Black Petals Issue #114, Winter, 2025

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Editor's Page
BP Artists and Illustrators
Mars-News, Views and Commentary
The Dance of Chloe-Patra: Fiction by Hillary Lyon
Broodmother: Fiction by Damian Woodall
Frederick: Fiction by Paul Radcliffe
Henry's Last Laugh: Fiction by Stephen Lochton Kincaid
Pete the Pirate: Fiction by Floyd Largent
Public Body: Fiction by Martin Taulbut
Tacklehug: Fiction by Cindy Rosmus
Wheelchair Bound: Fiction by Roy Dorman
When Graves Won't Speak: Fiction by Justin Alcala
Air Ambulance: Fiction by Blair Orr
Silent Night: Fiction by Stephen Lochton Kincaid
He Was a Student of the Old Days: Flash Fiction by Zvi A. Sesling
The Panther: Flash Fiction by Rotimi Shonaiya
A Vampire Returns: Flash Fiction by Charles C. Cole
An Invited Guest: Flash Fiction by John Tures
It's Been a Minute: Flash Fiction by Pamela Ebel
The Dead Only Stay Dead if You Let Them: Flash Fiction by Francine Witte
Roses: Micro Fiction by Zachary Wilhide
Song Sparrow: Micro Fiction by Francine Witte
Where's Mummy?: Micro Fiction by Harris Coverley
Evidentiary Discovery: Micro Fiction by John Tures
JLM: Micro Fiction by Paul Radcliffe
Anecdote of the Edibles: Poem by Frank Iosue
Gone Viral: Poem by Frank Iosue
Dolls: Poem by Simon MacCulloch
The String: Poem by Josh Young
Last Dance: Poem by Josh Young
Warm on My Hands: Poem by Josh Young
Last Rights: Poem by Kendall Evans
My Friend Lucan: Poem by Kendall Evans
Mary Black: Poem by Christopher Hivner
Alone, in the Dark: Poem by Christopher Hivner
Deep Field: Poem by Christopher Hivner
Dust Damsel: Poem by Meg Smith
The Lights of The Armory: Poem by Meg Smith
The Cyclops Child: Poem by Meg Smith
The Sleeper's Limbo: Poem by Stephanie Smith
Flight: Poem by Stephanie Smith
Immaculate Chasm of a Moonless Night: Poem by Stephanie Smith

Francine Witte: Song Sparrow

114_bp_songsparrow_kjhannahgreenberg.jpg
Art by KJ Hannah Greenberg © 2026

Song Sparrow

 

Francine Witte

 

Perched high in a Brooklyn tree, a sparrow sings a sharp peep that twists into a burr. His feathers are streaks of white and gray, with tufts of brown that blend into the lace of the leaves. It’s the end of summer, and he is lost in sparrow thoughts—winter is coming, and soon, he will fly south.

Below him, a family is having a picnic. They sing and laugh, their voices mingling with the sparrow's song. Their clothes are also streaks of white and gray, with tufts of brown hair. They are wrapped in their own thoughts—school is about to start, the work routine will return. An early whiff of autumn shivers the tree. “Getting cold,” the father jokes, “I’m going to need my parka.”

The sparrow remembers the pattern of flight, built into his wings, ready to lift him into the air. The family remembers the rhythm of mornings, traffic, and pencils—an instinct that carries them back to their roots as hunters. Around them, the last sky of summer begins to dim. The edge of a leaf is about to turn.





Francine Witte is a flash fiction writer and poet, and the author of the flash collection RADIO WATER. Her newest poetry book, Some Distant Pin of Light, has just been published by Cervena Barva Press. Her work has been widely published, and she is a recent recipient of a Pushcart Prize. She lives in New York City. Please visit her website francinewitte.com. She can be found on social media @francinewitte.  



KJ Hannah Greenberg is eclectic. She’s played oboe, participated in martial arts, learned basket weaving, and studied Middle Eastern dancing. What’s more, she’s a certified herbalist, and an AP College Board-authorized teacher of calculus. 

Her creative efforts have been nominated once for The Best of the Net in poetry, once for The Best of the Net in art, three times for the Pushcart Prize in Literature for poetry, once for the Pushcart Prize in Literature for fiction, once for the Million Writers Award for fiction, and once for the PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay. To boot, Hannah’s had more than forty-five books published and has served as an editor for several literary journals.

Check out her latest short fiction collection, An Orbit of Chairs:

https://www.amazon.com/Orbit-Chairs-KJ-Hannah-Greenberg/dp/B0CWMMM73T

 Within its pages are two tales originally published at Yellow Mama: "Alive Another Day" and "Light Notes."

Channie's new art book, Life's Colors, https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FGCTHJ6Z, just launched (hit "read sample" button). It contains images originally published by Yellow Mama.

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