Category

Indoor Activities

Showing 1-20 of 151 results
  • Poem

    poetry-magazineRedwork

    By Stefania Gomez
    In the sunless hour before day I hear the man I want
    to love just how I’d want him. He’ll never let a…
  • Audio
    By Stefania Gomez
  • Poem
    By Josh Bell
    Kung-Fu, a couch, and I might reach
    emptiness tonight, stuck on that Midwest
    hoo-doo, counting cemetery…
  • Poem
    By Michael Palmer
    I know a silent movie star named Jane.
    She speaks without moving her lips.
    She once starred in a film …
  • Poem
    By Robert Hayden
    At Dunbar, Castle or Arcade
    we rode with the exotic sheik
    through deserts of erotic flowers;
    held in the…
  • Poem
    By Chana Bloch
    On the holiest day we fast till sundown.
    I watch the sun stand still
    as the horizon edges toward it. Four…
  • Poem
    By Sarah Ruhl
    Some say: to do the necessary task is greatness;
    I say: do the least necessary thing first.

    I don't want a frozen living room,
    a room where nothing happens.

    I don’t want my labors tied in string,
    a prelate hovering over, declaiming.

    I want a treasure...
  • Poem
    By Lynn Emanuel
    Love is boring and passé, all that old baggage,
    the bloody bric-a-brac, the bad, the gothic,
    retrograde, obscurantist hum and drum of it
    needs to be swept away. So, night after night,
    we sit in the dark of the Roxy beside grandmothers
    with their shanks...
  • Poem
    By Patricia Smith
    Dear ferocious dreamer. Dear maven of song and surveyor of every flung star. Dear meandering romantic, audacious witness, dear listener with the whole of your covetous heart. Dear listener to the air’s brutal and gorgeous music, soft dancer to ballads...
  • Poem
    By Kiki Petrosino
    So I lean back & Redford asks, “Water warm enough?”
    & I don’t answer because I’m holding my breath.
    I don't know why he asks.
    He never uses the faucet to shampoo my afro—just an old clay jar.
    Redford fills the jar at the...
  • Poem
    By Norman Finkelstein
    I have built a machine to visit the stars.
    I have built a machine to outlast the stars.
    There is a glass ball inside a copper egg.

    There are dynamos and turbines, Tesla coils and magnets.
    There is a boy in Brooklyn, Wisconsin
    and a...
  • Poem
    By Haki R. Madhubuti
    Frequently during my mornings of pain & reflection
    when I can’t write
    or articulate my thoughts
    or locate the mindmusic needed
    to complete the poems & essays
    that are weeks plus days overdue
    forcing me to stop, I cease
    answering my phone, eating right, running my miles,
    reading...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Bay Leaves

    By Nikki Giovanni
    I watched Mommy
    Cook
    Though I cooked
    With Grandmother

    With Grandmother I learned
    To pluck chickens
    Peel carrots
    Turn chittlins inside out
    Scrub pig feet

    With Mommy I watched
    leftovers for stew
    Or vegetable soup
    Great northern beans
    Mixed collards turnips and mustard greens
    Garlic cloves Bay Leaves
    Very beautifully green
    Stiff   so fresh
    With just a...
  • Poem
    By Elizabeth Theriot
    Head tilted back, eyes to the light, I squeeze single tears of moisturizer from the glass jar: forehead, cheek, cheek, a cross, martyr mystic blessing that promises to unblemish me.

    //

    After the hospital everyone brought facemask sheets. In meager bursts of...
  • Poem
    By Uma Menon
    My first instinct is to translate
    the word. Make it easier to understand
    without saying the word itself.
    I feel guilt for this mistake—
    for changing languages instead
    of describing. Isn’t this an easy way out?
    My mother and I are playing charades
    alone. We make this...
  • Poem
    By Anuradha Bhowmik

    BUDDY INFO: CANDYDANDY24
    Personal Profile: 

    *~iF yOu GoT mY nAmE
                iN yOuR mOuTh
                                                  //
       ...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Spring Coronal

    By Hyejung Kook
    Again this year I’ve failed the peonies that came to us
    when we bought our house in summer, not knowing what
    pink and white glory grew in the northwest. After the first May,

    still childless, seeing how a single bloom could overflow
    the cup...
  • Poem
    By Julia Edwards
    Behind me, a man retrieves waterfalls
    of coins from a vending machine while
    laundry owners fold cloth, hold a crying baby.

    I’m across the street from a restaurant
    we drove to in the haze of motion meant to
    anticipate grief—gallons of water, a burnt

    quesadilla. What...
  • Poem

    poetry-magazine

    Stomp

    By Nikki Grimes
    I come home,
    feet about to bleed
    from angry stomping.
    “Boy!” says Mom.
    “Quit making all that racket.”
    But what does she expect
    when, day after day,
    haters sling words at me
    like jagged stones
    designed to split my skin?
    I retreat to my room,
    collapse on the bed,
    count, “One. Two....
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