he punctuates the days […]
Editors’ Selections
http://www.tupeloquarterly.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/from-Xamissa.pdf From Cape Town, South Africa, Henk Rossouw has recent poems in The Paris Review, The […]
From Xamissa by Henk Rossouw
As though a group of persons looking at one bird had called themselves a flock. For […]
School by Kathleen Peirce
My hands are simple as mice and harnessed to a body of straw. The cup you […]
Domestic Noir II by Jennifer Moore
Moore delights in parataxis and inversions of scale; the reader of this formally dexterous poem is […]
An Introduction to Jennifer Moore by Virginia Konchan
In Tyler Mills’ haunting poems of extreme brevity, everyday acts such as hanging a baby’s diapers […]
An Introduction to Tyler Mills by Virginia Konchan
A line from another of Natalie Catasús’s poems haunts me, “how soon body/will sidestep body.” Lately, […]
An Introduction to Natalie Catasús by Cassandra Cleghorn
When Carrie looks up at you, pale green eyes pleading, and asks when daddy is coming […]
How To Be A Widow by Lesley Trites
her pretty face […]
What Flew Out of Aunt Hester’s Scream by Ashley M. ...
http://www.tupeloquarterly.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Toby-Martinez-de-la-Rivas.pdf Toby Martinez de las Rivas was born in 1978. He grew up in Somerset, then […]
Seven Poems by Toby Martinez de la Rivas
Poetry can be supremely palliative, adding beauty where little is found or providing therapeutic relief from […]
Against Officialese: On Solmaz Sharif’s Look by D.A. Powell
I first read this batch of Toby Martinez de las Rivas’ poems at a large, outdoor […]