Editor's Note, Sarah Adeyemo (June 2026)
Editor’s Note Memory, in the phrase of Oliver Tearle, is an “exercise in nostalgia”. We visit our past to regret decisions, laugh out loud at joyful moments, and seek answers to an endless list of questions. In this issue, we have curated a collection of 39 poems from poets visiting the space between past and present Jane Berger walks us through the “scouring memory” of a traumatic childhood experience in “Four Years Old,” both becoming and comforting the little girl she was. “Elephant” by M.D. Skeen shows how personal recollection can be selective and painful. The poet's use of detail and direct address makes us see how two people can experience the same event but remember it differently. Marie Burdett’s tender “Love in Memoriam” keeps love alive despite the sharpness of a lover's absence. Sometimes you remember with all your senses. In Stephen Mead 's “The Wearable Scrapbook,” memory is stored in objects as something tactile, not abstract. ...