Snow Guests

by Lois Levinson


The day of the two-foot snowstorm (was it in March?),
the patio chairs filled with broad-shouldered,

square-headed snow guests decked out all in white,
leaning slightly forward, engaged in animated conversation,

old friends seated around a table laid in a thick damask,
and, though they were chilled, I could sense their sparkle,

the heat they generated, and I envied them, yearned to join
in the effortless ambiance of melodious babble.

Then the sun came out, and, like vanilla snow cones
on a summer day, they began to puddle.

I grieved their meltdown, the inevitable subsiding,
as though I needed more proof of impermanence.

                               *
But now it is May, and, like a cicada emerging
from a seventeen-year burial, I am ravenous

for your company. Dare we meet for coffee?
I’ll put on that crimson silk scarf, the one whose ends flow

behind me like soaring wings. I’ll dust off my red shoes,
find my old purse, drive the disconcertingly unfamiliar streets

to our favorite coffee place and greet you with a hug.
We will sit down at an outdoor table with our cappuccinos,

shake off our cobwebbed cloaks of isolation
and blink in this new brightness, a bit bewildered

by the screenless sight and sound of one another.



Lois Levinson is the author of Before It All Vanishes, and a chapbook, Crane Dance, both published by Finishing Line Press.  Her poems have appeared in Global PoemicCanary Journal, GyroscopeThe Literary Nest, Cloudbank and other journals. She lives in Denver, Colorado where she’s gotten through the past year by writing poetry and watching birds. Liz Baron is an artist and restaurateur who lives in Texas by way of New York City. She and her husband, Jim, founded, own and operate four Mexican-Southwestern restaurants. She got her Bachelor of Fine Art from Pratt Institute but stopped painting when restaurant work and family life consumed most of her time. She is grateful to the online art classes of Sketchbook Skool that helped her regain the joy of a regular art practice. 

After Icarus

by Lois Levinson


We hadn’t thought to worry
about the birds,
consumed as we were
with the threat
of sickness and death.
Each breath laced with dread,
we doomscrolled
and calculated our odds.

Last spring the birds returned,
found us secluded
under a shroud of anxiety.
They heard our silence
and raised their voices
to fill the void with song.

Late summer, despair
compounded by wildfires
devouring our mountain forests,
the air vile with smoke,
we hardly noticed
as flocks of birds
fell dead from the sky–
swallows,
flycatchers,
vireos,
bluebirds–
by the thousands.

They’d fled the infernos,
only to be trapped aloft
in the lethal grip of icy storms.
Their wind-wracked bodies
starved to feather and bone,
they plummeted to the ground,
where they lay side by side
along the rivers and roads
and in the fields,
in ghastly pantomime
of all the lives we’ve lost.



Lois Levinson is the author of Before It All Vanishes, and a chapbook, Crane Dance, both published by Finishing Line Press.  Her poems have appeared in Canary Journal, Global PoemicGyroscopeThe Carolina Quarterly, The MacGuffin, Cloudbank and otherjournals. She lives in Denver, Colorado where she’s gotten through the past year by writing poetry and watching birds. Sulochana Mahe is an artist based in India’s former French outpost, Mahe. She dissolves herself day in, day out in social work, and art. Her work includes teaching painting to cancer patients, helping them overcome their sense of being doomed. She taught art to 150 prisoners at the Central Prison, Kannur, moving their minds to the softer sides of life. Teaching art to women at a care home in Thalassery gives her joy that colors can’t.

Chasm

by Lois Levinson


You pick your way
through the rubble
in your quarantine dream
your legs wobbly
the ground crumbling
beneath you
a cavernous gorge gaping
between that luminous confection
you thought was your life
and that bilious vortex
on the other side
your recollection
of the time before
already receding as you
are sucked over the precipice
into the howling.



Lois Levinson is the author of Before It All Vanishes, a full-length book of poetry, and a chapbook, Crane Dance, both published by Finishing Line Press. Her poetry has appeared in The Carolina Quarterly, The MacGuffin, Canary Journal, Cloudbank, Literary Mama and otherjournals. She is a graduate of the Poetry Book Project at Lighthouse Writers Workshop in Denver, Colorado and is currently at work on her second book. Sabiyha Prince is an anthropologist, artist, and author based in Washington, DC.  Her books and essays explore urban change and African American culture, and her paintings and photo collages grapple with memory, identity, kinship and inequality.