Any poets out there use Ink Node?

seen from United States

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seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States

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seen from Malaysia
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seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

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Any poets out there use Ink Node?
Cadence
Instead of a street light
angling through your blinds
decorating sleep
I am a pale gleam
on the sheets
my mouth the next verse
we lean into
I want to set you loose
like a wind chime
in a storm
shaking the house
until our teeth crack
I don’t want a taste
I want my body to be
so full of your body
that you wave at yourself
in the mirror
with my hand
Sarah Bartlett
I’ve been writing letters to writers I love and posting them at Ink Node. Today’s: for Julie Carr.
The primary reason I started this Tumblr page is to attempt to corral my poems that are published online into a unified space. Mostly I continue to be deliberate about placing work in print journals (such as Forklift, Ohio) and champion the printed page. This catalog is simply a record of what exists in the cloud.
Several poems have been published on Ink Node:
Blind Lemon Something
Painting
Asparagus
The Field
In the Prairie Hiss of Lithe, Bright Grasses
Cheat River
Sinks of Gandy
And there are three poems in Narrative:
Self Portrait with Exile, Bears, and the Original Carter Family
Pruntytown
A Wild Perfection
(there's an annoying log-in thing on Narrative's website, but it is free to sign up and view their content).
Your Invitation to a Modest Breakfast | Hannah Gamble
It’s too cold to smoke outside, but if you come over, I’ll keep my hands to myself, or won’t I. I would like to tell you about the wall eaten up by the climbing plant—it was so beautiful. Various things have been happening to me, all of them sexual. The man on the bus took off his pants so I could see him better. Another man said, “Ignore him darlin’, just sit on my lap.” But I’m not one of those who’s hungriest in the morning, unlike the man at the bakery who eats egg after egg after egg. Listen. Come over: the cold has already eaten the summer. I need another pair of ears: from the kitchen I can’t tell if I’m hearing wind-chimes or some gray woman with failing arms dropping a pan full of onions and potatoes. This morning I need four hands— two to wash the greens, one to lift a teakettle, one to pour the milk. This morning, one little mouth will not do. We could play a game where we crouch on the tiles, two yellow dogs drinking coffee from bowls. We could play a game where we let the breakfast burn. Outside there’s a world where every love-scene begins with a man in a doorway; he walks over to the woman and says “Open your mouth.”
(via)
untitled
Dear lost fragment of youthful exuberance, you left your shoes by the river. Dear documentary on clouds assembling, the windows should be moved to account for climate change. There is plenty of everything is a theory I tried to live by once. Dear fortune-teller, dear runner through the park at dusk, dear giraffe girl in the clouds. As theories go it was not very useful. The branches of the trees in winter look like waving fingers, motioning to the power lines get us out of here. I am in the basement with the hedgehog and the hamster wheel. Dear hedgehog, dear repetitive motion, dear rooftops cut off by the window frame. When I think about animals, I envy their bodies. Dear basement, dear setting sun, dear star charts. Dear constellations, I am renaming you.
Susan Denning
No issues, no permanent editors, no linear structure, just writers publishing and asking writers they like to publish in turn. Check it out for some good stuff.
I hope that cause it's National Poetry Month a lot of people buy a lot of poetry because I am friends with a lot of poets and I know they could really use the money.
No one buys poetry.
If you are curious about contemporary poets and small presses, The Lit Pub and HTMLGiant are good places to start looking at reviews of stuff you might not have heard of outside of a poetry class or MFA program. You can also bookmark everyday-genius or let people poems and check in on what they're doing, since there are new poets featured all the time. There are also TONS of online lit journals that offer some great stuff (from the past and currently published) --Ink Node, My Name is Mud, Lamination Colony, Paper Bag, and Noo Journal to name a few. And of course, if you want to take a more traditional route you can always download The Writer's Almanac podcast (or donate. They could use the money, too).
Though [almost] every poet I know has some kind of day job, whether it's teaching or working in a psych ward or working as a dom, I'd really love to live in a world where people bought poetry like the bought novels (and listen even that isn't asking for much like AT ALL). So think about purchasing some poetry, especially small press poetry this month. And, you know, rock on and etc.