Vox Populi

A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 6,000,000 visitors since 2014 and over 9,000 archived posts.

Michael Simms: Magnolia

Suppose you held what you love so tightly
you broke it
Suppose you let something slip away

April 6, 2024 · 45 Comments

Video: The Emperor of Time

The strange and sordid tale of Eadweard Muybridge, the man who accidentally invented motion pictures. The film is told from the point of view of Muybridge’s abandoned son and viewed completely through a nineteenth century early cinema contraption called a mutoscope.

April 6, 2024 · Leave a comment

Bob Kunzinger: Moral Absolutism | Do Not Kill Children

Starvation is rampant and the conditions in Gaza have been called by Save the Children one of the “slowest, cruelest deaths” on record. It is a holocaust…

April 5, 2024 · 10 Comments

Barbara Crooker: Diorama

Mother stands by the stove, waiting
to serve. Father has tamped down
his anger for the night.

April 5, 2024 · 9 Comments

Dion O’Reilly: Luke Johnson’s Heroic Journey

Luke Johnson’s debut poetry collection portrays a dream world linked to a stark reality, where generational trauma is recognized as an artifact of mind, a collection of leaping memories that haunt and possess.

April 4, 2024 · 5 Comments

Joshua Michael Stewart: Functional

Because the dead
remind him that splinters in his palms
are gifts, he builds cabinets, chairs, houses.
His life is work, no room for self-indulgence

April 4, 2024 · 15 Comments

White Whale Bookstore event: Saturday April 6, 7pmET

We are so excited to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Vox Populi, a curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature. The site was started by Pittsburgh poet Michael Simms as a way to connect with his peers in letters, and what better way to ring in ten years than with other Pittsburgh poets, on a date that also coincides with Michael’s 70th birthday! 

April 3, 2024 · 12 Comments

Pascale Petit: Hummer

The suitcase I found
on the shelf above his bed, with its jars
of mummified occupants, how I unwrapped
the photo curled around each hummingbird couple
like a sarcophagus

April 3, 2024 · 8 Comments

Kim Stafford: American Crazy Quilt

John Henry’s hammer ringing
twinkle, twinkle little bombs bursting in air

April 2, 2024 · 2 Comments

Baron Wormser: Vistas

I don’t doubt that somewhere in the United States some class or reading group, as a way of girding their collective loins for the upcoming election, is reading or rereading Democratic Vistas, an 1871 essay in which Walt Whitman surveyed American democracy’s prospects.

April 2, 2024 · 3 Comments

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer: The Medicine of Surrender

It’s like opening the dictionary
to the word heaven. Or obliteration. 
And knowing it’s the same thing.

April 1, 2024 · 10 Comments

Jack Stewart: El Greco’s Barmaid

In small town life, lovers are grist
for any gossip’s mill, even when the barmaid
stays at home, thinking about the cool grass
by the river, watching the moon pass

March 31, 2024 · 5 Comments

James Laughlin: Easter in Pittsburgh

the telephone rang it
was Mr. Shupstead at the
mill they had had to use
tear gas father made a
special prayer right a-
way for God’s protection

March 31, 2024 · 13 Comments

Joan E. Bauer: The Apple Pan on Pico 

When you are seeking greatness, turn to the Apple Pan, a homey 1940s institution imitated everywhere from Duluth, Minn., to Bahrain. — Jonathan Gold, Los Angeles Times food critic, 2013 … Continue reading

March 30, 2024 · 14 Comments

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