Nightingale & Sparrow

Author: juliette

  • Peter Stewart O’Grady

    Peter Stewart O’Grady

    Poetry Contributor

    Peter Lives in England, in the county of Wiltshire. He has been writing poems for about 10 years and enjoys reading his work at open mic events. This year he became co-host of a monthly poetry programme, The Poetry Place, on a local on-line community radio station, West Wilts Radio.


    Works in Nightingale & Sparrow

    Not Everything About Winter is Winter

     

  • Kim Backalenick Escobar

    Kim Backalenick Escobar

    Poetry Contributor

    Kim Backalenick Escobar graduated from Antioch College. She worked as a chef for many years. Writing has recently become an all consuming passion and she has had several poems published in Train River Anthology, Juste Milieu Zine, and Poetry 365. She lives in Connecticut with her family, including her two cats, Lisa and Muffin.


    Works in Nightingale & Sparrow

    always winter

     

  • Intimations of Death, Passing through Connecticut

    Intimations of Death, Passing through Connecticut

    James Dowthwaite

    Harlem 125th St

    It is a cold morning, Cimmerian,
    and the last of the snowfall
    and the last of the night
    collude in the air of departure,
    enclosing the forty-one
    who wait on the platform.
    Harlem’s ghosts are lost,
    as they rise from the midair,
    caught with the half life
    of breath,
    turning and twisting
    in its pathetic ascension.
    Even talk freezes at this hour
    and they are quiet,
    those waiting on the platform,
    acquiescing themselves
    into the last of the snowfall
    and the last of the night.

    Greenwich

    On the train window,
    water’s ghost
    casts a veil over the glass,
    like a frozen lake,
    becoming the border
    between the living in the carriage
    and the dead outside.
    The snow, which in the city
    is wrapped around Main St
    like a Kashmir scarf,
    faces us here in its blank aspect,
    casting the trees, the fields,
    and the houses in strangeness,
    and life takes on the uncanny form
    of the photo’s negative,
    and being itself is quieted.

    Westport

    By the railroad bridge in Westport
    a crust of ice plagues the Saugatuck;
    The sky is a soft metal, platinum,
    being hammered into form
    as the light plays upon its cooling.
    The ice clears before the houses
    with their snow-banked lawns
    and spare trees, concealing little,
    and the fallen snow pulls the light,
    jealously gathering the view
    from the brittle branches,
    each one a memorial
    to the long-departed leaves,
    remembered only by the dark water.

    Bridgeport

    No cars, the boats all sealed,
    their white covers catching the light;
    there is no one here, the whole of Connecticut
    as if every living being
    had dissolved into winter
    and its languid snowfalls.
    The sky is sepia above the Veterans’ Park
    where the lethargic wind
    lifts only half the flag,
    the stars lost in its folds
    as on a clouded night.
    A lone crane
    salutes the steel water
    while the empty berths
    lie demarcated
    like graves in the harbour;
    and the train passes by
    unheralded.

    New Haven 

    So this is New England,
    where the old comes though
    as a palimpsest,

    or a half-ghost
    half-seen in the mirror,
    halfway on its departure.
    And out there,
    beyond Sandy Point,
    beyond Long Island,
    the dark Atlantic rages
    and in its fury
    holds off the snow.

    James Dowthwaite

  • All That is Solid

    All That is Solid

    Lynn White

    There’s an ill wind blowing,
    gale force at least
    laden with ice and snow
    a real blizzard,
    so keep your head down,
    head for home,
    don’t let it in
    close up the gaps
    and wait.

    Wait
    until the storm passes
    leaving all eerily quiet.
    Wait
    for the sun to return
    bringing rainbows.
    and the breeze to grow gentle
    with a sweet breath
    and a warmth to break the ice
    with colour.
    Wait
    for the delicate flowers to show
    through the shattered soil,
    melting the frozen silence.
    Make a space then,
    an opening
    for a warmth,
    that will shatter the ice.

    Yes, even the solid will melt away
    and make it all worthwhile.

    Lynn White

  • Matthew Miller

    Matthew Miller

    Poetry Contributor

    Matthew Miller teaches social studies, swings tennis rackets, and writes poetry – all hoping to create home. He and his wife live beside a dilapidating orchard in Indiana, where he tries to shape dead trees into playhouses for his four boys. His poetry has been featured in River Mouth Review, Club Plum Journal, and Ekstasis Magazine.


    Works in Nightingale & Sparrow

    Snow is a Blanket Fort My Children Built

     

  • Letter from the Editor – blizzard

    Dear Reader,

    Welcome, and happy 2021! If you’re anything like our team here at Nightingale & Sparrow, you were eagerly counting the moments until the new year—and now it’s here! Even as we celebrate making it here, and all the hope that comes with this year, we’d like to take a moment to remember all those who couldn’t join us in 2021, from Breonna Taylor, George Floyd, Jacob Blake, and other victims of racist violence and police brutality to the millions who’ve succumbed to COVID-19.

    As I write this introduction to blizzard, I’m sipping a mug of hot, black coffee and gazing out the window at another interpretation of our theme. “The February 2021 nor’easter” already has its own Wikipedia page! The nearby woodland (hearkening back to our November 2020 issue!), having long since lost its leaves, is coated in a thick layer of white and ice. Watching the breeze blow snowdust through the air, I can’t help but think of the photos and written work that make up this Nightingale & Sparrow blizzard.

    With blizzard, we aimed to showcase the unique facets of every snowflake and the dichotomies present in every storm. As we make our way through the early proofs of the issue, I believe we’ve done just that.

    “Snow can sparkle on tree limbs or block your view of the outside world,” we wrote to submitters. “ Ice can create a graceful skating scene or a painful fall. Wind can burn your cheeks or blow a caress through your hair. We hope to explore the seemingly contradictory nature of the quintessential winter storm with this issue. Every snowflake is unique and we hope that each piece featured in blizzard will be equally distinct.” From Fija Callaghan’s “A Midwinter Night’s Dream” and Kate Gough’s “Yule Known” to Jasmine Kuzner’s “Snowsquall” and Karla Linn Merrfield’s “Breaking Story,” you’ll feel the chill in the air and smell the distinct scent of snow as you page through this issue.

    As always, thank you to the N&S staff, submitters and contributors, readers, customers, and other supporters who’ve made this issue and all of our efforts possible.
    Welcome to 2021, and to blizzard.

    Juliette Sebock
    Editor-in-Chief, Nightingale & Sparrow

  • Matthew Pinkney

    Matthew Pinkney

    Fiction Contributor

    Matthew Pinkney is a writer of socially-conscious stories across genre and medium. Originally from San Jose, California, Matthew is a recent graduate from the Dodge College of Film and Media Arts at Chapman University. He/him/his.


    Works in Nightingale & Sparrow

    Vulpes lagopus

     

  • The Popples are Sleeping

    The Popples are Sleeping

    Kimberly Wolkens

    Kimberly Wolkens