MAPS, by Chris Farago.
If you’re going somewhere, anywhere, you need a leaf map, don’t you?. . .
MOVING, by Bruce E.R. Thompson.
It takes a skilled logician to explain why poetry transports us . . .
PEREGRINATION, by Sean Murphy.
Lately, moving has taken on a rather sinister cast. . .
FALLING IN NOIR, by Tamra Lucid.
It’s fortunate we can be transported by an eternity of finding love . . .
ON THE MANUFACTURE OF DREAM DUST, by Duncan Tierney.
Options other than love and memory can be fatal . . .
HEINRICH BOLL IS DEAD, LONG LIVE HEINRICH BOLL, by Charles S. Kraszewski.
Literature transports as love and memory, even if you’re not a poet . . .
AMERICAN PASSENGER (Excerpts), by Benjamin White.
Grief transports, too, properly applied . . .
A SUBWAY MUSICIAN, by John Grey.
And music transports in all transit hubs . . .
CONTAGION, by David Selzer.
History transports, but to what history are we listening . . .
COVID-19 MORNING WALK, by Barry Vitcov.
Time changes an everyday transportation . . .
TRANSITIONS, by Jonah Kruvant.
Because nothing stays the same. . .
KINDS OF A COLLEGES COURSES, by Jim Meirose.
All this transporting to and fro is very confusing. . .
ODE TO TRANSIENT BUS VENDORS.
Those who aren’t transported wait for change. . .
IRAN’S FEMINIST PARTIES, by Brian Griffith.
To transport to the future, there has to be a start . . .
TO THE EMPATHY TRANSIT CENTER, by David D. Horowitz.
Because Transportation Begins at Home . . .
WALTZ FOR STRANGERS, by Marissa Bell Toffoli.
And then maybe we all will start to dance . . .
The TODBLOG wants creativity more than ever before, with good reason . . . JAM TODAY loves salads, even at the end of a long period without shopping . . .
This issue’s picture contributed by EAP’s own MIKE MADRID.
The next issue is 1 October, and it’s the FALL 2020: SORT OF issue…contributions by 1 September, please…
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got poems? email Marissa. got anything else? email Tod.