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Ode To Everything Ordinary, Mary Christine Delea
Ode To Everything Ordinary, Mary Christine Delea
Bryant Literary Review
Praise the #2 pencil
The Waves, Jéanpaul Ferro
The Waves, Jéanpaul Ferro
Bryant Literary Review
In the afternoon, when the sky
is almost out of sun,
The Last Transgression, William Peacock
The Last Transgression, William Peacock
Bryant Literary Review
August 31. Valerie cut her foot on a shell this afternoon and acted like she was going to die.
To A Former Student Training To Become An Interrogator, David O'Connell
To A Former Student Training To Become An Interrogator, David O'Connell
Bryant Literary Review
They say pressure isn't torture
and, at times, because I don't know better
I'm willing to agree
Kidnapped At Birth, Buff Whitman-Bradley
Kidnapped At Birth, Buff Whitman-Bradley
Bryant Literary Review
Every one of us was kidnapped at birth
By a man in money-colored shoes who
Snatched us away from our real parents
One More Time For Donny Deadborne, Stephen Roger Powers
One More Time For Donny Deadborne, Stephen Roger Powers
Bryant Literary Review
I'm a feature comedian.
Happy, Peter Johnson
Happy, Peter Johnson
Bryant Literary Review
In spite of persistent rumors, let me assure you I'm happy.
I Traveled South, Janet Jennings
I Traveled South, Janet Jennings
Bryant Literary Review
We drove to the coast to sip Black Russians. Cream swirled in an ice-
black sea. My name changed every day.
Young Boy Riding The Wave Of Desire Out Of This Poem, Ken Meisel
Young Boy Riding The Wave Of Desire Out Of This Poem, Ken Meisel
Bryant Literary Review
The young boy who is about ten years old and sitting on the front step of a burned house and bouncing a small rubber ball on the charred garbage strewn sidewalk
On A Beach With White Sand, Matt Ross
On A Beach With White Sand, Matt Ross
Bryant Literary Review
In trillions of years,
Every inch of matter
Autobiography, Pamela S. Wynn
Autobiography, Pamela S. Wynn
Bryant Literary Review
My parent's match was made on the outskirts of heaven.
The Other Betty, Pat Schultheis
The Other Betty, Pat Schultheis
Bryant Literary Review
Grow old and you'll become a stranger to yourself.
Colfax With The Sound Off, Erika T. Wurth
Colfax With The Sound Off, Erika T. Wurth
Bryant Literary Review
Pushing his head out of her lap, she stands.
Bridge Of Sighs, Don Kunz
Bridge Of Sighs, Don Kunz
Bryant Literary Review
One wrong turn
(For which Venice is famous)
The Song Of Louise Blue Feather, Zan Bockes
The Song Of Louise Blue Feather, Zan Bockes
Bryant Literary Review
I played violin in high school.
Exposed, Michelle Soucy
Jerome And The Angel, Jennifer Anne Moses
Jerome And The Angel, Jennifer Anne Moses
Bryant Literary Review
Jerome had two secrets, both of them so beautiful that he wanted to burst open, just burst right open at the seams, spilling himself everywhere, all over the floor
Hartford Circus Fire (1944), John Surowiecki
Hartford Circus Fire (1944), John Surowiecki
Bryant Literary Review
All we were told was that the animals
were saved and the children died;
The Cliffs, Stephen Arney
Girls, Linsey Morse
Girls, Linsey Morse
Bryant Literary Review
learn at very young ages
that outer beauty is the water--
How Far Is Home, Robin Caine
How Far Is Home, Robin Caine
Bryant Literary Review
Her younger sister, Beth, met a Venezuelan man at a wedding, where she was a bridesmaid and he was the best man.
Lyme Tick, Mitch Lescarbeau
Lyme Tick, Mitch Lescarbeau
Bryant Literary Review
Through the porch screen of the makeshift sickroom
the patient boats in the cove
Morendo, Al Niente (Dying Away, To Nothing), Ryan Cipriano
Morendo, Al Niente (Dying Away, To Nothing), Ryan Cipriano
Bryant Literary Review
Chicago plaza, centered around a fountain
Beside which Stanley passed away
Gone Too Soon, Nancy Lee Craven
Gone Too Soon, Nancy Lee Craven
Bryant Literary Review
You left, I think, under the burden of heavy judgment,
Or grief too difficult to bear. I do not know, but I would like to,
Counting, Mitzi Mcmahon
Counting, Mitzi Mcmahon
Bryant Literary Review
Counting is important. Not that you're able to count because an idiot can count.
Parsimonious, Paul Hostovsky
Parsimonious, Paul Hostovsky
Bryant Literary Review
I remember the first time I looked it up--
I was a sophomore--Michael