Today’s choice
Previous poems
Steve Komarnyckyj, Anna Bowles and Lynnda Wardle for Holocaust Memorial Day
TThe mirror in your apartment
where I saw you praying through the angle of the door
Now hangs only in my mind I breathe on its glass wipe away fly specks
Tsyotsya but there is only the empty kitchen in the tower block in Volodymyr
The rhomboids of light on the linoleum floor when I cleared your things
The cupboards musty with damp flour packs now hard as tombstones
you had so many graves for the living one night a fox flicked past your window
brushing the uneven ground the way a pianist coaxes a piano
But there was no sound as when you pray now
Tsyotsya keep talking even death will hear you.
Tsyotsya is the Ukrainian word for Aunt.
Steve Komarnyckyj‘s literary translations and poems have appeared in Index on Censorship, Modern Poetry in Translation and many other journals. He is the holder of three PEN awards and a highly regarded English language poet whose work has been described as articulating “what it means to be human” (Sean Street).
Bus Station
Izium, November 2025
The kiosk glows, a radioactive sugar cube.
Two for Kharkiv, please. We wait, scrolling—
a glide bomb kissing the ticket office—
its roof sways like a ponytail.
A last stripe of day creaks red in the west.
The sky and river clamp shut the wound.
The bus roars into the arena. Driver
wants quick off this tarmac steppe.
There’s nothing left to burn,
but that won’t stop them.
Anna Bowles is a freelance editor and activist who blogs about her travel and volunteer work in Ukraine at annabowles.substack.com. Her first pamphlet, Landscape with Mines, was published by Mica in December 2025. Her Instagram is @annabowleswriter.
the end of small things
(after Mary Ruefle)
from this day forward all rituals
will be banished
we will be locks without keys
the way we peg washing
will be wrongdoing
all clothes abandoned
along the dusty rail-line
in ghostly extinction
no morning coffee to be shared
online cross our worlds
this is my cup, let me see yours
in which I boil my kettle
while she burns
her school notes to make a fire
no more these settled mercies
when our skins are peeled
back as hides
when our hair is woven into coir for someone’s else’s mattress
when we darken our faces with coffee grinds to stop burning
in a sun that insists every day on rising and rising
the sun too should stop.
and the wind.
and the rain.
because there is no shade
now that ritual as been exiled
the comfort of habit cannot be found
in small things
or the warm hand of a brother
Lynnda Wardle’s work has appeared in publications including Gutter, New Writing Scotland, Magma, New Orleans Review. In 2007 she was awarded a Creative Scotland New Writers award. She is studying for an MFA in Creative Writing at the University of Glasgow www.lynndawardle.com
Note from the poet: The poem was written for a young poet, Amera Atiyya Abu All‑Husein, whom I met through a University of Glasgow project connecting creative writing students in Gaza and Glasgow. Amera is currently living in a tent in Gaza after her home in Rafah was destroyed. My poem is for her — for her courage, her voice, and the small things she continues to hold onto despite grief and hardship. She is a gifted emerging writer. Her book, The Diary from Gaza can be found here and on Instagram she is @amera_atiyya_
Amirah Al Wassif
Beneath my armpit lives a Sinbad the size of a thumb.
His imagination feeds through an umbilical cord tied to my womb.
Now and then, people hear him speaking through a giant microphone—
Singing,
Cracking jokes,
Mark Smith
In the portacabin that morning, men smoked
and looked at last week’s paper again.
There was no water to fill the urn.
The first job – to get connected
Toby Cotton
A blustery day –
the wind too strong for kites
or for lifts to the sky.
“To a thoughtful spot,” it cites
and pins me to the earth.
Ansuya Patel
except this burnt red vase.
Hand shaped in the muffled roar,
devouring flame in the furnace’s mouth.
Hannah Ward
Look, Drew, the
plums are in
pieces beneath
us. I dreamt:
Andrea Small
a flower is not a heron
does not stand on one leg
spear-billed over golden carp
Usha Kishore
At dawn and dusk, my father
becomes a chant, that flies above
the courtyard of the old house
Jane Frank
The leaves are a colour you’ve never seen
but that I will learn to expect
and there’s a fracas-induced full moon
Clara Howell
The way a halved peach breathes, then rots
from the inside out.