Recent
Literature.Jul 9, 2017

Stakhanov

“The coal in his eyes, in his ears, on his lips, in tears/ that cleansed his corneas, in fingernails. The coal…”
Poem of the Week (9 July), by Somendra Singh Kharola.

By Poetry Team
Roving Eye.Jul 5, 2017

Poet of the Month: Simon Perchik

“The subconscious is a gold mine, all you need is a pen in your hand.”
Simon Perchik, The Missing Slate’s Poet of the Month, talks to Julie Haasova.

By Poetry Team
Literature.Jul 1, 2017

Some Boats Don’t Float They Resist Sinking

“I admit I felt nothing when the news broke,/ it was only the stained glass bellies of the purple martins/ flaring, that made my skin bristle into the laketop stillness…”
Poem of the Week (1 July), by M.J. Arlett.

By Poetry Team
Literature.May 24, 2017

Of Persimmons

“My beloved brought me a basket of Hachiya persimmons, orange-red and glowing…”
Poem of the Week (24 May), by Susan Nguyen.

By Poetry Team
Literature.May 18, 2017

*

“It was a needless rinse, this bowl/ half wood, half smelling from wood/ that’s been taken away, trembling”
Poem of the Week (17 May), by Simon Perchik

By Poetry Team
Literature.May 3, 2017

The Word

“they cannot ensure a clean death for me/ they cannot ensure my reincarnation back to those lands…”
Poem of the Week (3 May), by Elif Sezen.

By Poetry Team
Literature.Apr 26, 2017

Vigil

“For the longest time I thought the night was furred, / a mass of soft hair fallen each dusk.”
Poem of the Week (April 26), by Meg Reynolds.

By Poetry Team
Literature.Apr 20, 2017

Note from Orchestra

“I passed a boy with a cloud of smoke/ where his head ought to be:/ a cigarette fume Magritte…”
Poem of the Week (19 April), by Helen Bowell.

By Poetry Team
Literature.Apr 13, 2017

Invitation to Dust

“We were tangueros/ of the same tile, tropical/ byway, creek mist,/ and love’s insomnia under Venus…”
Poem of the Week (12 April), by Sergio A. Ortiz.

By Poetry Team
Literature.Apr 5, 2017

It is easier

“Three paper rosebuds/ strung on an unbreakable thread…”
Poem of the Week (5 April) by Alice Rahon, translated by Anna Kisby.

By Poetry Team