Monday, May 25, 2026

HAN VANDERHART — "ODE TO KNOWING" (Issue 30)

ODE TO KNOWING

The orchard in my childhood: apple,
pear, cherry I fell from—and a plum tree
neglected every spring, a jelly fungus
taking the purple fruit. No soft plums
in the fridge. There was so much
I thought I could not have; obedience
I had to give. My child body, bruised.
My heart: kept like an abandoned fruit
tree, or a goat to a tether. I did not buck.
I did not bite. I stood in the long grasses.
I’ve since learned that a child cannot
provide. That fruit and animals both
need tending hands—hold me, comb me,
were words that for years I could not
say. But now I feel the wisteria around
my thighs. The landscape curls with relief.
There is ripe fruit in the shape of your mouth.



ABOUT THE POET 

Han VanderHart is a queer writer living in Durham, NC, under the pines. Their 
second poetry collection, Larks (Ohio University Press, 2025), was selected by 
Chanda Feldman as winner of the 2024 Hollis Summers Poetry Prize. Han is also 
the author of What Pecan Light (Bull City Press, 2021) and has essays and poetry 
published in Kenyon Review, The American Poetry Review, The Rumpus, AGNI
and elsewhere. Han hosts Of Poetry Podcast and, alongside Amorak Huey, coedits 
the poetry press River River Books.



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ELLA FLORES — "FIELD NOTES FROM THE CREATION MUSEUM" (Issue 30)

FIELD NOTES FROM THE CREATION MUSEUM

After the Tower of Babel diorama
    you arrive at a Kentucky nuclear
wasteland where mannequin Moses
    asks mannequin David, Why do I
suffer? A projector whirs the answer:
    a million CGI particles form a fully
adult, human male—No baby Adam.
    No diaper changing station
in the men’s bathroom. No stopping the field
    tripping students from prodding fertilized
egg models and life-sized fetuses. Or shoving
    their way through the Garden of Eden
exhibit to be first in line for the petting-zoo-food-
    court-equipped Ark, where a premium ticket
gets you the Deluge Experience and rainbows
    are kept to a minimum. Please leave
in twos, a placard points to the gift shop.
    In the humor section you buy a birthday
card with a unicorn nuzzling a brontosaurus
telling him, It doesn’t hurt.
Not really.


ABOUT THE POET 

Ella Flores is a poetry PhD candidate at SUNY Binghamton and has recent 
or forthcoming work in The Penn Review, DIAGRAM, Salamander, Hunger 
Mountain, and others.



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MIKE WHITE — "FAIRGROUND (OLD PHOTOGRAPH)" (Issue 30)

FAIRGROUND (OLD PHOTOGRAPH) 

Given that the colors
must already be
imagined,

allow the mind’s eye
to erase

every last bobbing balloon,

and then subtract
the levitating strings.

Now keep

squarely in view
the clenched raised fists
of the stone-faced children.


ABOUT THE POET 

Mike White is the author of two prize-winning collections: How to Make a 
Bird with Two Hands (Word Works, 2012) and Addendum to a Miracle 
(Waywiser, 2017). Individual poems have appeared in journals, including Poetry
Ploughshares, The New Republic, The Yale Review, The Kenyon Review, The Iowa 
Review, Copper Nickel, Rattle, and previously in Sugar House Review. Originally 
from Canada, he now lives in Salt Lake City and teaches at the University of Utah.



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Sunday, April 5, 2026

SEAN HILL — "WANT AT THE TRANSFER STATION" (Issue 30)

WANT AT THE TRANSFER STATION

A slipping whistling sliding sound of a song
calls my attention at the City of Helena
Solid Waste Transfer Station where the sign reads
NO SCAVENGING Violators Will Be Prosecuted
where I was just moments ago with my seven-year-old
son and our recycling minding my own business
and with questions on my mind—Where will this
harvest from our garbage go? What will we reap?
What did we sow?—when your song found me and I
call my son’s attention to it. I want to share the singer
with my son in the middle of our recycling run to this
transfer station like when a jam from my youth
comes on the radio when we’re in the middle of our
erranding for things to bring home and I get excited.
I once heard the clear whistles of one of your eastern
cousins’ songs and thought it sang Hey young man, go away.
And once a friend said you sound like you’re singing a question;
he heard a rising call that I didn’t, and if it was, it would
have been uptalking seeking agreement, right? Since, what
question would you have? Aside from those questions of life—
how to keep your body safe and going in order to make
generations to come—those needs and drives, which may sit
in you not as questions. At any rate, I want him, my son,
to see you, the belter of the song that drops, a drawly
glissando or perhaps twangy vibrato, a western song,
with that bright bib, the yellow of a sunflower? Some flower?
Or maybe the yellow of detritus gathered with hope
of it getting a new use—an emptied laundry detergent
jug or Pacifico can? Not a question in my want,
what I mean is (trying to find you with my eye) I want
to show my boy not metaphors in the day but your coal black
necklace bold against that yellow reminding me of that boy-mensch
Charlie Brown’s shirt and your streaked mantle of browns
and blacks on your wings and back matching the dried grasses
and the shadows they cast to keep you hid in your ground feeding
and ground nesting habits and hard to find in this valley east
of MacDonald Pass and the continental divide in this watershed
with your spill of those liquid slipping notes in a run that floats
open over the open land next to the roll-off dumpsters.



ABOUT THE POET 

Sean Hill is the author of Dangerous Goods and Blood Ties & Brown Liquor, 
and the forthcoming collection, The Negroes Send Their Love. His poems have 
appeared in Callaloo, Harvard Review, The Oxford American, Poetry, Tin House
and numerous other journals, and in several anthologies including Black Nature 
and Villanelles. Hill lives in southwestern Montana with his family and is an 
associate professor of creative writing at the University of Montana.



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Wednesday, April 1, 2026

LAUREN CAMP — "AS LONG AS I SEE" (Issue 30)

AS LONG AS I SEE

Onto the same valley, I keep looking. Impossible that
the future is instantly changed.

Empty land will continue
to set slight

wind. I woke
at dawn and asked the flat

dark to sing me
its wings. Reason could be the lantern

of owls. I went mapping the body-blood, and escaped
to previous versions and margins

where I reappear in echo. Now I look
at this valley straight across, gold fields

and leaf flutter, fences, lulled cows. Aluminum trailers wriggle
and flex dirt roads. Each shift of peaks and triangulated

pine. The moon curls, and circles
slink about on the pond.

Time widens along west.
Before this, I would have to poke silence—

expecting much to be the only value.
I am looking at the valley because that is what there is

to do and it is already justified. I have buried my father.
Birds scale sand dunes in unison.



ABOUT THE POET 

Lauren Camp serves as New Mexico Poet Laureate. She is the author of eight 
books of poetry, most recently In Old Sky (Grand Canyon Conservancy, 2024). A 
former Astronomer-in-Residence at Grand Canyon National Park, she was a 
finalist for the Arab American Book Award, New Mexico-Arizona Book Award, 
and Adrienne Rich Award. Her poems have been translated into Mandarin, 
Turkish, Spanish, French, and Arabic. LaurenCamp.com



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Saturday, January 24, 2026

SUPHIL LEE PARK — "HERE ARE SOME FLOWERS" (Issue 30)

HERE ARE SOME FLOWERS

In a gentler dream, I thumbed
each hydrangea socket wet
onto your palm, purple scabs right off
my lips, as if to not
press: look what you’ve done.

Its head, all eyes in the darkest
corner of summer.

In another, someone pointed out the rarity
of fathers in my poems and spoke around
all the frothy mothers. How to say I’m my father
in pastel has no better lyric place
to go to than silence?

In a less gentle dream, I dove face
first into a meadow made of bees so high
on flowers they recited the whole glossary.
I ran out of memory and started to abridge.
Ended up with acronyms on the cusp
of prescriptions.

An ocean of pistils drowned me
from afar.

From another dream, I uncrinkled
a twenty-dollar bill for tulips a touch
paler than the banana peel
still rotting in my sink.



ABOUT THE POET 

Suphil Lee Park (수필 리 박 / 秀筆李朴) is a writer and translator from South 
Korea. She is the author of Still Life (Factory Hollow Press, 2023), selected by 
Ilya Kaminsky as the winner of the Tomaž Šalamun Prize, and Present Tense 
Complex (Conduit Books & Ephemera, 2021), which won the Marystina 
Santiestevan Prize. She also translated An Unraveling of One, an anthology 
of pre-twentieth-century Korean women’s poetry (forthcoming from the 
University Press of SHSU, 2027). Her work has appeared in The Kenyon 
Review, The New Republic, Poetry, and elsewhere. Suphil-Lee-Park.com



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Friday, January 9, 2026

LIZZY 柯 (Ke) POLISHAN — "TRANSDIFFERENTIATION" (Issue 30)


TRANSDIFFERENTIATION

why not talisman your body with cheap charms?
chew the unspeakable 桃子? sail off in search of ambrosia?
golden apples? a holy grail? you can’t count

on transmigration to pour your soul back into a human vessel / you can’t count on
your honda’s transmission to hold until you get home / if metempsychosis is
stolen immortality, you feel no remorse / do you really want to return

from cosmic comatose bliss to be a long-stem rose or some other symbol
of someone else’s love? ask sisyphus to trace the shape
of his callouses and tell you how happy he feels / you can wait for late to retronym

your proper name, bingeing bake off, knitting snood after snood, or you can find
the magical grackles / they’ll exchange your freudian regressions for
a child-sized skeleton / fresh lenses / firm skin... / up to you / you are now approaching

the point of radioactive decay / a half-life crisis / the instant of your transformation
into clever lead / if you’re clever enough, you can pestle yourself
a helichrysum-meets-cicada-skin cocktail / name it ‘transdifferentiation’ /

delirious, you’ll delete freckles! / sunspots! / buy crop
tops again! / if a jellyfish can do it so can you—
channel your inner turritopsis dohrnii & unsheathe your spine! /

just like sliding a toothpick from your favorite amuse-bouche /
convert to a glossy polyp / a blob / slippery / shimmery / reborn
on the seafloor / on the seafloor / surrender / you’ll love what you’ve become



ABOUT THE POET 

Lizzy 柯 (Ke) Polishan’s poems appear in Gulf Coast, Passages North, EPOCH, 
RHINO, Tupelo Quarterly, petrichor., Poet Lore, Rust + Moth, Greensboro Review,
Pacifica, and others. She is a guest editor at Palette, a poetry reader at Psaltery & 
Lyre, and the managing editor at River & South Review. She is the author of 
A Little Book of Blooms (2020). She lives in Pennsylvania with her husband.



ABOUT SUGAR HOUSE REVIEW 


We loved reading the work that we’ve published (clearly), and we want an 
opportunity to better hear our contributors. We're featuring audio recordings of 
poems from our pages, read by the poet. This an open invitation to all contributors 
from any of our issues, we were delighted to print your work, now we’re eager to 
hear it.