Issue 1:

Home

What is Home?

To me, "home" is a neighborhood, not just the place where I sleep.

In this series of three pieces, I've painted the cluttered backyards abutting my house and the corner store down the block. My own "home" is defined by its surroundings, sort of like the hollow space in a bird's nest. It wouldn't exist without the tangled branches.

They are all painted with leftover latex house paint on scraps of plywood salvaged from renovation projects (I had to build a scaffold to paint the exterior of my house.)

- Mark Thomas

"Queen Street Backyards" (24" X 32"), Latex house paint on scraps of salvaged plywood, Mark Thomas

"Wellington Street Backyards" (24" X 32"), Latex house paint on scraps of salvaged plywood, Mark Thomas

"Academy Street" (24" X 24") (bottom), Latex house paint on scraps of salvaged plywood, Mark Thomas

Home Hum

by Christopher Stolle

You thought

home

was a place

that didn’t move.

You expected

home

to be there

after a trip.

You hoped

your parents

would return

home

after work.

You prayed

no tragedy

would befall your

home.

And when

you moved away

you found

home

stuck to everything—

and the heart

the most.

Big World, Oil on Panel 20x24", Marion Reynolds

One Heart 8x10", Oil on Panel, Marion Reynolds

Clearance

by Sharisa Aidukaitis

I almost tell you to look out

as I reach for flour in the cupboard

and you twirl in your habitual

spot by my elbow—

and the warning is a new sensation

because you used to be so small that 

whatever happened at my eye level

was irrelevant to you,

content in your world of

dance parties and lego cars—

but now you are thoughtlessly taller

than the first time we made

banana bread in this house

and on any unsuspecting morning

you might close that one-inch gap 

between your head and the cupboard door

Hearth

by Jim Eigo

______

*

EAR

HEAR

HEART

HEARTH

EARTH

ART

*

______

Nicky in her garden, 30 x 25 cm, oil on board, Jen Maidment

Sunny-Side Up

by Michael Alcée

Some mornings,

we are co-conspirators.

You cooked, I placed

the egg on the couch,

while our seven-year-old

watches YouTube videos

to start the day.

Slid it beside

our little egg—no fanfare,

just business.

Hunger best served in absentia,

as if conjured, self-contained,

in this secret we all share.

Submission

by Michael Alcée

The window is open

for your work—

much like the world—

plays like minutes,

even if days and weeks.

We accept political haiku,

poems that fit

on a postcard—that’s all

the space we have.

We’d love to take more,

but only so many of us

listen, read, imagine

these days.

Are you surprised?

You already knew

men die miserably

for lack of what you’ve sent.

Trust us:

even if no one sees your words,

one day your sister

may send us the backs of envelopes,

fascicles of the facts we failed to heed—

those only you could seam.

ReCOLLAGES #ro, Digital collage, Laurene Bois-Mariage

Justified

by Johannah Simon

You told me that if you died before me, you would haunt me, so I don’t forget you or remarry, and with my deep fear of the supernatural, can you blame me for having the affair now, while you are still breathing?

The Black Unicorn

by Z. T. Corley

after Rachel Eliza Griffiths

after Audre Lorde

Even. 

The. 

Black. 

Unicorn.

Cannot.

Res(is)t.

(In.)

America. 

Bearish1, ink on paper- 21x14cm, Ori Aviram

Disease; Device (All provinces, autonomous regions, municipalities directly under the central government soil + blood transfusion bag, rack), Yang Lijie

People Fight Against Epidemic Disease, Installation / Steel pipe, barbed wire, mask write a hundred surnames, /70X70X90cm / 2020, Yang Lijie

Dandelion 

by James Benger

We find ourselves in this mire,

muddling around 

like we've always done, 

because what else is there to do

when the world finds itself 

in this painful shape. 

The warning signs were always there,

banging on from the sidelines, 

louder and louder,

and now it's not only in our face;

it is our face.

Our blood finds itself 

anywhere but where it should be, 

and we stick our heads in the dirt, 

hoping a flower will finally spring up, 

but the soil was poisoned 

so long ago,

and the toxicity of our time

has been leeching silently outward, 

killing any hope.

There is a little copse of trees

by the side of the highway, 

candy wrappers and spent rubbers,

the exhaust fumes never leave the air.

A few feet into those trees,

there's a weed growing, 

scraggly and forlorn. 

But the wilting stalk holds up

the start of a flower,

and that is where it will begin.

On Same Shores

by Adria Libolt

“light falls through the huge windows/then they decide to try
love   as a kind   of heart softener”
Grace Paley from “The Hard-Hearted Rich”

White caps this October morning kick 

their feet fiercely on the Bay’s wind                      

gulls float on gusts shielded 

by picture windows from 

where I read in a warm robe.

Her car on the street, partly hidden by a large fir

except for the headlights

a car full of items, she moves and arranges, 

sometimes but seldom with the child,

her hands busy, looking under the hood 

or when someone walks by, 

letting anyone know 

she has something to do, a purpose. 

Her boat in the storm, the car warming up 

warming her, half an hour now

the car’s relentless motor’s idling drone 

drowns the dinning racket, buses and trucks 

rumbling by bumping, 

snuffs out an emergency vehicle’s siren 

some sounds can’t be unheard,

sometimes she’s slumped like grief 

in her long hair’s curtain 

that covers the steering wheel, 

malingering on the streets, 

loitering wary worrying work 

waiting for a tap on the shoulder, 

one time it's me, she assures me she's fine

and has work, her words send me away. 

A wind of easy acquiescence reaches me,

She’s safer on the street.

waves crash in piercing persistence

lash me numb in burning salt spray’s beauty

She’s safer than in a shelter.

I want to be accepted

for any reason I’d be here. 

'Silent Spring ', 60x70 cm oil on canvas, Juliet Mathes

Mater Alarmata. “Et expecto sirenam” (Mother Under Alarm. “And I Await the Siren”),Tempera, levkas, linden board, 20 × 30 cm, Olesia Herashchenko (Shambur)

Three elderly nuns flee an Austrian retirement home to return to their abandoned convent

by Damaris West


The sisters are homesick in their care home in the valley, without the mountains blue beyond the windows. They are not accustomed to the washing of their wrinkled bodies by uncaring hands. But there are three of them and they confer.

Two years of hiding under their tongues the pills intended to sedate them, and the plot is laid for their escape. They take only bare essentials. They are driven up the hairpin bends to their beloved castle in the clouds, peaks rising round them. God in the guise of grateful former pupils will provide.

We are not burglars, says one as a locksmith breaks the locks.
We are not squatters, says another as the services are partially restored.
I have been obedient all my life, says the third, until today.


I would rather die in a meadow, says one.
Under this apple tree, says another.
In my own bed, says the third.

Subsumption

by Samantha Lucia

Gaia

Obeisant One

Usurped by mortals

Ephemerally abides


Subsumption, Photography, 4003 × 2666 pixels, Samantha Lucia

Poppy Fields", gel print: acrylic on teabags, 5in x 5in, Anita Dime

Long Road Home

by Gerard Sarnat

…That he not busy being born is busy dying…

—Bob Dylan, It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)

After in so many other words

saying your forever good-byes 

to dear places + beloved friends

down on SF Bay

                          during four hours

drive north couldn’t nearly manage 

without eldest daughter at the wheel

as return for last time to family cabin 

grandson of sorts

                           recently oy boy but now

a man calls to announce we’re great-parents.

Torus (41cm, 2025), Alchemy (41cm, 2025), and Vortex (48cm, 2025, mixed media on wood panels, Izabela Ołdak

Assimilation 

by Adria Libolt

Short and dark, he stands close to a doorway 

of Sonora’s Taqueria, nearly blending into rosy sandstone

of a Mexican eatery, walls aqua with yellow trim, 

a cactus growing out of a stone sombrero at his feet,

his back leaning against what’s behind him

a concession to colorful Guadalajara.

Absorbing a northern world rushing by to work,

he dines on the culture’s frenzied mornings 

as important as his kitchen’s tacos and burritos,

not imagining a century ago

the Dutch Boy Laundry across the street,

opening, an owner looking out, 

stooping to clean the step, when the picture

above of the bobbed boy in blue on the façade, 

a hint of Holland, had not yet faded

or bleached out in the sun. 

In two generations

their backs behind the door, 

intent on their operation,

washing, drying all the clothes 

that have come together

to be cleaned.

except to break

for lunch at the new place,

with the alien accent

and order tortillas and tacos

with a Dutch brogue.

Face the Music, mixed media collage (acrylic paint, oil pastel, HVS paper, magazine cutouts), 23,5cm × 15cm, Metalhead Melankolis

Water Music 53, 80, 81, photographed with Kodachrome 25 film and converted to digital images, Roger Camp

Capes Gossip about Retirement

by Ted Guevara

Batman & Robin

If it's golf, the sand traps look too much like litter.
We defecate like ladies at a beauty salon,
mind you. We’re not only duo at night.
we’re duo for all time. He’s looking
for life insurance. I don’t know why.
He can buy his death twenty times,
and Alfred’s and mine, and that maniacal
Catwoman’s. Does super-indulged
muscle lose intensity over time?
No, it doesn’t. We’re still slick on the page,
even if our god had succumbed due
to human years. He should really think
about a wardrobe change. He’s so TV.

Houses_of_Knowledge_Malokas_Mambeadero_4_Elders, Houses_of_Knowledge_Malokas_Mambeadero_Knowledge_Benche_Pensadero, and Houses_of_Knowledge_Yage_Malokas_Gathering_of_Knowers_Taitas_and_Aprentices, digital art, Sergio Yepes "Zurya"

Last This, Last That

by Joyce Peseroff

Last morning for scones on the porch.

Last farm stand corn and peppers after

last week’s frost. Last headline before

selling wicker loveseat and rocker:

the blond assassin held a gun

to his wife’s head, forced her

to decapitate her dead lover, I read

to a dozen wasps knocking against

the screen. I’ve knocked their gray

empty amphorae from the eaves

for the last time—strips as thin

as birch bark, fibers chewed and glued 

to last through a Nor’easter. My own 

dead wood: harvest table, cane-back 

chairs with rush seats packed, carved 

chickadee and duck decoys crated. 

Row of sugar maples whose leaves 

like scarlet palms clutched at aortic roots,

pruned. Rooms we slept and shouted in, 

shaded and shut up. Our last goodbye:

a frown, a sneeze. Last gravel spit

backing onto the road. House with good

bones, time for another to twist 

into the driveway and turn the key.

Between the Gaps, photography, Cameron J Laing, 

Friday’s Reflections, photography, Cameron J Laing

Thank you for reading Hum Magazine.

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