Snap Peas and Timber Rattlers
Poet Joshua Lavender, a South Georgia native, brings us verses that resurrect how folks talk in the country.
Poet Joshua Lavender, a South Georgia native, brings us verses that resurrect how folks talk in the country.
A poem that recounts the remarkable story of the author’s great-grandmother, Alma Davenport, who was born in Pheba, Mississippi, in 1898.
Tennessee poet Linda Parsons brings us verses written for the heat of high summer.
In this poem written in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, Kaylee Eisman wrestles with how to find union with her neighbors.
Ray McManus, a South Carolina-based writer of poetry and prose, today graces Salvation South with seven — count ’em, seven! — new poems.
The writer Ann Hite has been obsessed with the 1915 lynching of Leo Frank since she was a young girl. This poem is based on a statement about the lynching from Frank’s wife, Lucille Selig Frank.
Tennessee poet Denton Loving covers fishing, the moon, chimney birds and more.
Louisiana poet Neema Murimi shares a poem based on her years in New Orleans.
Neema Murimi ponders a 20-hour drive back home to a sodden, dirty South.
Florida poet John Davis Jr. contributes “Crossing Middle Age” and two more powerful poems.
Poet Mel Buckingham from Nashville sets her memories of the 2010 Cumberland River floods to the strict rhyme scheme of the villanelle.