Blue Home
Victor Jimenez

Out of the Shade

By Meghan Sterling

O, my sun—you are already slanting your eyebrows

at me, furrowing in preparation for what’s coming.

Winter is a stone fox. Winter is a cruel master.

My sun will get weak as hair. I have seen babies

stronger. It will no longer hold up the sky with its

long feet or its bold yellow arms. I will be left to

pleasure myself in darkness, beneath a quilt, heavy

with the scent of my own salt. Just the other day

when feeling the light lowering I spread myself wide

beneath what heat was left, greedy for burning. Critics

compared Pollock to the sun, Krasner to a stunted thing

left in the shadow cast. An understory blight. A mere

woman. Of course, they didn’t see what was there—

they had stared so long at the sun, they had holes for eyes.

 

[1] Anne M. Wagner, “Lee Krasner as L.K.” Representations no. 25, Winter 1989 p 45.

Meghan Sterling

Meghan Sterling (she, her, they) is a queer/bi writer and mother. She has been published in Tahoma Literary Review, Los Angeles Review, Colorado Review, Rhino Poetry and others. Sick Letters from the Lovebed (Harbor Editions) is forthcoming in 2026. Poet laureate of Gardiner, Maine, read her work at meghansterling.com.

Victor Jimenez

Victor Jimenez has photographed an array of people, places, and things since 2015. He was gifted his first Nikon D3300 as a Christmas gift and has not been able to put it down since. He grew up on Long Island, photographed the beaches, and traveled to Manhattan to shoot photos of the architecture and people. His camera has been an extension of himself. He is lucky enough to travel and focus on his hobby, learning how to manipulate light and color, and create something new through a still photograph.

Painting of a desert mountain in the background and pink flowers in the foreground

Provocative Converged Precognitions
Jim Woodson

Fiction

Poetry

Nonfiction

A row of empty glass bottles on a window sill backlit by a sunset

Gone

By Jeffrey-Michael Kane