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Showing posts from June, 2026

STRATOSPHERE by John Patrick Robbins

We escaped for a moment, and that was apparently for a moment too long. All my dreams were dispersed into a void of emptiness as you were a victim of choice. I cannot fathom the end, but no matter my readiness, it is most certainly here. Heartbreaks are fragments of bad choices and damn near fatal accidents. Now all I am left with is this broken shell and a barely functioning memory. The poison is within reach as it is inside of me. I cannot fathom what lies ahead. I just know that in my life I got it all wrong. There's no turning back, as at the beginning of any story, the saddest truth comes with the realization it must inevitably end. As with that said, I am gone.   John Patrick Robbins, is a Southern Gothic writer and editor of The Rye Whiskey Review his work has been published in Lothlorien Poetry Journal, Disturb The Universe, Horror Sleeze Trash, Piker Press, A Thin Slice Of Anxiety and Fixator Press. His work is often dark and always unfiltered. 

THE CENTER FOR SHORT-LIVED PHENOMENA by Colin James

 One of our members             was only married             for a few months,             when he required of his wife             to end every question             framed with the colloquialism,             "before you choke the chicken?"             His remains were scattered             over a Bavarian Forest,             the Pacific Ocean Maldive Atolls,             and an Indiana Walmart parking lot.             Still he did not rue.             Rather, his only regret             was his inability to locate             a decent decaf coffee    

BLOWING IN THE WIND by Lynn White

It was a windy day in a windy city a long time ago. A sudden flurry made me into the vortex and I was surrounded by sheets of paper caught up and blown from a doorway. When it had settled,  I collected a few. They were letters applying for jobs dated about fifty years ago, I forget exactly when. All were hand written  in the most beautiful cursive scripts. I could visualise the care with which nibs had been dipped in ink, the concentration in the touch of pen to paper. These were the stuff of unknown dreams. The names are long forgotten now but I wonder what became of them, those ghosts of a past who touched my life in a flurry of wind only to be blown away.   Lynn White lives in north Wales. Her work is influenced by issues of social justice and events, places and people she has known or imagined. She is especially interested in exploring the boundaries of dream, fantasy and reality. She has been nominated for Pushcarts, Best of the Net and a Rhysling Award. https://lynn...