Tuesday, August 27, 2019

A Treatment. By Ben Nardolilli



If God exists, I’ll know
Because he’ll tell me how to fix
The latest knot
Within the plot of the novel
I’m working on,
He’ll be divine enough to know
Not to interfere with the poetry,
That stuff has to remain
Human, only human
In its sources and execution,
If I claimed otherwise
I wouldn’t be a poet any more,
But a prophet instead,
And I don’t want that career,
I’m not armed heavily enough
To last long on any dais,
Nevertheless, if God exists
And we’re in talks in private,
I’ll tell him I’d enjoy
A promotion to the big room
And be a writer for his show.








Ben Nardolilli currently lives in New York City. His work has appeared in Perigee Magazine, Red Fez, Danse Macabre, The 22 Magazine, Quail Bell Magazine, Elimae, fwriction, Inwood Indiana, Pear Noir, The Minetta Review, and Yes Poetry. He blogs at mirrorsponge.blogspot.com and is looking to publish a novel. 

Friday, August 23, 2019

WHEN IT'S BEST TO DRINK ALONE. By Bradford Middleton



It's happened again as the time spent at bars
Dwindles to the point where I contemplate
Just giving up, maybe visit only once a week
To drown this lonely existence surrounded
By other people by way of a change.  Of late
Though it is these other people that have
Caused the most damage to my mind leaving
Me demanding more booze to drown out
Their existences as I struggle through dreaming
Of sitting at home alone, smoking the
Proverbial weed and very occasionally
Treating myself to a drink but not through
Need or habit just for the pure simple joy
Of cracking that bottle open and taking a taste
Loving it as it cascades down my throat.

The other night I went out, alone as usual,
And found myself in one of those moods,
Dark, foreboding, wanting to get annihilated
The only people I spoke to were bar staff
All of whom knew my name and asked how
I'd been, handing over drink after drink until
That point where I could face no more, a time
Spent surrounded by useless hipsters, bearded
Fucktards who annoy me greatly, and if it
Weren't for the smoke I'd have ended up
Leaving a hell of a lot quicker and walking
The streets dreaming of bars where the drinks
Flow cheaper and there are no immaculate
Beards requesting craft beers looking down
On me as I sit, beer and chaser at the ready.








Bradford Middleton was born in south-east London during the summer of 1971 and won his first poetry prize at the age of nine.  He then gave up writing poems for nearly twenty-five years and it wasn't until he landed in Brighton, knowing no one and having no money, that he began again.  Ten years later and he's been lucky enough to have had a few chapbooks published including a new one from Analog Submission Press entitled 'Flying through this Life like a Bottle Battling Gravity', his debut from Crisis Chronicles Press (Ohio, USA) and his second effort for Holy & Intoxicated Press (Hastings, UK).  He has read around the UK at various bars, venues and festivals and is always keen to get out and read to new crowds.  His poetry has also been or will be published shortly in the Chiron Review, Zygote in my Coffee, Section 8, Razur Cuts, Paper & Ink, Grandma Moses 'Poet to Notice', Empty Mirror, Midnight Lane Gallery, Bareback Lit and is a Contributing Poet over at the wonderful Mad Swirl.  If you like what you've read go send a friend request on facebook to bradfordmiddleton1. 

Sunday, August 18, 2019

WITH MY PLUS ONE AT THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL. By Luis Cuauhtémoc Berriozábal


Sitting here
at The Bowl,
my plus one
to my left,
a cooler
with six beers.

It does not
tell me to
stop drinking.
It does not
tell me to
stop singing.

It does not
disappoint
or let me
down.  My plus 
one is all 
that I need. 





Luis was born in Mexico, lives in California, and works in the mental health 
field in Los Angeles, CA. His poems have appeared in Ariel Chart, Beatnik Cowboy,
Dope Fiend Daily, Unlikely Stories, and Zygote In My Coffee.


Monday, August 12, 2019

Mr. Asshole. By Dan Provost




It’s a great
justification for 
all those who suffer 
from depression and anxiety
that “getting out of your head”
is the reason you, sometimes,
drink twenty Miller Lights.

Smoke ten pipe hits of the weed.

And take credence that the
world is all right for a while.

No, not really…

The truth is that asshole has crept
into your life again.

Not as often

Not every day…

But he still lingers around the 
Periphery.  Peeking, hiding—
Welcoming back the guilty 
hangover, 

when, while groaning in bed… 
All you want to do is swallow
the bullet—Cursing your existence.

No, I do not make
the cut anymore…

Walking around dazed.

Pondering creative ability
under the influence.

When you have difficulty 
picking up the pen…

Yes, I hate that asshole
who has hounded 
my footsteps for so many
God damn years.

He laughs when I’m
fucked up…grins

when I make a fool of
myself…

Calls me out when
I try to stay sober.

Kills me if
he wins…





Dan Provost has been published throughout the small press for many years.  He is the author of nine books and lives in Berlin, New Hampshire with his wife Laura.

Friday, August 9, 2019

The Weirdo of La Calle. By Gwil James Thomas



Lived at the top 
of the street - 
his hair was wild 
like an animal’s - 
maybe that’s how 
he’d befriended 
the alley cats 
that’d follow him 
down the street - 
he carried a pen 
and a little 
black book 
in his back pocket, 
he was frequently 
seen in the bar, 
or by the dumpsters
going through 
unwanted paintings 
and broken furniture - 
a few months ago 
he was caught 
skinny dipping 
with some girl -
having climbed 
the fence 
to the pool of 
the nice flats 
down the street - 
he always 
seemed to have 
some fresh wound 
or bandage on him too - 
God knows what 
he did? Or where 
else he went? 

Someone said 
that he wrote
poems too - 
but of course 
you can’t believe 
everything that 
they say.





“Gwil James Thomas is a novelist, poet and inept musician originally from Bristol, England. He is a Best of The Net nominee whose written work can be found widely in print and online. His latest poetry chapbook Writing Beer, Drinking Poetry is forthcoming from Concrete Meat Press. He is currently laying low somewhere in Northern Spain.”


Thursday, August 1, 2019

Tattoos by Wayne F. Burke


Tattoos
over
his
arms
looks
from
a
distance
like
he
forgot
to
wash.




Wayne F. Burke has published six full-length collections of poetry, most recently DIFLUCAN (2019, BareBack Press). He lives in Vermont.