May’s Poetry Issues is out, including “Platamon” by Alexandra Mouratidou.
Along with The Hague and Malmö, I am pleased to announce that a small number of copies of the current and previous issues are distributed to a selected audience for the first time in Berlin, thanks to the publishing professional and co-founder of Litdocs and the Literary Field Kaleidoscope, Dr. Sandra van Lente, and in Liverpool, thanks to the curator and visual artist Jenny Porter, some of whose work you can admire here.
And if you can’t get your hands on a copy, you can still enjoy the content of Poetry Issues #3 right here:
The end of our affairs
We’d like to fold them up in a neat
bedsheet-in-drawer manner
but they’re a roomful
of hopelessly knotted yarn.
So we set them on fire in the yard.
We resume our conversations
with ashes-on-mantel earnesty
then stuff them in shoe boxes
at the back of the garage.
So we get to keep the advantage.
In cardboard urns we align the has-beens
the would-be husbands we never miss
but then we judge it inefficient
as it all comes down to mass.
So we finally throw them in the trash.
Unfastened
I asked him to tell me once again
about the death of stars.
He went up and down the room
and I stayed focused on his arms
that broke into a dance against
the stubbornness of time,
tracing harmony and flow
back to when
each loose moment had the stamp
of the movement of the sun.
Platamon
by Alexandra Mouratidou
The evening leans
the sea shies behind a fan:
geranium red.
A Child’s Solace
A memory of
forever invincible
young parents laughing.
Mirror Image
It took me years of staring
at a flat map
before I saw
the night’s stereogram
as firefly lights descended their strings
one by one
and surfaced to the unlit soul
of the one staring.
Interrogation Triolet
The empty pages forced me to confess
to all the murders that I didn’t do.
The pen is now resting on my chest.
The empty pages forced me to confess
insisting that we made some progress
before the late-night shift was due.
The empty pages forced me to confess
to all the murders that I didn’t do.