[Image: Multiple hands form together with a large red heart painted across.]
Sarah Denise Johnson’s poem is a defiant reclamation of the plural pronoun and celebration of the spectrum of genders that have always been part of humanity.
Read More[Image: Multiple hands form together with a large red heart painted across.]
Sarah Denise Johnson’s poem is a defiant reclamation of the plural pronoun and celebration of the spectrum of genders that have always been part of humanity.
Read More A touch of your skin,
A coin in hand, you take
My heart from the market.
[Image description: close photograph of a bright burst of flames against a dark background. The brightest flames rise to the upper left corner of the image.]
Floating on their nimbus wings
And breathing lightning at the ground—
And the thunderclap! It sounds!
[Image description: black-and-white photograph of a sequined curtain, shot from beneath. Some sequins pick up light and shine brightly, and other disappear into dark folds of fabric.]
Name for a woman or a man
Gender neutral pronouns, please
Read More[Image Description: The fingers of elderly hand rest on an open palm, touching a red rose in full bloom in the foreground. Leaves recede in the background.]
How do you navigate love in the midst of your family’s historical trauma? Avra Margariti questions the closets we put ourselves in for necessity and survival with “Grandma’s Wars” and “Two Birds.”
Read More[Image Description: A close up of dew drops resting on verdant blades of green grass.]
Gabriel Lee Bass’ poetry explores intergenerational trauma and questions what it means to thrive in a hostile environment.
Read More[Image Description: A partial view of an old antique clock in black with gold Roman and Arabic numerals.]
With celestial musings and tactile language, Carl C. probes the tenuous connection between ancestry and family traditions contrasted with the possibilities of solitude.
Read More[Photo description: A distant view of a woman in shorts and a t-shirt walking away down a sun-dappled, tree-lined alley..]
i am more stranger than any man can touch.
Read More[Image Description: A macro shot of cactus needles in vertical rows on top of vivid green ridges]
With quiet precision and vivid imagery, Hal Y. Zhang’s poems portray the arrays of emotions throughout various life scenarios.
Read More[Image Description: A wooden, articulated figure doll stands against a grey background]
The author of A Quick And Easy Guide To They/Them Pronouns showcases their another facet of their talents in these four poems. With fierce force, Archie Bongiovanni reclaims the body and forms a liminal space for creation.
Read More[Image Description: Two Balloons in macro focus are at the right as confetti drifts down into shadow in front of them]
it's clever,
it's pointed,
it pops off the tongue,
says hey, sit up straight folks —
[Image Description: Clear capsules filled with an assortment of heart shaped confetti, star cut-outs, and multi colored glitter.]
Matthew Broomfield take an unflinching look at the toll queer nightlife can take on those vulnerable to addiction.
Read More[Image Description: A modernist house sits on the Hollywood Hills with the Hollywood signs against a muted lavender sky in background.]
SP Mulroy’s poems explore the potential lives passed away queer Hollywood figures may have lived, and the ways they may have inhabited the world.
Read More[Image Description: Wilted pink roses, with a touch of brown on the edges, lay flat on a marble background with water stains]
Casey Elizabeth Newbegin’s poem’s quietly contemplate the surrounding world of patriarchy and its influences on our bodies
Read More[Image description: close photograph of a pair of closed pink lips, lightly coated in lipgloss.]
We sat together in art class. She practiced her calligraphy and I painted beaches.
Lito asked me if she had turned me into a lesbian.
[Image description: photograph of the rigging of a large sailing ship against the backdrop of a cloudy sky.]
Nobody will tell you the secret
behind those stories:
they were written by men
who want to believe
that women are nothing more
than ships that cannot sail.
[Image description: close photograph of an opalized fossil: layers of pale rock with shimmering colourful patches.]
but you and me, gloves
we're on the road to grabbing a title
[Image Description: Various equations are written in UV reactive green ink on a black background with UV purple lights affixed above.]
“Being rational, but discrete, he divided me. Advanced curriculum, my bell curves skewed, and he transformed the mean. No longer prime, I wished him imaginary.”
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