“Rapture is a painful thing” by McKinley Johnson

after Louise Bourgeois’s Arch of Hysteria (1993)

It’s no simple vanish, no snap of earth-forming fingers;
when God takes you, it's violent.
Dissonant trumpets, burning chariots,
angels grab you by the belt and yank.

Your clothes are not left, neat and folded,
in your seat. There is no flash of light,
no cooing of doves—you are here and next
you know you are heavenbound, Godspeed,

hips skyward, limbs trailing behind,
shoulder ripped from socket by the drag;
friction makes you burn, a reverse comet,
a smoking censer chain-dragged through the sky,

sprinkle your sulfur down on earth—
that is what hell smells like. There is no
chance for goodbyes, or there wouldn’t be,
if your ascension wasn’t eternal. By the time

you realize there was time, those you left
behind are gone—their journey equally plummet,
you just had the luck to spite gravity, you predestined
devine, you rainbow-clad prophet, father of Methuselah.

Be glad your friends are the ones in the iron box;
be glad as you soar past Saint Peter, that he stamps
your name in the book; be glad the cherubim east
of the garden lowered their swords for you. Be glad

oh golden image of God, that He has made you
and allowed you this ascension, this fire is cleansing,
this journey a lesson. Why would rapture be anything
but painful? Even Jesus had to suffer to get here.

McKinley Johnson (he/him) is a poet from the foothills of Appalachia. He is an MFA candidate in Poetry at George Mason University and a teaching fellow for Poetry Alive! His work can be found in the North Carolina Poetry Society’s Award Anthology Pinesong, Neologism Poetry Journal, and elsewhere.

“I Search the Internet for Evidence to Justify My Melancholy” by Jacqui Zeng

Yes, headlights are 15% brighter now
and plane turbulence is actually worse.

Birds crash into windows,
little yellow packages dropped

onto the sidewalks, announcing
the death of spring and the rise

of brutal summer. Someone
is trying to poison the rats

in my neighborhood, but
the squirrels lay belly-up

instead. Covid rates are spiking,
again. Last week’s death count buried

in a webpage few are reading.
Our city will get 30 days

of dangerous heat next year.
I know 30 people who don’t

have air conditioning. Heat
has a bitter taste. Like asphalt.

Lightning bugs are going extinct.
Little kids don’t understand

what the glowing circles are
in books and movies set in summer.

The U.S. Military is the largest
polluter in the world. 51 million tons

of CO2 per year. Also, our bombs.
Also, dust flumes six stories high.

The official death toll in Palestine is
massively, massively, undercounted.

Any rain big enough, anywhere,
could sweep a house away.

I need to reacquaint myself
with the Earth I actually inhabit.

I keep a pit in my stomach
so I don’t blow away.

Jacqui Zeng’s poems have appeared in Black Warrior Review, Mid-American Review, HAD, and TIMBER, among others. She received her MFA from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. They are a poetry reader for Tinderbox Poetry Journal and currently live in Chicago.

“THE SPEED OF THINGS AT SPRING RUN” by Andy Fogle

A green frog on the bank,
and we just watch.

Everyone knows this
from cartoons and/or

being outside: the leap
is a single, swift, arc

from right there at our feet
to somewhere else

we don’t even know.
It happens when we get

too close. If we’re lucky,
if the water

is clear enough,
if the light is right,

we can see the creature
that lives in both worlds

living in the other now,
and the single kick that

flicks it from one side
of our vision to

the other. Everyone
knows about the land

and water deal,
but amphibian also means

of doubtful nature.
Were we made

for both worlds?
It’s good we started

with just watching, ok
that we’re fuck-all to the frog,

the one that haunts stone,
and a miracle

that we manage to track
its flight through the stream

because—God!—it gets
so far away so fast.

Andy Fogle is poetry editor of Salvation South, and author of Mother Countries, Across From Now, and the forthcoming Telekinesis, collaborations with Hope LeGro (Ghost City). He’s from Virginia Beach, spent years in the D.C. area, and now lives with his family in upstate New York, teaching high school.

Two Poems by Chris Corlew

I MAY NEVER BE STRAIGHT EDGE BUT IT IS PUNK ROCK TO QUIT DRINKING

in the NOFX song Bob spends 15 years gettin loaded until his liver exploded
saying he wanted to think about nothing

am I made of the same weakness
afraid of checking my mail?

cockroaches & bedbugs my first apartment like Charybdis’ maw of misery
molded paperbacks thanks to a busted ceiling pipe like
cosmic justice for my settler ass like all streams flow
into the sea & yet the sea is never full homie


all becomes dust
it is not a sin to recycle a book


the best conversations happen in a tavern but
the revolution doesn’t happen because you got drunk

the revolution is clear-eyed & callous-handed & joyous in struggle
the revolution is constant as a river & leaves you sore but naturally high
the revolution is dancing with everyone on the floor

in community garden mornings
in the drag punk band hollerin on the street festival north stage
in the public school fundraiser night

it is song you started but only the rest of the band could finish
it is a reliable bus route
it is a shared box of blueberries

WHITE PARENTS OF BIRACIAL CHILDREN

do people ignore you
at the airport
if you’re the parent not holding the kid’s hand?

our kid’s pre-k3 teacher called him a ‘bright light’
which was as adorable as hummingbirds
of course that’s exactly what you are yes it is you are bright light

cut to a couple years later
talking about being half-Black half-white
he asks how much of him is bright light

every part of you is bright light I tell him
but that’s not the point it’s Black History Month
& sun is shining at the park
& my wife teases me he still needs sunscreen you know

one day my son will grow up
& be another Black man
I can screw up a handshake with

Chris Corlew is a writer and musician living in Chicago. His work has appeared in Cotton Xenomorph, Whisk(e)y Tit, PassionFruit Review, Cracked.com, and elsewhere. He can be found at lazyandentitled.org or on Bluesky @thecorlew.

“I Wanted to Tell You about These Geese” by Amorak Huey

I love the work a kiss can do. The way
it leaves language
harmless, temporary.

The way it erases a whole history of distance.

It’s raining in Ohio this morning,
roadside ditches filled to overflowing,
and I don’t have words

for the distance between this morning
and our last kiss.
When I was an editor

I was taught not to write last
when I mean most recent.
What I mean

is we should be kissing even now.
I mean you should see this sky
emptying itself into the day.

So much rain. And
despite the rain, geese anyway.
Torrents of them, flying home.

Amorak Huey is author of five books of poems including Mouth, forthcoming from Cornerstone Press in 2026. Co-founder with Han VanderHart of River River Books, Huey teaches at Bowling Green State University. He is co-author with W. Todd Kaneko of the textbook Poetry: A Writer’s Guide and Anthology (Bloomsbury, 2024).

“Counter-clockwise” by Nico Green

I want you and I want you too.
I want two loves around me. Swirling in a spiral, if possible.
Counter-clockwise.

I want to look up at the sky and see two faces.
Two moons orbiting an alien planet.
We left the old one behind. It couldn’t hold us anymore

I want to look up at the sky and see two faces.
Then I want them to look at each other with all the love in the Universe.
The Universe we created together. The old one couldn’t hold us anymore

I want two dogs and two cats and two lovers and 6 rooms, for when we need to be alone.
I want to collect all the love that loves me back and fill a house with it.
A new species of love that grows when exposed to sunlight.
The old love couldn’t hold us anymore.

Nico Green is a Brazilian-American poet based in Lisbon, Portugal, and the founder of Poems for Strangers, featured in a documentary by Ukrainian filmmaker Anastasiya Bura. His work explores love, sex, and non-monogamy, reflecting his activism in sex-positive and polyamorous communities. He/Him.

“I was a child, all body.” by Tara Burke

It was always the mountain
and me. Paris Mountain.
The woods were mine:
tree tops, rocks, creeks,
space between. I topped
for the first time on leaves
straddling felled trees.
The way they laid across
space, over huge limestone,
and moss, rocks begging me
to shimmy across. I laid
on my belly, wrapped
my young arms and legs
around her girth. I couldn’t
reach my own fingertips,
pressed into the rough bark,
pressed my ear too, so I
could hear her breathe.
This was around the time
my pelvis had a body
of its own, my pubic bone
close to anything at all
and a rhythmic rocking
took over. I let myself
be all pelvis, all fingers
and ears, all torso and legs
and tongue. I was a child
who’d pressed herself
into many things but
the forest took me in.
I came alive, moaned
like an animal, looked
around. Was it me, or this
tree? Or the wild, how it
always seemed to see?
Alone, usually, but not
here. She, the trees. She,
the mountain. She, the space
between my sound and hers.
We came up together, I learned
my body, she taught me what
it is to be alive, how to be a wild
beast on this blue green earth.


Tara Burke is from Paris, Virginia and teaches at VCU and the Visual Arts Center of Richmond. Her poems were recently published in Screen Door Review, Shenandoah Literary, Khôra, and Southern Humanities. Lately, she’s absorbed in making shorter, surreal love poems, speculative stories, handmade quilted things, and clay houses.

“108 degrees, honey” by Thanh Bui

there will still be humans, my lover says 
though we might not be included in that.
our kind isn’t just going to die out immediately,
to which i envision the skin of the ones who’ll
live. visit a Titanic museum—to predict which
persons will survive, you’d need to know their
statuses. an iceberg does not discriminate, nor do
fires, but people? we aren’t natural. did you know
the world is running out of sand? we’re not even
wealthy enough to know what to hoard, to hide.
for now, i can get water whenever, i am rich with
someone else’s thirst. our guide this summer
was from Quảng Trị, & didn’t know of electricity
until 2004. while he used candles, i moused
computers, i watched tv. during covid, i witnessed
my relatives pray for the vaccine already in my body
waters away. watching is another kind of pain.
that’s why they use it as torture, too. what’s as
un-human as having no power to change what’s
in front of you? bó tay as it all sinks. is it a good
thing i don’t know what species we’ve lost? which
cats are the last of their kind? my phone keeps
turning off, says it’s too hot to function. the summer
construction workers have a tip: turning off the AC
in their homes an hour+ before work helps them
acclimate to the heat. elsewhere, they’ve invented more
ways to survive. but we are a country of litigators.

Thanh Bui was born in Gò Vấp and raised in Dorchester & Alief, and is a writer & actor based out of Austin, Texas. She loves constantly.

“Natural History Museum” by Pam Yve Simon

Posing for a selfie in the museum,
you pulled me in close for a kiss.
Motion sensors disengaged, alarmed wire quieted,
the security guard on a lunch break.
All at once, our love
became visible and accessible.
For that one moment,
I didn’t feel like a relic
of myself.

Pam Yve Simon (she/her) believes in love and art. Her poetry and photography have appeared in print and online publications, including Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Stanchion, Northern Otter Journal, FERAL, and The Daily Drunk’s Marvelous Verses anthology. Say hi via Bluesky Social @PamYve

“Summer Light with Migraine” by Donna Vorreyer

a horseshoe shovel

Something precious, pink shimmer of quartz in rough earth—
precious glimmerseed of memory. No lie, things have been rough.
Pink-cheeked fever, clustered stab of pain. But I’ve found here, in
shimmer and dirt, a slow sifting of time, a stalled second-hand, the quartz
of a Swiss watch stymied. When I close my eyes, I imagine a mound of
quartz where the garbage lies, where even trash cans shimmer
in the right light. How lucky to have known love, its gardens of pink,
rough caresses. Such delicate firmness. Both common and precious,
earth that blooms diamonds, stays fertile, alway growing something.

Donna Vorreyer is the author of Unrivered (2025), To Everything There Is (2020), Every Love Story is an Apocalypse Story (2016) & A House of Many Windows (2013), all from Sundress Publications. She hosts the online reading series A Hundred Pitchers of Honey and co-edits of the online journal Asterales.