Stalemate / Jeanne Blum Lesinski
“A hairy woodpecker, hidden on the trunk back, inched its way downward out of danger.” Jeanne Blum Lesinski writes on aviary drama.
“A hairy woodpecker, hidden on the trunk back, inched its way downward out of danger.” Jeanne Blum Lesinski writes on aviary drama.
“In hibernation, the town / didn’t stir when we arrived. / The dune frozen / lakes mostly ice.” Karen Paul Holmes shares a piece on a winter climb.
“Though why should a fox and poems obey / when my children do not, / slalom savants sledding sideways” Kiyoshi Hirawa writes on a winter day at the hill.
“The cemetery is filled / now that it’s winter, a warm / winter I don’t like. I find / heated encounters with the living / tiring.” Camille Newsom shares a piece on winter.
Daniel Combs shares an image from Lake Michigan.
“The cemetery is filled / now that it’s winter, a warm / winter I don’t like. I find / heated encounters with the living / tiring.” Camille Newsom shares a piece on winter.
A watercolor and ink piece from Kaisa Holmstrom, an artist based in Hancock, MI.
Kiyoshi Hirawa shares five translated haikus and a meditation on inheritance.
“This winter, bare pavement the last four weeks, birthday gifts for my grandson irrelevant: snow shovel, snow tube, snowball gun.” Greta Bolger writes on snow and its new absence.
Susan McDonell shares photography from an ice storm in winter.
“How many times have I written us into snow?” BEE LB writes on winter and wanting.
“Shedding covers, stepping /
onto frigid hardwood – / feet like bricks of white marble / in the semi-darkness.” Bruce Gunther shares a piece on winter mornings at home.
“If the ice gave in, Will and Stuart would learn that still waters run deep, and there are bodies at the bottom of the lake.” In “Winter, 1877,” Carl Lavigne’s characters take a treacherous journey.
“A dog’s bark several blocks away travels on the steady wind -a wind with sharpened teeth.” Bruce Gunther shares a piece on bitter cold and fine snow.
the wind whipping through the edges / of my windows and doors. my unmade bed / and its frozen sheets. the blue / of the lake at night. the burnt haloes / of light all around. it’s like someone painted the world / but no one did. ” BEE LB writes on the frigid days.
The morning crow / perched in the skeletal branches / of the maple remains silent / and flutters its crepe paper wings. Bruce Gunther shares a piece on snow and stillness.
“Stepped into a park covered in brown leaves / awash in a fine flurry of white snow” Joanne Gram writes on a season’s start.
“the sun is for gracing the lake on the best of days, warming the trees that reach tallest, thinning the ice without ever breaking.” BEE LB writes on the winter sun.