Eve Lyons's Blog
January 18, 2025
“The Edge is Closer than You Think”
Trigger Warning has published
December 30, 2024
New poetry book!
You can order copies here: https://bottlecap.press/products/got
September 12, 2024
The Automat
In September of 2024, Snoozine has published a new fiction piece of mine! Check it out.
December 17, 2023
New chapbook out!
Gorgeous handmade, limited edition of poems about the pandemic and being a therapist. Get yours now!
January 8, 2023
Conversations with Flower Bulbs
First published in Prospectus in May 2021. Nominated for a Best of the Net Award in July 2021.
I planted 100 tulip bulbs last fall,
rather I hired Ian to put them in the ground.
I’m always running out of time.
This month sturdy green leaves shot
out of the ground as if to say, is it safe to come out?
Have the frost and the blight ended?
No, I want to tell them. We’re all hunkering down.
We’re not leaving our homes,
why should you?
We’re not bothered by your plagues, they tell me.
We represent perfect love, wealth and royalty,
we cannot be defeated.
What about the jealousy of yellow tulips? I ask.
That’s a myth, they tsk tsk. Humans
always insist on creating the ugly where it isn’t.
The ugly comes from inside us,
I say, feeling defensive.
I don’t know how to be anything else but human.
We know, the tulips tell me.
We’re coming out, and you’ll have to wait
to see which colors we are.
Recent published work
Horseshoe crab
They amble across sand
for millions of years
sometimes with another one
impregnating it
knowing nothing
of viral pandemics
nor Pride parades
They don’t hug
laugh
tell stories.
Yet there they go
just surviving.
First published in Literary Cocktail in October 2022
Five Answers to the Same Question
First published in Mutha magazine in October 2022
Five Answers to the Same Question After Faisal Mohyuddin
My son is ten today
He hasn’t heard from his first mom
It’s been years.
2.
He loves to explore underwater
Worlds under our world
Thousands of sunken slave ships.
3.
We tried for years to get pregnant
But stopped short at engineering
Waited for a woman to find us.
4.
He loves every sport with a ball
He has endless social energy
He didn’t get this from us.
5.
We are the lucky ones.
His first mom carried him
They both carry the loss.
September 28, 2022
“Why Can’t We All Just Get Along?”
This poem was first published by The Mocking Owl Roost in January of 2022.
In 1992 Los Angeles erupted into riots
Latasha Harlins was murdered by a Korean shopkeeper.
She was fifteen. Her murderer served time,
unlike the white cops who beat Rodney King
Which tells you everything
you need to know about white privilege.
I was in my freshman year of college
watching the riots on television in my dorm.
My closest friend was from South Central LA
Yet it still didn’t feel real, at least not to me.
The shock that can only come
from realizing you’re white,
no matter how othered
you’ve been as a Jew, as a queer.
You’ve been living under a rock
while black people look at that rock
in envy: Rocks are a good place
to hide or can be weapons to throw.
Twenty-eight years later
Minneapolis police murder a black man,
after St Louis police,
after Staten Island police,
after state troopers in Texas,
after state troopers in South Carolina.
Our whole country erupted.
Enough is enough,
White people finally said.
Black people shaking their heads:
What took you so long?
January 11, 2022
Tree of Hope
Tree of Hope
Published by The Aerogramme Center in December of 2021 (Volume 2: Issue 1) along with several other poems of mine.
Two thousand year old Judean date palm seeds
A tree thought to be extinct
One day a scientist pulled the seeds out of a drawer
Seeds that were found in an ancient clay pot
**
A tree thought to be extinct
An archeologist plopped small brown seed in the ground
She found it in a clay pot
“Could it still grow? Is that possible?”
**
An archeologist placed the almond-like seed
When all hope was lost
It seemed impossible
We plant the seeds anyway
**
When all hope was lost
Six weeks later, a Judean date palm sprouts
This is why we plant the seeds
Someday there may be a forest.
**
The first Judean date palm in two millennia
From thousand year old date palm seeds
Someday there may be a forest of bushy palm leaves
We’re all waiting for science to save us.
January 9, 2022
Small but Sentimental Box
First published in In Our Shoes: LGBTQ anthology (New Wasteland) in June of 2021 for only $5! I have two other poems included.
Like so many people
I have trouble letting go:
Birthday cards, holiday cards,
theater programs, artwork by my kid,
found objects and surviving earrings
that someday might become art.
Meanwhile the snow piles up
buries everything in a blanket of white.
The temperature drops to twelve degrees.
Nothing can survive outside for very long.
Yet there are people and cats and hawks
trying to do just that.
We are living through a pandemic,
not even the first of my lifetime
just the first one to get the money
and scientists’ attention for a vaccine
in under a year. Unheard of.
Ghosts of gay men shake their heads.
These days, I rarely leave my house.
Grocery pick up, check the mail, runs
at least once a week. I’ve started running
through the cemetery.
Tombstones from the 1600’s mingle
with Boy Scouts labeling the trees.
Somedays survival is all we can do
The snow will melt, the earth is warming,
the kid grows up
far too quickly
for something wanted for so long.
So many onesies he only wore once.


