And the nominees are…

Best of the Net

Sparks of Calliope nominated six poems for inclusion in the 2025 Best of the Net Anthology, sponsored by Sundress Publications. Eligible poems appeared between July 1, 2023, and June 30, 2024, and were previously unpublished.

Best of the Net 2025 Nominees

“Flowers” by Gary Borck

“Along the Shoulder” by Terence Culleton

“Dear Son” by Jacqueline Jules

“Honeymoon” by James Mulhern

“The Metaphor of Work” by Ali Rowland

“Anticipation” by Beate Sigriddaughter


If you would like to view our previous nominations, you can find them here.

Two Poems by Terence Culleton

The Nightingale’s a Literary Bird

. . . here there is no light,
Save what from Heav’n is on the breezes blown . . .
                    –John Keats

What other’s ever cozened poets quite
like this one—always elsewhere, scatting away
in thickets cast with gloom? Moon dark or bright,
they hear it and they call on it to stay,
decocting what-all of its old grief may
be left—as essence of a nighttime rose
unfolding for the Hippocrene-ic nose.
Sylph-like syllables compose a word
our warbler in and of itself bestows—
the nightingale’s a literary bird.

Songs are airs, and melodies take flight,
wheeling, light-wingéd hatchlings of mid-May,
on course without a beam of earthly light
through every verdurous winding mossy way.
Song’s light’s from heaven, rimesters like to say.
Songs string wild note-posies: poems pose
truths too liminal for boorish prose.
(This might be thought weak-minded or absurd,
but Philomel has heart-truths to disclose:
the nightingale’s a literary bird.)

Or a song’s a lusty flower, day or night,
and nighttime flowers sing again next day,
reverberating in the soul (it might
be said, if soul there is—or, anyway,
the heart) as, say, an ode or roundelay.
A song, just like a flower, blooms and grows.
It pulses, which is how its blooming goes—
a pulsing of the soul to heavenward
on suppliant wings. It’s true, we all suppose
the nightingale a literary bird

piping faerie anthems: heart-ache flows
and ebbs till chanticleer puffs up and crows.
It is a music every poet’s heard
at night, whereby he—or else she—but knows
the nightingale’s a literary bird.

“The Nightingale’s a Literary Bird” first appeared in Westward Quarterly.


Along the Shoulder

A buck’s dead here about eight hundred feet
from where that little girl died down the road
last year, shoulder-strapped into her seat
spooning a cone, or something à la mode
with whipped cream—sugar’d—strudel dough’d

—whatever you’d imagine—when the truck
hit them. Last night, I guess, this gorgeous buck
leapt out into the lane, mad for night air,
knowing nothing of what we call luck,
good or bad, or happiness . . . nightmare . . .

The dog applies her nose to it by way
of reading it, its death, its breathlessness,
having no other impulse but to stay
sedulously at it as the press
of traffic hurtles past—she doesn’t guess

at anything, breathes everything, so what
she knows is it alone—I think that, but
I also think its beauty, think the pain:
her little eyelids pressed three-quarters shut,
the gurney waiting in the turning lane.




Terence Culleton has published poems in a variety of journals, including Sparks of Calliope. He has appeared on TV and radio shows in Philadelphia and New York and several of his poems have been featured on NPR. Mr. Culleton’s third volume of poetry, a collection of sonnets entitled A Tree and Gone, is now out through Future Cycle Press and has been included in the New York Review of Books Independent Press “New Releases” list. It’s available at Amazon or through his website: terenceculletonpoetry.com, where you can also purchase his other two books, A Communion of Saints and Eternal Life.

Two Poems by Terence Culleton

Caught

after a boardwalk poster

The go-round brings round
merrily the steed midstride,
robbed of its motion, thus
(maybe) furious, foaming

as (now!) the shutter
stops it, blurred, mid-glide,
ictus-click, there, here,
known, not known, come

round contained in its
own orbit, fury-eyed,
fantastically alone, caught
out, mid-stride, mid-

vault here in its arc—
it’s just a ride
and surely one hears
waves somewhere, gears

groaning, slats creaking,
a siren hailing, more
laughter, candy corn, it
rears forward furious-

seeming in its un-
motion, only motion,
deferred, inferred, caught—its
own and only motion.


Ham

Cut-glass carafes,
two white, two red,
wheels of Neufchatel
(cheese for the body,

wine for the head)—
someone laughs,
dings a dinner bell,
upon which we

come over rowdily
drawn thus to you,
the stuff around you,
the dying bell-sound:

you are the primal
victim of our primal
faith in the roasting pit,
the special honeydew

sauce, pineapple-crowned
before us hunkered round
you in the blackened pan,
blistering fat-driblets,

clove-chafed, hide studded
with peppercorns and bits
of lemon rind.—Ham,
you ooze your best

in savory death, how
is it that to host and guest
there’s nothing in this whole damn
world except you now?




Terence Culleton has published poems in a variety of reviews, including Sparks of Calliope. He has been nominated for several Pushcarts, and he has appeared on TV and radio shows in both the Philadelphia area and New York City. Several of his poems have been featured on NPR. A former Bucks County, PA, Poet Laureate, Mr. Culleton’s third volume of poetry, a collection of sonnets entitled A Tree and Gone, is now out through Future Cycle Press and has been featured on the New York Review of Books Independent Press “New Releases” list. It’s available on Amazon or through his websiteterenceculletonpoetry.com

“Photographing Hoodoos – Bryce Canyon” by Terence Culleton

“Thou still unravished bride . . .” —John Keats

As of yet these, too, are still unravished or
too slowly carved to call it ravishing.
Distended, urn-like, rust red, eighteen soar
above me as I inch down, ogling.
Some seem countenanced like totem poles
or tiki men atilt to ruminate
as I square round to frame their limestone souls
within the finder lest the inner state
of stone be only stone, what wind and hail
have carved respond as nothing to the eye.
And I’ll insist on thinking up the tale
of what I see here—now—and maybe why
I see them this way, beautiful, and true
as anything I’ve known or thought I knew.

“Photographing Hoodoos – Bryce Canyon” from A Tree and Gone (Future Cycle Press, 2021).




Terence Culleton is a former Bucks County (PA) Poet Laureate, a 2019 Pushcart Prize nominee, and recipient of First Honorable Mention in the 2019 Helen Schaible International Traditional Sonnet ContestTerence has published two collections of formally crafted narrative and lyric poems, A Communion of Saints (2011) and Eternal Life (2015), both with Anaphora Literary PressPoems from his forthcoming collection of sonnets, A Tree and Gone (FutureCycle Press), have recently appeared in Antiphon, The Lyric, The Eclectic MuseInnisfree, The Road Not Taken (including Feature Poem), Blue Unicorn Review, and Raintown Review.