ISSUE 11 (Nov 2022)
Composing and Decomposing by Jerry Robbins a poem and a somewhat literal ode to that feeling we all get in life when everything seems to be falling to bits.
Ass-Holes by Bobby "Z " the jyd - a visceral poem concerning the rusty bullet-wounds we encounter in daily adult life.
My Hand is Stuck! by Lesley Mukwacha - a safari tale about two starving men and a rhino with a recalcitrant rectum.
Bob Newhart Meets Nirvana by Mark J. Mitchell - a poem which is also a bemused telephone conversation and a novel excuse for missing work.
You Scratch My Back, and I'll... by James Blears - a darkly humorous tale involving a huge, over-enthusiastic dog and the dangers of men's locker-room talk.
A Guest for Dinner by L. M. Stanley - some macabre humour for you now, about a burglary that goes horribly wrong. You know what they say, "One man's finger is another man's sausage," or something.
The Aruba Trip by Antaeus Balevre - a poem that is a subtle parody of a Christmas poem, only it involves clothes with minds of their own and a smug cat.
Remembering Abe and Sally by Jeffrey Zable - a thoughtful closing poem examining the irony behind how we treat people older than us.
Ass-Holes by Bobby "Z " the jyd - a visceral poem concerning the rusty bullet-wounds we encounter in daily adult life.
My Hand is Stuck! by Lesley Mukwacha - a safari tale about two starving men and a rhino with a recalcitrant rectum.
Bob Newhart Meets Nirvana by Mark J. Mitchell - a poem which is also a bemused telephone conversation and a novel excuse for missing work.
You Scratch My Back, and I'll... by James Blears - a darkly humorous tale involving a huge, over-enthusiastic dog and the dangers of men's locker-room talk.
A Guest for Dinner by L. M. Stanley - some macabre humour for you now, about a burglary that goes horribly wrong. You know what they say, "One man's finger is another man's sausage," or something.
The Aruba Trip by Antaeus Balevre - a poem that is a subtle parody of a Christmas poem, only it involves clothes with minds of their own and a smug cat.
Remembering Abe and Sally by Jeffrey Zable - a thoughtful closing poem examining the irony behind how we treat people older than us.