Poetry for Spring
The latest poems from our Tomato poets, explore themes of connection, missed opportunities, the quest for belonging, and the spirit of transformation. Despite different tones, they capture moments of vulnerability and human interaction.
Hopeful
Too many delays and waiting again and again
The reasons matter and more importantly so does precious time
Not to be wasted on the trivial
So many experiences to embrace
Sometimes those you want to share them with won’t make the time
Some don’t want to share it
Hopeful
I Went Home Alone
I went to a party,
With all the glitterati,
And hoped to have a grand time,
Wearing an off the shoulder dress divine,
There I was in all my glory,
With not one person interested in my story,
It became very confusing to me,
When I spoke to a man who turned out to be,
A gorgeous hunk who’s really a she,
Not that I care since it seemed clearly,
None of my business if she’s a he,
And definitely not someone I’d marry,
I just wanted to have a conversation,
To make the evening a sensation,
As the room was filled to the absolute brim,
With actors and tall models so trim,
I wanted so much to fit in!
Well wouldn’t you know it,
I dropped my drink on a poet,
Who stood beside me on the left,
He had this marvelous chin with a cleft,
It was love at first glance,
Even though I wet his pants,
With a gin and tonic with lime,
I felt in time he would be all mine,
Until his wife introduced herself!
I went home alone,
To talk on the phone,
With a caring friend,
Whose ear I could bend,
And had a fun evening after all!
~Carol Ostrow, author “Poems from My Pandemic Pen”
Spring In New York
I treasure true grit
in a city.
Clean is for Disneyland,
it is not authentic.
In real cities
the streets testify
and politics are plastered to silver poles
with stickers and paint,
automatically elevated to street art.
I am energized
by avenues with loud voices
echoing the current
state of affairs.
I get off
taking a 2 buck chance
on a Mega Millions ticket
from a bodega on any corner.
You gotta be in it to win it.
I prefer a howl to a hum,
making the spring flowers glow brighter in the sun,
and smell stronger in the dirty wind.
City tulips tell tales
as they sway in the breeze
tilted toward change.
~Nicole Freezer Rubens, author “The Long Pause and the Short Breath”
Poetry is back in vogue and through The Three Tomatoes Book Publishing we have the honor of publishing books by four poets—Madlyn Epstein Steinhart, Stephanie Sloane, Nicole Freezer Rubens, and Carol Ostrow. Check out their poetry submissions each month.