Longevity by Henry Bladon
As you drift off,/ you imagine a poem/ about the night sky/ which talks about/ fairy dust/ and candy
Recipe for a Better World by David Lohrey
Don’t you know the difference between a potato and a lion?/ That’s odd.// They put lions on pajamas
Death Is Not a 5-Star Hotel by David Lohrey
That was it. I wasn’t able to be free,/ wasn’t prepared to carry the load, not entirely./ I was too young. And
Every Conversation Begins with a Lie by Brent Vickers
Common tongue passed back/ and forth, tenuous communication// stretched over a canvas/ of silence
Death and by Gale Acuff
When I'm dead I wonder will I know it/ and if I will if there's something I can/ do about it but if not at least
The Usurpation by Dan White
The Usurpation; Or: How the Honor of Store Location 1293 of the Ragin’ Raccoon Pizza House Franchise
Flame by Michael Chin
Ingrid didn’t like birthdays. She didn’t mind getting older—a sheer measurement of time—and supposed
What Have We Got Going On? by Ace Boggess
—clerk at the auto shop// someone said the world will end today./ asteroid. solar flare. nuclear armageddon
MIGHT TREMBLES by Siddhika Didel
The scourge slipped over her/ Like a silk sheet./ Soft at first,/ And then gently suffocating./ Sleepy laughter
Nightscape by Joan McNerney
Fog horns sound though/ air soaked in blackness./ All evening long listening/ to hiss of trucks, cars.// Shadows
Tangerine Strands by Alfredo Salvatore Arcilesi
The little girl and boy were screaming. Not the bad screaming. Not Mia’s screaming. Lucretia stood in the
IN THE MIST by John Grey
The treetops are clouded with mist./ Same as the waterway,/ dampness sponging our curious faces/ as it
Smoke by Elaine Thomas
Smoke crawls up the chimney and surfaces into the air. It dissipates, although not really gone, not ever gone.
Garden Genesis by Elaine Thomas
The warm sun felt good on the old man’s skin. He stood on the balcony, gazing down into the garden. “A
Ballad To Jack In The Box by H.L. Dowless
A man of beauty,/ A man of wisdom,/ A man of power,/ Oh such a man he is./ He lives for that final hour/
A Better Place by Olatubosun David
A man never rests/ Except for the Sabbath of toil/ And peace is no peace/ When devoid of violence/
IF WE BOTH FALL ASLEEP TOO SOON by Colin James
Our suitcase is offering no receipts/ whether carried loosely or on shoulders./ The estuary is almost never
Minnie Winnie by Niles Reddick
B.J. And Sara parked their Minnie Winnie Winnebago in the farthest section of Wal-Mart’s parking lot in
My muse by Krista Genevieve Farris
is a lifter who flips logs to consider/ wood lice or embers./ The first skitter skatter flee./ Who cares.
Except For The Laughing Mouse by Shome Dasgupta
lazed daff-dils tilted drooped:/ petals sagged yellows sad stems,/ soaked fox tears--smoldered tongues/
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About Us
Trouvaille Review is an online journal that publishes the poetry of poets across the globe. For free, you may send us your poems, and if selected, we will publish your poems on this website. We strive to let the contributors know our decision within 24 hours.