Former Santa Clara County Poet Laureate Sally Ashton is a poet, writer, teacher, and editor-in-chief of DMQ Review, an online journal featuring poetry and art. Publishing in three genres, she is the author of five books of poems including the just-released Listening to Mars (Cornerstone Press, 2024) and The Behaviour of Clocks (WordFarm, 2019). She taught writing at San José State University for ten years and continues to teach workshops locally and online. Her prose poem “4.6 Billion Years” will go to the Moon as part of the Lunar Codex project via the Griffin/VIPER mission in 2024. www.sallyashton.com
Sky Writing
What remains to be written of this year will need a cloudless sky and the acrobatic courage of a stunt pilot twisting through runes to wrestle language from smoke. It will need a still afternoon, one from September, with that kind of blue that snaps to attention. Make it something a child can read, good news instead of threats—surrender Dorothy—that darkened other skies. No tornado, no wind. Use words that make amends.
from Listening to Mars, Cornerstone Press 2024
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Cami DuMay (née Rothmuller) is a writer from Davis, California. She is in her final quarter of undergraduate studies at UC Davis, and will begin her MFA studies at the Michener Center for Writers this fall. Cami’s work has appeared in Hare’s Paw, Burningword, Red Rock Review, and others. Her first chapbook, This Canyon Has a Thousand Names, came out earlier this year. While Cami writes about myriad aspects of life, from intimacy and trauma to nature and insects, her work most often returns to an intersection of nature, madness, and secular worship.
Idolatry
I don’t know who built it or when, but the beams,
raw with aging and near-stripped of pigment,
suggest a timeless worship.
We still take our shoes off and set them
reverently on the stones, perhaps wondering if this place
could tell more to our bare skin
than our godless eyes, and we step inward
looking for warmth, tracing our toes
along the scars that line the floorboards
where pews once were, in a time
that our bruising knees long for. The windowless frames
suggest an inside and an outside,
but the ceiling is open like a chest
letting all the sunlight in, and the forest
is asking endlessly, sending trails of ivy
and ushering the moss and lichen to decorate the thresholds,
to find the faint rancid oil of human touch
in the woodgrain, to amend it,
taking God back from the pages
that molder behind the pulpit. Thrown stones
lie in their guilt on the floorboards, summoning
memories of flight and purpose, the gifts
of worthy hands. And the wreckage
of the windows they found lies
in entropic mosaics, chiming scree unsettling itself,
assembling its stains to form a picture of redemption,
quivering in the sunlight,
babbling of its thousand rifts. A wonder
that something broken so long can gleam so lovely
and cut so finely the soles of our naked feet.
Poem published in Red Rock Review Issue 51: Idolatry - Red Rock Review