Welcome to Writers Resist Spring 2026 Issue

Welcome to the vibrant words and images of spring, celebrating the memory of Marsha P. Johnson, beloved and befamed transgender LGBTQ rights activist and Stonewall Inn heroine.

If you’d like the link to the virtual reading for this issue, 18 April at 5:00 pm PACIFIC, please email us at writersresist@gmail.com.

Now, join us and our contributing resisters, while we flip the flaming bird at the antis and revere all that proclaims our identities.

Why does a tranny cross a yellow brick road? by Mx. Asher

To David Lehman by Waverly Vernon

Run by JL Smither

Ahead of the Storm by Laura Ann Reed

Absent Hills by Johanna Haas

This Is the Way Our Words End— by Dennis Humphrey

Doomscrolling isn’t solidarity by Maxochitl Cortez

Warning by John L. Holgerson

Two Poems by Robin Michel

Trashy by M.R. Mandell

Duality of Dogma by Nardien Sadik

No Vacation by Raymond A. Mazurek

On the Road to Samarra by Marissa Glover

planning the ballroom by Alexis Rhodes

Pledge by Dion O’Reilly

When Should We Senior Women Not? by Ann Grogan

Choices by Alice Benson

Absent Hills

By Johanna Haas

In 1980, West Virginia had green hills of magic.
The sky was small and the land wide.
Others saw only coal.
Others saw black diamonds.
Fireflies lit dark July skies,
A child could chase them forever.
My place of Hillbillies.
My place without luxury.
People say little girls should be quiet,
Fed upon sugarplums and restraint.
I cannot stay silent.
I cannot return home.
They blasted away what I knew.
I will raise my voice about our silences.
Silent rock, sitting open.
Silent women, keeping peace.
I will shout the things that matter,
Even if I’m the only one who hears.
Shouting, stop removing the mountains.
Shouting, stop removing us, too.


Johanna Haas lives in the middle of the U.S., in a cottage with four lions. She writes fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, focussing on speculative work. She is neurospicy, disabled, a former professor, and the publisher of Cicada Song Press. Her work has appeared in Bewildering Stories, Young Raven’s Literary Review*82 Review, and Star*Line. Her poem “Absent Hills” won first place in the Wilda Morris Award from the Illinois State Poetry Society, and you can find her playing with plants and animals or tying a long string into many knots. Visit her website and read more of her writing at her Substack.

Photo credit: David Hoffman via a Creative Commons license.


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