Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Four Poems by Peter Mladinic

 









Steve McCleery

 

He made me feel like I was part of something

in a way I’d never felt before and have not felt

since. Part of a community.

 

I close my eyes and can see a red apple,

but not a community.

I picture that word on a billboard,

 

myself climbing up

and putting “our” before “community.”

It was our community because of him:

 

Our grass, shrubbery, trees, our corners,

windows, and doors. Never his,

always ours because “ours” was his goal.

 

We were his goal, each individual.

Never a command, always a suggestion:

Be yourself,

 

as, in his acts of kindness, he transformed

I into we, me into an us we owned.

The walls and floors and doors

 

of our community. The podiums

from which, when he said one name,

all others knew that person,

 

what they did, what they liked,

and didn’t like. So many people,

our public selves, each part of the whole

 

because of him.

What I have today, the roof over my head,

the food on my table, I have because of him.

 

Many of us can say that.

“I made me, he made me who I am,”

Somewhere, each says, as I say.

 

I close my eyes and see a black horse

in a green pasture,

but not a paradox. The I-made-me-

 

he-made-me contradiction was part

of the ordinary that lay within our lives,

beneath our hands as we opened

 

and closed doors, some with plates

in which were engraved our names,

and one door with his name,

 

that was his door and ours.

And is and will be.

I close my eyes and see us, seated

 

in tiers in an auditorium. Steve

is on the stage at the podium, and he is

seated in the center, two places at once.


 

For Your Listening Pleasure

 

Dennis knew the sounds.

A Saturday afternoon we’d hitchhike

into Hackensack and there he’d be

on a stool behind the counter

in a corner of the Relic Rack

as soon as we walked through the door.

Dennis in purple and black,

a short-sleeved, buttoned-down

purple shirt, clean-shaven,

with delicate features, brown eyes,

brown hair slicked back.

Behind him, on the turntable a forty-five

spinning: "Moonlight,” by the Vanguards,

on a green label, its name I forget.

In the Relic, forty-fives in paper sleeves

covered the walls, some forty-fives,

such as "Golden Teardrops,”

by the Flamingoes, and "Stormy Weather”

by the Five Sharps, rare, hard to find,

priced higher than others. Dennis

knew them all, and knew what we’d like

before we even heard it, a bluesy item,

"219 Train,” by the Moonglows, a ballad,

The Martels’ "Forgotten Spring.”

 

Dennis was the keeper of the rhythm &

blues kingdom, the long, narrow

Relic Rack, owned by Eddie Gries

and Don Feletti, who once in a while

popped in, but their visits, especially Eddie’s,

were occasional. Dennis, there full-time,

made money for Eddie and Don.

We couldn’t afford to part with fifty dollars

for "Darlene,” by the Dreamers, on Grand,

or twenty for "Off Shore,” by the Cardinals,

on Atlantic. But we’d leave the Relic

with forty-fives like "Lucille,” by the Drifters,

and the Flamingos’ "That’s My Desire,”

that increased in value through the years,

as they became rare, hard to find.

 

I spent a year in Vietnam and came home

to find the best of my forty-fives

collection gone, my brother had taken them

and sold them for money for heroin.

What I didn’t know was that Dennis, too,

was "on heroin.” I don’t know if he was

all those Saturday’s we’d go to the Relic,

in the mid-sixties. But the late-sixties,

when many people were doing heroin,

maybe that’s when he started. By then,

I was in the military, far from the Relic.

When I frequented it, I knew little of Dennis,

only what I saw, and, most of all, what

I heard. He knew the good R&B sounds,

as he sat in the corner, near the register,

behind him, the turntable. I knew too

that he lived not far from Hackensack,

in Bogota, a town with lots of hills, trees,

and old houses. I assume he went to school

there. I don’t know if he graduated from

high school. After I went into the navy,

I don’t remember seeing him.

But years after, when the Relic Rack

was no more, and a different store,

with records on the walls, had opened

down the block from where the Relic was,

I saw Dennis one more time. By then,

I was "into” gospel music. I casually

mentioned a group, the Swan Silvertones.

Dennis said, "Oh, they’re the best.”

He was wearing a black leather jacket

that came to his waist, no longer

behind the counter playing a Lamplighters

ballad or an uptempo Jumping Jacks tune.

Phil Spector had the Wall of Sound.

The Relic was walls of sound. Dennis,

not long after I saw him in that black

leather, a little heavier, his face a bit fuller,

puffier, became part of the silence none

of us knows, or will, till we get there.


 

Pick a Number

 

At sixty-seven you would have found me

grading freshman compositions,

Friday afternoons, weekends, my corner

windowless office a second home.

 

At fifty-seven, Friday afternoons, you

would have found me in a red truck

driving from plains to high desert.

It was on one of those Friday afternoons

 

I learned in an email you’d left this world

of your own volition, in Florida.

I pictured you crawling into a leafy bush, like

an igloo of foliage, and in that shady enclave

 

taking your last breath, then and there,

or perhaps in a hotel room, or on a dune

above the Atlantic, or in a cluster of palms

off a seldom-traveled path.

 

No one can tell me. I’m speaking to the wall

I’m sitting near, not to you. In a cafeteria

with large windows, in the Ozarks

one morning you were thirty-one,

 

and I, thirty-three. Pushing seventy-eight

I miss the classroom, my small corner office,

and "our” cafeteria, a woman handing me

a plate of biscuits and gravy.

 

Why did you leave? All I’ve learned is

I don’t go back, that even if I were to go back

to the Ozarks, to the desert,

to the classroom, I’d be going forward,

 

into a dream, you in rumpled chinos,

a wrinkled cotton shirt half-buttoned, brown

loafers, ash-blond hair. The world

is a mess. Loving my life, I love the world.


 

For Michael Minassian

 

Their Viking River cruise will begin

in Budapest and end in Prague, in April,

when the flowers are in bloom, I imagine,

my sister, my cousin, their spouses

and friends. But what flowers bloom

in Prague I’d have to look up to find out.

Tulips in Holland are peach, white, blue

in my mind’s eye, and Prague is Kafka.

 

You are in the South, and I the Southwest

United States, who once were only two

children two miles apart, you in Dumont,

I in New Milford, neighboring towns years

before we were the neighbors we are

on Facebook. I’m not on Facebook now,

but on my notepad app, tapping keys

of memory that lead Madison Avenue.

 

In a red and black Studebaker wagon,

my mother at the wheel, we turn right

onto Hillside Avenue. Pick up my aunt

and my cousin and drive. The A&P,

on Washington, bordered Bergenfield

and Dumont. Flourescent light, boxes,

packages, sacks on shelves, drew me in:

orange, blue, and white sacks

 

of Pillsbury flour, red and yellow boxes

on Sunkist raisins, the bonneted lady

with wavy dark hair, the Sunkist lady,

looked like my neighbor in her tomato

garden; the Animal Crackers boxes,

with lions and giraffes behind bars;

and coffee tins, the yellow-black Chock

full o’Nuts; and boxes of Lipton’s tea.

 

Heaven, I suppose, was packaging,

the forms and colors men, in those days,

in shirts and ties at tables in the City

brainstormed for shoppers to take items

off shelves and stack in metal carriages.

They drew me in. I loved being there,

that one weekday morning, the only one

of its kind I recall, one day only.

 

But Madison Avenue was never ending.

Do you remember the bank with its pleated

white columns on Madison and Washington?

Madison was hills, one steep hill going from

my town into yours. Other hills less steep,

the whole drive like riding lulling waves.

That one day at the A&P, my cousin may

by chance recall, tourist shopping in Prague.




 

 

Peter Mladinic's most recent book of poems, The Whitestone Bridge, is available from Anxiety Press. An animal rights advocate, he lives in Hobbs, New Mexico, United States. 

 

 

 

 


Wednesday, 24 December 2025

Three Flash Fiction Pieces by Gabor G Gyukics

 






rather be a night shift clerk in the post office...


no drink, no nothing, no red stripe, no beer from milwaukee, no jazz from new orleans, no friends if you ever had one to count on, not even a barfly, only delirium as you stare at the wall that over time becomes several 16-inch television sets showing different programs and you are not capable of turning them off, no switch no remote control, only your will, but that’s not enough after all it was your brain that turned all of them on at the same time, it is no dream no hallucination it is reality but only for you, only you can see them and no one else but you, they are audible too, you can see and hear them just the same, the actors the anchors the commercials the movies the soaps the beats on a reality show, the games, everything that goes on, what is weird though that what you read in the paper during one of your clear moments in the morning is suddenly being broadcast on every television channel, every article every word is being shown in every country, every one watches the same damn programs, the only difference is that they are able to turn off their TV sets, not only that, but they can switch from one channel to another while you cannot until you start screaming and that is the time when two burly male nurses walk in, you want to fight them with your rigid fists and bare knuckles like in the olden times in front of some bar, but these guys easily punch you out and give you a shot that knocks you out and now the TV sets are off and you are falling down into an abyss without a parachute and there is not even one friendly giant to catch you before you hit the bottom, if there is one. 

When you get to your senses you have no clue where you are, what you notice is that you are tied to a solid narrow metal bed, the walls around you painted goose shit green, your throat is dry, your tongue is sawdust, you got no beer handy, your eyes are glued with goo yet as soon as you blink the TV sets are visible again showing the same god damn programs over and over again on all of the four surrounding walls, on the floor, on the ceiling too, among them a beer commercial from st. louis you open your mouth trying to get some drops when you feel your ass start itching because the male nurse didn’t wipe it shit clean, but you are not mad at him, you are thinking of your last lady who left you to screw another guy because you ran out of wild turkey that you never even liked


 

Flying Trapeze Clubs


A usual night on the New York subway. Almost the same crowd every time, yet new faces show here and there. One emerges. A tall, lean, well-dressed black man with whiskers on his chin. Obviously, he plans to throw himself under the commuting spotlight. Everyone is waiting, staring at him. He takes his time, smoothens his trousers then he goes off. “Ladies and Gentlemen. This is not the ten o'clock A train, this is a moving condominium where I'm hiding from my wife. She lives in South Carolina. She’s so fat I walk around her, and I can't find my way back. It means I'm not homeless. I'm lost. Man, I'm so broke I can't pay attention.” It seems he timed it; the train stops, he gets off and disappears. Everyone's teeth are hanging out of their mouths. He got what he begged for and escaped with an encore.



a phone call from the rez


In the spring of 2011, I had the privilege to visit Jim Northrup in the Fond du Lac Indian Reservation where he lived with his family on Northrup Road. One of the reasons for my visit was to ask him to allow me to translate his poems to Hungarian and to find Adrian Louis for me because I simply had no luck getting his address from any source I had, which was not much. Jim looked at me saying, okay, let’s call him. “You know his number?” “Of course, I do, I’m your wise Anishinaabe elder.” So, he dialed a number and when Adrian picked up the other end, they started a funny conversation. Finally, Jim said. “Hey, Adrian, would you wanna talk to your Hungarian translator?” “I certainly would, -Adrian said, but I ain’t going to call him in Hungary.” “You don’t have to; he is standing right next to me.” Adrian laughed. “Yeah, right, very funny joke by good old Jim, the jester.” Then Jim handed me the receiver. “Good evening, Mr. Louis, I’m Gabor from Hungary.” I heard a short silence then a gasp and after that Adrian started laughing. “Had no idea Hungarians were allowed to enter Indian reservations, but since you’re there, I’ll send some poems your way.”


By Gabor G Gyukics 

One Poem by Antonia Alexandra Klimenko

 






For Openers 
 
Hello    again 
my friend 
I’m still here-- 
still waving a fond farewell 
after we  
like smoke in the distance  
have already left the station 
 
How to say goodbye 
Is the part  
that's never easy 
Is the art 
of staying open 
even     
as you recede 
into the tunnel--
that black hole 
of space 
 
There are many holes 
In my story-- 
ones i have dug for myself 
(and have left out altogether) 
ones so deep 
I am still trying  
to find my way      back 
In the dark 
 
How i long to be  
like a flower 
to burst forth 
Into the light 
to unfold 
to peel back  
each moment 
(yet another threshold) 
another horizon) 
slowly   mindfully 
to open myself up 
to each day--  
every day-- 
a brand new Spring 
 
Instead 
my mind 
opens and closes 
like a window  
stuck in winter 
like a grave 
i have crawled  
In and out of 
sunken into 
too often 
for who knows  
how long? 
 
My eyes    
these dry empty sockets 
will open  
again   and again 
like wounds 
gushing  
with blood     
with technicolor dreams  
bursting 
onto sidewalks 
(in between the cracks) 
bursting 
Into hospital and hotel rooms 
and yes 
train stations 
dragging all my old baggage 
sometimes never 
but always 
gushing into you 
 
Even at the very end 
there is that beginning 
that opening  
that    
see you on the other side 
that comes all too soon  
 
Every day 
we open ourselves 
to the mystery of the Gift    
slowly unfolding   
the life we come wrapped in 
Every day 
I tear at the wrapping 
I untie the knots 
I open myself  
to a world 
with 
and   without you 
 
Of course 
whenever 
I feel empty 
If ever 
I find  
the moment  
wanting 
Something  Holy 
Someone  Holy   
fills my life 
with rain or tears 
and yet   again 
that damn gushing wound  
that budding new promise 
that bursts like a miracle 
that sings its little heart out 
 
Hello   again 
it says 
here  I  am 
 
Are you 
still 
There?






  

Antonia Alexandra Klimenko was first introduced on the BBC and to the literary world by the legendary James Meary Tambimuttu of Poetry London–-publisher of T.S. Eliot, Dylan Thomas, Henry Miller and Bob Dylan, to name a few.  After his death, it was his friend, the late great Kathleen Raine, who took an interest in her writing and encouraged her to publish.  

A nominee for the Pushcart Prize, The Best of the Net, and a former San Francisco Poetry Slam Champion, she is widely published. She has been a featured guest at Shakespeare & Company, on a number of occasions, as well as performed or read in other literary venues in the City of Light and elsewhere. Her work has appeared in (among others) XXI Century World Literature (in which she represents France), Jazz and Literature and Maintenant : Journal of Contemporary Dada Writing and Art archived at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. She is the recipient of two grants: one from Poets in Need, of which Michael (100 Thousand Poets for Change) Rothenberg is a co-founder; the second—the 2018 Generosity Award bestowed on her by Kathleen Spivack and Joseph Murray for her outstanding service to international writers through SpokenWord Paris where she is Poet in Residence. She is also Writer/Poet in Residence at The Creative Process.
 
Her selected poems On the Way to Invisible was recently published by The Opiate Books and is now available. Her selected poems The Looking Glass is forthcoming in 2026.


Four Poems by Peter Mladinic

  Steve McCleery   He made me feel like I was part of something in a way I’d never felt before and have not felt since. Part of a co...