Dotted Line Dotted Line

Poetry Summer 2022    fiction    all issues

Cover of Poetry Summer 2022

whitespacefiller

Joanne Monte
Departure
& other poems

Holly York
Still When I Reach for the Leash
& other poems

Anne Marie Wells
Catholicism Still Lingers in a Concrete Poem
& other poems

D.T. Christensen
Coded Language
& other poems

Laura Faith
Ungodly
& other poems

Abigail F. Taylor
Winter in Choctaw
& other poems

Natalie LaFrance-Slack
Peace
& other poems

Nicole Sellino
iii. moving, an interruption
& other poems

Gilaine Fiezmont
In Memoriam / Day of the Dead
& other poems

Sheri Flowers Anderson
On Being A Widow
& other poems

RJ Gryder
Felling
& other poems

William S. Barnes
to hatch
& other poems

Suzannah Van Gelder
Idolatry
& other poems

Sam Bible-Sullivan
The Dying Worker’s Soliloquy
& other poems

Hills Snyder
Eclipse (July 4, 2020)
& other poems

Lauren Fulton
Birth Marks
& other poems

David Sloan
Prostrate
& other poems

Nancy Kangas
Dry Dock Cranes of Brooklyn Navy Yard
& other poems

Noreen Graf
In Attendance
& other poems

Jim Bohen
Nothing Tea
& other poems

Thomas Baranski
Let us name him dread and look forward
& other poems


Anne Marie Wells

Catholicism Still Lingers in a Concrete Poem

The organ’s aria rang out from the National Cathedral, quivering free the most delicate of the cherry blossom petals with its chords, littering the sidewalks of Wisconsin Avenue with belated valentines as she took her dog out on Easter Sunday

morning, alone, too early to call anyone just to say hi, not even her devout, Catholic mother. And this woman’s lonely, atheist heart found itself brushing her hair for her, covering her night-old eyeliner with a pair of glasses, pulling up stockings underneath a floral dress and pink cardigan, walking her, as if on a leash, the half mile to childhood familiarity in the shape of a pew and a hymnal. Is it so surprising though? When her heart knew she needed something, anything, even if it was only to admire Romanesque architecture and stained glass? To fall trance to the hollow murmur of responsorial psalms? She, like her mother, had held onto so much for so long with

-out a place for it all to go. Hadn’t she already spent a year pretending untruths were true for the sake of a quiet pulse and six hours of sleep each night? Hadn’t she already wished on dandelion seeds and sidewalk pennies, birthday candles and stars and nothing at all to manifest her unrelenting daydreams into reality? What would one more try hurt? What are prayers, anyway, if they are not the release of our desperate, captive hopes into the wild?

Anne Marie Wells (She | They) is an award-winning, queer poet, playwright, and storyteller navigating the world with a chronic illness. She is a faculty member for the Community Literature Initiative poetry publishing program and Strategic Partnership Fellow with The Poetry Lab. Her debut book Survived By: A Memoir in Verse + Other Poems is slated for April 2023 with Curious Corvid Publishing.

Dotted Line