dance on the hair of a pin. They try to play me off the ledge. I decide I have had enough. We could be friends, I will show you my soundless memories, if that is what you seek. Colour is cold, strips skin as they stand as a boulder refusing to budge. I try to make peace, offer all I have at hand, but they scoff and scream on mute as I shove them hard down my slipway of tears.

Jane Killingbeck





She And Horse

(In Memoriam Rosie at 14)

 

She eases down the horse’s head.

It is summer and flies

scamper the edges of his eyes.

She fixes a bead curtain

 

above his lashes

that shakes with movement

like a grass skirt.

Keeps the flies away.

 

She talks to him, 

lurks into his world.

A stamp of hoof lets her in

a place of power 

 

and the intensity

of another consciousness,

a place of dream-scapes

that unfold into a restless

 

knowledge of war and haulage,

a history of labour

on Orwell’s farm.

He is tight lipped,

 

holds his ancestry close.

She strokes, hugs,

brings her consciousness

and life energy to him,

 

rides him bareback through

a valley of trees and rocks,

crosses the river in ventures 

to a renewal of herself. 

Neil Beardmore





I Lunch With Du Fu 

He asks if people have learned

anything in the past

thousand years. 

 

I stammer.  We have made war

more horrible, use children

to detonate bombs.  He remembers

 

a weeping cherry.  How could it be

in the same world?   

 

When he leaves, his sun cape

flaps in the wind.

Kenneth Pobo





Central Park
 

What I’d forgotten is how snow                      

has an older sister   

 

Snow is mostly peaceful, you said –

even in New York

 

We walked through the trees

in the church of snow, wondering

 

The snow went about its work   

settling differences

 

Kids were trying to catch snowflakes as they fell –

melting in gloved hands

Jeff Skinner





human/nature (at berkhamsted castle, may 2024)

the slow, slightly tipsy-

looking stagger of the

 

woman to the bench,  

carefully carrying

 

some kind of

glass…

 

*

 

new royal litter, picnic garbage

on the keep. two geese, like hikers,

 

slowly climb the rise, taking care-

ful note, & i find myself hoping

 

they don’t reach the top,

recognize our

 

sign

 

*

 

slow moat walk after

thunder: hundreds

of beads, snail’s-

pace ros-

ary

 

*

 

postprandial

stroll, goose

with a duck-

weed neck-

lace

Sean Howard





The Best in Palliative Care 

The lift opens and the charge nurse wheels out

the next casualty of an escalating war in the brain.

 

(If the Patient File had been sent up first

I might have been better prepared.)

 

Surely not! My old neurology lecturer

diminished to a nodding head in a shawl

 

demoralised and hollowed out by an enemy

taking the brightest and the best.

 

Her first lecture provided insight into my husband’s behaviour -

brain tumours presenting as Alzheimer’s -

 

and I was fascinated from there on,

but her specialty field was neuroplasticity -

 

the brain’s ability to restructure, reorganise, heal itself.

Clearly not happening here.

 

I wheel her to the empty room, settle her into a chair by the window,

put toiletries in a bedside drawer.

 

It’s raining heavily and she watches a dismal slurry

of pebbles and garden bark pour down hospital drains. 

“Dr Marjorie,” I say, pulling up a chair beside her. “Do you remember me?”
“Of course I do!” she says. “We were lovers once.”

Jan FitzGerald





Medea’s Friends
 

Of course we knew poor Meddy was insane -
never quite normal since she ran away
with that adventurer – and then the strain
of life with him got greater every day
until he said, My dear, I’ve found a wife
with money, young and prettier than you.
The prenup doesn’t give you any rights.
The house is mine, goodbye. – Of course it threw
her so off balance she’d do anything
to get revenge. It was a tragic time,
and now remorse will never lose its sting…
That’s why we make allowance for her crime,
not saying even to ourselves the sad
fact that the kids alone can drive you mad.

Gail White






Lost Property

 

Where did I leave my gloves,
you ask yourself,
and yourself promptly provides
the perfect visual,
but when you get
to the imagined location
the gloves are not there
and you stare
at a brief hole in the world.
 

At which point
a rusty sub-routine will
sometimes click in
from a time
when something equally certain
and solidly imagined
was also looked for
but never found.

Leonard Lambert 

 

 

 

 

Tuesdays 

When will Anna come? he asks.
Tuesday, his wife says: he groans,
unable to work out how many days
must pass till next she comes. 

The day-to-day escapes his memory,
but Anna’s chatter stimulates him
to recount, each time, his happiness
as an evacuee from London’s bombs,
feeding chickens and collecting eggs
on a far-flung Northumbrian farm. 

Tuesdays are the days he’s bright,
as if sparks blown from a dying fire
have set Roman Candles alight,
giving him each week a remission
from the pitiless advance of night. 

Mantz Yorke

 

  

What becomes of the Broken-Hearted

I used to believe people died when
their heart stopped beating. 

Was it you who told me
this?  

I walk through the blue
front door of my childhood and you

don’t recognise my face, don’t know
my name. 

When the time comes and your
heart stops beating, will I have
forgotten you too?

Emma Mooney  

 

 

 

Counting Dead Women. 
[after ‘The Murder’ by Paul Cézanne] 

A black river is part of the conspiracy,
feel its evil presence. They pin her down
with muscled arms and hands like claws,
it is a job that must be done at speed.
One man’s arm is raised, he holds the knife
as if it is an act of grace. Is it her beauty,
her youth, the summer in her eyes
they must obliterate? But she is dead
before he even strikes, her arms gone limp
like broken wings, a mouth that gapes.
She fought them there but female grit
gives way to brutish force and the river gags
the cries of ‘Shame!’- a disposer of murdered
bodies, the children she would have had. 

Anne Bailey

 

  

 

Deviant Burial at Littlemore Priory

In the burgeoning dark, the clay is human
Earth, the dust of bone a pigment of
Desire, desirous they lick the gristle and
Lap the fat, sleep two to a bed
Burn the stocks, they say, and bury the child
We’ve nothing left to sell for her dowry
In the broken clay, the dark is altogether
too human; buried face-down, the prioress’
Mottled teeth jut from her yellow skull
In a crooked gristle-grin  

Erin Emily Ann Vance

 

 

 

For Homero Gómez González
Monarch Butterfly Defender, Rosario, Mexico 

Can a man be worth more
than sixty thousand wings
breezing towards extinction.
The Monarch butterfly’s
winter home is a stand of fir and pine.
Branches covered in orange,
black-veined wings sway and snap
with the weight of butterflies
fluttering the possibility of chaos.
His head caved under pressure, his pulse
stopped in the well where his body
floated for money, weeks after loggers
watched him stand with Monarchs
settled on his hand, his head, his heart. 

Emma Woodford

 

  

 

Someone’s Been Busy in My Kitchen
for Emily Dickinson 

I come home to the sweet smell of baking.
Upturned on the drainer, two bowls and a sieve.
Five unwashed cups out on the worktop, each
bears a clue: a daub of butter, a dash of milk,
shreds of coconut, specks of sugar, dustings of flour.
Next to abandoned eggshells, a small sheet of paper,
words in longhand catch my eye, But Joys ― like men ―
may sometimes make a Journey ― And still abide ― 
On the reverse, a list of ingredients. No mention of method.
Graced with essentials on any venture, don’t expect
to be led the way. A loaf tin is missing from the open
drawer, the empty oven still gives off warmth. 

The backdoor gapes, a view of the yard ―
that bit of breeze, gently rocking the unlatched gate. 

Helen Heery 

 

   

 

The Skipping Forecast 

Counting was everything whether we were steady, rising or falling.
A light wind was fine but a strong one made it harder
which is why we liked to tune in for some kind of warning.
Light, moderate or fresh was best.
Winds of 34 knots or more would send our rope into spasm.
Fog was a non-starter.
Months when the summers blazed all day
we’d long-rope skip to the well-versed chant of Dogger, Fisher, German Bight.
This was our game, our landlocked song
that we sang out loud for all the skippers at sea. 

Neil Leadbeater

  

 

 

Harvest Moon
                     (after Samuel Palmer) 

Only one field draws down moonlight,
pooling it over the corn,
a spotlit dance floor of stubble and lost grains,
over ears of wheat, their sighs and whispers.
The fields slip into shadow, forgetting edges.

Harvesting shaves all it can from sleep.
Men, women against time, sickles scratching the stiff stalks,
wheat rattling as the blades slice, slice, slice.
Armful by armful they knot the woven plaits,
set the sheaves upright, listening
for the scurry of night’s small animals.
A few words catch in the waiting wheat,
a few words running out of time.                          

Sheep graze in the shadows, timeless,
shepherded. Night moves through the trees,
through silent leaves, masking identity.
Perhaps it is the moon that holds two shepherds
so late out of doors, making a mystery of their future.
Is there an owl, echoing down the valley,
wooing its mate? How far to the sea?
Night is loosening the questions. 

D.A. Prince

 

 

 

 

The Mirror’s Truth

In the mirror’s gaze,
I confront the remnants of yesterday,
the shadows of choices made,
the echoes of laughter,
the weight of unspoken words.

Each reflection is a story,
a tapestry woven with threads of light and dark,
where the bright moments shine,
but the cracks reveal the deeper truths,
the hidden fears, the silent battles.

I stand, a witness to my own becoming,
the layers of time etched upon my skin,
and I wonder,
what is it to be whole
in a world that often feels fragmented?

The mirror offers no easy answers,
only the invitation to look closer,
to embrace the imperfections,
to find beauty in the chips and scars,
and to celebrate the journey of repair.
 

K. A. Wisniewski

 

  

 

Meditations with Mrs Swan in her Iced Tu-Tu on a Frozen Lake 

So, your husband went away, took on a different mind
for a while. Said it was like living darkness, like the edge
of a sky as we gain and lose the light. How a world turned.
How it was thunder. And you’re sat there thinking of Leda,
and you’re not in the middle of the lake but off to the side,
under the poisonous arch of the fallen tree. As if your
considerable efforts at thermal conduction didn’t signify.
(They did to me - I could see your feet peddling like war,
like abusive relationships, like the lack of a smile at death row.)
It warmed my heart that you’d managed to maintain any space
in all that frozen H2O. A circle of moving chloroplasts,
thick with life. Insects too small for my brambled eyes to see,
fish too hungry not to dare to dart upwards, towards the light,
risking death in the cool winter rays. You move sedately
within your narrow domain. Water spooling out in rivulets,
venturing towards the centre, will it hold?
Careful or you’ll flood world. 

Lydia Bennett  

 

 

 

The Park 

We saw a barn owl in the park last night.
This morning, the red-tailed hawk, unsuccessful, hunts
a squirrel, mobbed by screaming blue jays;
all these characters wanted to have their say. 

This morning, the red-tailed hawk hunts unsuccessfully.
The body of the squirrel plummets from the tree to the ground,
all these characters wanting to have their say.
We’re not sure what the jays say, they’re too quiet. 

The body of the squirrel plummeting to the ground:
we’re not sure what this means, if it’s an omen.
We’re not sure why the jays grow quiet.
There’s a rough brown birch, a silver linden— 

we’re not sure what this means, another omen?
A cardinal arching through the branches, ducks pooling on a pond.
There’s the rough brown birch, the silver linden—
this is how it always begins and ends. 

The cardinal arches through the trees, the ducks swim in pods,
a squirrel, mobbed by screaming blue jays—
this is how it always begins and ends:
we saw the owl in the park last night. 

Hilary Plattner

  

 




One True God

I have made myself into a god
with a following of one.

The sun still dares to rise above me
none the wiser to its heresy.
The crowds don’t part.
The mirror shows something human.

No power to smite,
I don’t suffer like a martyr,
stumble over undone laces
and wear second-hand clothes.
My body is a temple to other gods
who demand food, sleep and care.

I have yet to fly
or crumple buildings
like pepsi cans in my hand.

Gods don’t die; I have yet to find
that I am not immortal.
My holy texts are unwritten.

Liam Lynch

 



 

 

 

On hearing my application for German citizenship had been approved

 

It’s the dead I have to thank.

I resurrected some briefly

 

on the application form,

translating their lives into

 

mine. There was no fee,

except what it cost them.

 

In Neuss, four bound by blood

and marriage lie buried together,

 

dead neat Jews in a line in the

correct section, no mixing allowed,

 

even in death. Four shineless stars

of David, carved into stone

 

the colour of persecution. Lines

of hammered Hebrew; I’ve forgotten

 

where the vowels go. Maybe they’re

buried too. The shoulder-tap of

 

reparation invites me to receive

my certificate and I thank them

 

in my best accent. They smile,

a welcome a century too late.

 

Max Terry Fishel

 



 

 

 

dear Manchester

a river never stops flowing but
the stones it picks up along the way must.
they are discarded on the shores of rigid land -
unknown, alive, lending its dirt onto my body.

there's a difference between a city you're born in,
and a city you belong to.
your home is nothing but a place to cage you,
your dreams show no one but who you will be,
you, dear Manchester, are what the scars on my skin
like constellations on a solstice night, spell out.

bear the wound like armor, your rain akin to gasoline,
you're burning me, and i was born with a thick skin.
how does it feel to be so wise and young?
there's no road that doesn't lead me away from you.

prophecies are just choices made by fate,
my heart rests in your red bricks, the wind bears my sighs,
the night grins as i run into it, familiarity bone-deep.
you, dear Manchester, have known me since before i was written,
albeit forcefully into history, and you will know me forevermore.

Sreemita Mukherjee

 

 

 




 

The little things I did

 

The little things I did to show I was pro-life when the gynaecologist said,

“Your foetus is growing where it shouldn’t, unlike other viable embryos”-

 

I transferred a mother’s affection to the ceramic dolls on the top shelf of my cabinet,

little baby-replicas, accepting that my anatomy cannot house precious living things.

 

I sniffed out the stench of death around my house- to confront Thanatos’s claim

to my unborn baby, taunt him with a menacing, you can’t kill this one or that one.

 

Replanted my dying Chusan palm tree in the front garden

instead, burying its roots in moist soil like nature intended,

 

to make it catch a glimpse of the British sun, like I could manipulate events, play God,

alter the existence of a living creature I had control over before its lifespan expired.

 

Masked death with misleading vital signs of life- luscious palm leaves, a foetal heartbeat

of a doomed pregnancy that will thrive only if either it or the human host dies.

 

I replied to the advert in my inbox, ‘Learn to tend carnations, marigolds buds,

chrysanthemum petals’ - Can what symbolises death ever bring joy to the living?

Bridgette James


 

 

 

Contributors

Anne Bailey is a Yorkshire woman now living and writing poems in North Norfolk. She has had her work published in various journals. She is a committee member for ‘Cafe Writers’ organising live poetry events in Norwich. Her first pamphlet What the House Taught Us was published in 2021 by Emma Press. 

Neil Beardmore has performed his poetry widely including St Ives Festival where he co-performed Painters and Painting. Published in Acumen, Orbis, The French Literary Review and others, he was placed in the top ten of 8000 entries of Erbacce’s 2024 competition: his interview and works will appear in Spring.  neilbeardmore.com

Lydia Bennett is currently studying for a Creative Writing PhD at Lancaster University. She writes poetry and as someone who is Autistic and has Dyslexia, she thinks a lot about neurodivergence. Her passions are chocolate, dancing and her two sparkly-eyed children who she loves and loves and loves.

Ramesh Dohan lives in the city of Toronto, Canada with his partner and an exceptionally perfect dog. When he is not writing in his favorite café, he spends his time reading, hiking and travelling the world. He has also seen his poetry published in several literary journals including Toronto Poetry Magazine (2020), Trouvaille Review (2021), Bosphorous Review of Books (2021), Bengaluru Review, Pinecone review (2021) & Modern Literature (2022)

Max Terry Fishel was born in Liverpool to European Jewish parents. Now living in London, Max writes and performs spoken word poetry on a wide range of topics, including the Jewish experience. Some of his poems have been published in magazines and anthologies. Max particularly enjoys performing at open mic sessions.

Jan FitzGerald’s poems have appeared regularly in NZ literary journals and overseas in Meniscus (Aus), Atlanta Review, Loch Raven Review, Yellow Medicine Review, Voegelin View (USA), The London Magazine, The High Window, Acumen and Orbis (UK), and been shortlisted twice in the Bridport Poetry Prize. She has four poetry books published.

Helen Heery was born in Kenya and now lives in Manchester UK. She is published on the Ekphrastic Review website and in Acumen, Orbis, Obsessed with Pipework and Dream Catcher magazines. In 2020 she was shortlisted in the Bridport Prize. She has two poems forthcoming in The French Literary Review.

Sean Howard is the author of six collections of poetry in Canada, most recently Trinity: Tribute Sequences, for Robert Graves (Gaspereau Press, 2022). His poetry has been widely published in Canada, the UK, and elsewhere, and featured in The Best of the Best Canadian Poetry in English (Tightrope Books, 2017).

Bridgette James was shortlisted for the Bridport Poetry prize and Renard Press Poetry Prize in 2024, longlisted in the Aurora National Prize for Writing, 2022. She won the Flash Fiction Summer Poetry Prize 2024.

David Karpel teaches high school English in New York, where he lives with his wife and their dog.

Jane Killingbeck is a new writer of poetry having recently completed an M A in Creative Writing under the tutelage of Mary Jean Chan. Her poetry explores belonging and place through the metaphor of memory, real, remembered and imagined. Her poems embrace both tender and tough imagery.

Leonard Lambert (1945) is a long-established NZ Poet. Recent highlights are a short-listing in the Bridport Prize and a Guest Poet appearance in Acumen(UK). His Selected Poems, Somewhere in August, (Steele Roberts) appeared in 2016, and his most recent publication is a chapbook, Slow Fires, (Cold Hub Press, 2024).

Neil Leadbeater is an author, essayist, poet and critic living in Edinburgh, Scotland. His work has been published widely both at home and abroad. His latest publication is Cityscapes and Other Poems (Cyberwit.net, Allahabad, India, 2023).

Liam Lynch
is a nonbinary second-year Creative Writing student who is interested in urban fantasy, horror and queer literature. While they’re always happy to play with formal and informal poetry, they abhor long poems – if something can be said in forty lines, four will usually do a better job.

Basil Meyer has published poetry in ContrastPresenceGreen Dragon and The Ekphrastic Review as well as reviews and criticism. He worked as an English lecturer in South Africa and the UK.  He lives in Berkshire from where he regularyly participates in the Ashmolean Museum’s Poetry in the Galleries.

Emma Mooney’s poems have been extensively published in various anthologies, and she is the author of two novels. Emma was awarded a master’s with distinction in Creative Writing from the University of Stirling, and was proud to recently share her poetry at the Youth Climate Summit 2023 held in Edinburgh.

Sreemita Mukherjee is an 18 year old from India pursuing Political Science. Her interests include watching sports, and writing articles on lesser known aspects of pop culture. Having written poetry since she was 13, she tends to echo feelings of nostalgia, optimism and longing in all her writing. 

Hilary Plattner holds an MFA in writing from Columbia University and has taught at The New School. Previously, she founded and directed Brooklyn Writers, a community-based writing program. Her writing has been published in numerous literary journals, including Cider Press ReviewFenceGSU ReviewGulf Coast, and The Ledge

Kenneth Pobo (he/him) is the author of twenty-one chapbooks and nine full-length collections.  Recent books include Bend of Quiet (Blue Light Press) and Loplop in a Red City (Circling Rivers). His work has appeared in Asheville Poetry Review, North Dakota Quarterly, Amsterdam Quarterly, Nimrod, Mudfish, Hawaii Review, and elsewhere. 

D.A.Prince lives in Leicestershire and London. Her second full-length collection (Common Ground, HappenStance, 2014) won the East Midlands Book Award 2015. Her third collection, The Bigger Picture (also from HappenStance) was published in 2022.

Eamonn Shanahan is a London Irishman. He has worked in many jobs. He lived for a long time in Croatia and developed an interest in the history of South Eastern Europe. He has been published in Magma, Strix, Orbit, Nine Muses Poetry, Ink, Sweat and Tears, Sarasvati, Marble. He currently lives in Brighton, UK.

Jeff Skinner’s poems have been published in anthologies and journals, most recently in Shooter Literary Magazine, Poetry News, Acumen. He was commended in this year’s Coast to Coast to Coast competition, highly commended in the Sonnet or Not competition, and long listed for the Briefly Write Prize.

Paul Stephenson’s debut collection Hard Drive was published by Carcanet in 2023. It was shortlisted for the Lambda Literary Award and Polari Book Prize. He has three pamphlets: Those People (Smith/Doorstop, 2015), The Days that Followed Paris (HappenStance, 2016), and Selfie with Waterlilies (Paper Swans Press, 2017).

Sue Wallace-Shaddad’s pamphlets are: Once There Was Colour, (Palewell Press, September 2024), Sleeping Under Clouds (Clayhanger Press, 2023), A City Waking Up (Dempsey and Windle, 2020). With poems widely published elsewhere, Sue writes poetry reviews, runs workshops, blogs for The Causley Trust and is Secretary of Suffolk Poetry Society. https://suewallaceshaddad.wordpress.com

Erin Emily Ann Vance is the author of the poetry collection A History of Touch (Guernica 2022) and the novella Advice for Taxidermists and Amateur Beekeepers (Stonehouse 2019). Her work has appeared in magazines and journals all over the world, including CV2, filling station, ARC, EVENT, and The Literary Review of Canada. Vance holds Masters Degrees in English and Creative Writing from the University of Calgary and Irish Folklore and Ethnology from University College Dublin.

Gail White is a contributing editor to Light Poetry Magazine. Her latest chapbook, Paper Cuts, is available on Amazon, along with Asperity Street and Catechism. She lives in the Louisiana bayou country with her husband and cats.

K. A. Wisniewski’s recent poetry has appeared in the Sierra Nevada Reviewthe Chiron Review3rd WednesdayCAIRN: The St. Andrews ReviewTule ReviewSmall Press ReviewThe Worcester Review, and Coldnoon. The managing editor of Textshop Editions, he is the author of the poetry chapbook Making Faces and co-editor, with Piotr Florczyk, of Polish Literature as World Literature. He currently teaches English and Digital Studies at the University of Maryland, USA.

Emma Woodford is the author of Wingless I Watch, (Hedgehog Poetry Press, January 2025), and has been published in the Ginkgo Environmental Poetry Prize, the Black Bough and Red Door anthologies and poetry magazines such as Quarter(ly) and Bindweed Magazine. Emma is an active member of Poets for the Planet.

Mantz Yorke lives in Manchester, England.  His collections Voyager and Dark Matters are published by Dempsey & Windle, and No Quarter by erbacce Press.