Author Archives: Bronson O'Quinn

About Bronson O'Quinn

Bronson is the Blog Editor for Accents Publishing. He finds any excuse to write, whether it's for someone's blog or a flash fiction contest. He likes starting projects. He hopes to one day finish them.

“To the Grocery List” by Barbara Sabol

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This incantation
of greens and grains,
rosy citrus in season
appeases with textures
and odors rising
from scrap paper.
Add the alchemists: butter,
flour – subtleties
of roux: scant ballast
against earth’s slack-jawed
hunger – splitting like
overleavened bread,
and the sea spills
from its immense bowl,
salting the land. What
can the hands do
but knead and blend.
The fingers themselves
marvel, and the tongue
in every living
language weeps.

Barbara Sabol,
Original Ruse
(Accents Publishing)

“Cherry Wood (The Making of Birds)” by Matthew Haughton

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for my Brother

His wife chose
a cherry wood
box to hold
him,
like a poem
holds a stray
bird.
Balanced as
a feather,
the making
of a bird
is difficult –
given a handful
of Springs.
The throat
opens,
the bones
hollow,
I still hear
the voice
of his wing.

Matthew Haughton,
Bee-coursing Box
Accents Publishing

“Poem to my Imaginary Friend circa 2008” by Dan Nowak

rp_of_a_bed_frame_cover-194x300.jpgI try to imagine you
like names are precursors

or premonitions. You stay
somewhere without a body.

By no means are you
post-modern. I do not need

more sensation, I need more
friends who write. More

who read, and make me feel
uneducated. I want you

to teach courses without
tuitions and still get

a Biothermal dynamics
professor’s salary. You feel

this need for family,
to dance, to misshape the world

as a play. Drama is left
as a nameless reminder

of our love of self-help.
No matter how hard I close

my eyes you never show
or talk or kiss. Tell me

what does your voice sound
like – angel or typewriter?

Dan Nowak,
Of a Bed Frame
Accents Publishing

“Wind-Slip Day” by Nana Lampton

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Three ravens slip the wind
into the hayfield
to forage after the storm.

When the harbor smoothes,
I will paddle my kayak out to sea.
I am waiting out the wind
the way we endure slow time,
the end of marriage, a mother dying,
the way winter endures for spring,

or one alone patiently awaits the other.
What unfolds today will indicate
the weather, what the sea has in mind.

Nana Lampton,
Bloom on a Split Board
Accents Publishing

Teen Howl #51 Featuring Rozalyn Wingate

Teen Howl 51 featuring Rozalyn WingateTonight’s Teen Howl will feature a reading from Rozalyn Wingate. The reading will begin at 6pm at the Morris book shop in Lexington, Kentucky.

Open mic sign-ups begin at 5:45pm.

Facebook Event page

When: Thursday, March 3, 2016 @ 6pm
Where: the Morris book shop
882 E. High St.
Lexington, KY 40508
(859) 276-0494

“Recommendation to God” by Bina Kals

The Season of Delicate HungerGod if you were born now among us
do you think we’d recognize you

just don’t arrive in a stable
because the media wouldn’t cover that

if you again decided to feed us
with two fish and five loaves of bread
I doubt we’d like it

you know we’ve advanced a good deal
we prefer our bread toasted
and of the fish—caviar
promotes skin regeneration
and removes free radicals

if you haven’t sunk into despair
send only a single star but if possible
far away from the gravitational field of the earth
otherwise global political chaos would ensue

if you have other things to do
do not reopen our eyes
otherwise mel gibson may come out with a new film
in which again you’re being lashed
for an entire 11 minutes
I don’t know how we could stand that

Bina Kals,
translated from the Bulgarian
by Katerina Stoykova-Klemer
The Season of Delicate Hunger:
Anthology of Contemporary Bulgarian Poetry
(Accents Publishing)

Matthew Minicucci Interview with Shelterbelt Reading Series

Matthew Minicucci

photo from NPR

Matthew Minicucci, author of Reliquary (Accents Publishing, 2013) was interviewed by the University of Illinois at Springfield (UIS) radio station 91.9FM. Minicucci’s newest book, Translation (Kent State University Press, 2015) is his first full-length. The audio interview is available by clicking here.

The Shelterbelt Creative Writing and Publishing Series from UIS is a radio show that presents emerging and established writers, focusing on place. You can find more recordings from WUIS 91.9FM by clicking here.

“Omen” by Bianca Spriggs

How Swallowtails Become DragonsAnd then there was the time we found a sorry gray cat
that’d been hit outside _____’s house right down the street
from the café. The animal was so pitiful, our bleeding hearts
couldn’t stand to leave it, so we gathered newspapers,
our hands never once touching any parasites, to maneuver it
off the pavement and the threat of more mangling tires.
The flies hadn’t gotten to be very thick yet, and we lifted
the cat over to the grass, its peridot eye petrified open.
It lay there on _____’s lawn for three days because we didn’t
know what else to do. Later, when we confessed we’d chosen
his house to place the cat until we could find someone to bury it,
he got angry and called us putas; he’d been so afraid a wronged lover
had come to put roots on him. He never suspected the hands of friends
would turn his fate sour. All the bad luck that barreled towards him,
thunderheads in a summer storm, he blamed on us and our dead cat.
Even after we all moved away, even though later we were all
very congenial, _____’s troubles stuck to him like dried blood
on the sagging outer gums of a dead mouth.

-Bianca Spriggs,
How Swallowtails Become Dragons
(Accents Publishing)

“Heat” by Bobby Steve Baker

There is a guitar inside the distance of the house,
soft classical baroque, a fugue.

Over the desert from the irrigated lawn,
the Sierras gather up horizons deceptively close.

Alone with a martini in my hand,
a pimentoed olive

floating/sinking.
I despise pimento.

This one moans it is the penis of a dog
and snares rabid sexual power.

I eat it. A woman, very thin and wispy
comes out of the abode house.

Ancient but cut and stuffed to appear much younger,
she joins me speaking, You smell like a dog in heat.

Males don’t or maybe always are, I deflect.
In any case it’s odorless.

She says she is not a male and so can smell
what she likes, pheromones perhaps.

She is the soul of the cities, islands,
and does not feel the desert as a life force.

She does not look with longing to the mountains
as I do just then.

When I look back she has changed into a pimento,
and in a moment, swallowed, gone.

Bobby Steve Baker,
Numbered Bones
Accents Publishing