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Showing posts from October, 2025

Flying Island Journal 10.31

Dear Flying Island Readers: Welcome to the 10.31 Edition of the Flying Island Journal! In this edition we publish poems by Boyd Bauman ,  Lillian Toumey , William E. Smith III , and  Zann Carter . Inspired to send us your fiction, poetry, or creative nonfiction? For more info on how to submit, see the tab above. Thank you for reading, Flying Island Editors and Readers All images are sourced from the Canva library from various artists. 

Praise Song for the Basement, a poem by Boyd Bauman

Praise Song for the Basement    though some folks might call it a cellar,  granite and quartzite, glacial rocks of ages  unfathomable, cement spread roughly between,  propping the 1910 farmhouse above.    My dad sought refuge here,  huddled for warmth next to the radio  the AC Church didn't allow upstairs,  Grand Ol' Opry and "The Wabash Cannonball"  carrying him away from fears of the father.    Warmth came also with chainsaw and ax  in the timber, scoop tractoring the load  to the basement’s east side, propping the chute door  to a yawn, feeding the ravenous furnace all winter,  a steel beast six feet deep,  pipes to the metal-grated vents upstairs.    We lay our work gloves on top to dry,  and once from the nest a startled snake shot out  into the space above my head,  finding nothing but air acrobatically doubled back.    Dad got up on a chair and flipped over...

Leaving Home, a poem by Lillian Toumey

Leaving Home In this house the air still smells like your old almond lotion, Mom. Upstairs you used to let me wear your wedding veil for ceremonies with my bear. Aunt Dee said I looked like you but in the mirror my face was mine alone. In August of last year you drove me in the minivan to college. On the sly I packed your tweezers and your perfume in my duffel bag. When classes ended I wished you’d bring me ginger ale and chicken soup in bed. Tucked up onto the couch my pinky toes feel callused just like yours. Your shower walls have mildew on them – I knew that would make you cry. Mom, I cannot hear you. I do not know you with those tired eyes. I baked a chocolate cake last week that tasted nothing like your recipe. I don’t think you’re boring, Mom – tell me what you’re working on –  I never read a truer story than your one about that long-haired girl. Why did you make me change my skirt before the sophomore dance? Mom, when you sent me to my room that night I should’ve gone. The ...

Miss You. Would Like To Daisy Together Again., a poem by William E. Smith III

Miss You. Would Like To Daisy Together Again. After Gabrielle Calvocoressi Do not even care if you come up the steps drunk. I know the jeep still waits somewhere. Still think  about how my sister named it daisy;  how hanging all over the row bar and sides:  my sister, my cousins, myself.  Do you remember that? Driving. Miss you. Miss the jostle of tree trunk breaks. Go ahead.  Light up a cig. We don’t have to tell your lungs this time. Miss you. Still hear the stories in my ears.  Be better if you told them. Your knack for details –  want that. Again. Remember pink lady slippers and red Indian paint brushes. The red army lichen. You named them for me. Wish we could ride those dirt roads and forest trails.  Miss Miane. Miss you. Misplaced the words  of the jeep song – forgive me? Miss  the scourge of the swamp. It’s shoulder. How you could turn a piece of stump into lore. Envy that. Somewhere on a radio playing with the queen of heart...

Emptiness Bound To Bloom, a poem by Zann Carter

Emptiness Bound To Bloom “Emptiness is bound to bloom, like hundreds of grasses blossoming.” - Eihei Dōgen, “Sky Flowers” This morning I drew a card that told me to leave a little space when I eat a meal and all day I thought about leaving little spaces. In my stomach. In my heart. In my day. I left a little space in my to-do list, space for a pause that let the bamboo print on the shower curtain remind me how my mother loved the clumps growing in the yard, how it sheltered my dreams and stories, and how itchy it was to touch the papery sheaths of the culms. Bamboo survived closer to ground zero  at Hiroshima than any other living thing. Within days of the blast new green sprouted. I thought of the ground zero of my son’s death. How I move in a little space around it. How I try to be bamboo. -Zann Carter Zann Carter writes poetry and short fiction in Terre Haute, Indiana, and then works with fiber arts to get out of her head and back into the body. She co-hosted a mo...