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baby monitor.jpg

Screen Time by Mina Manchester

August 4, 2018

Light crept in through the space between the black out curtains hanging over the bedroom window. Ron, her husband, shifted in his sleep. His shoulder twitched slightly as if reacting to a breeze. Soon the alarm would go off and he would stretch and get out of bed, not bounding exactly, but with enough gusto that Leigh would feel guilty. She was always tired. So, so tired, ever since their son was born.

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In Fiction Tags Mina Manchester, Screen Time, Fiction
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Oracle by Dustin Heron

August 4, 2018

Now Zeke looks at his grandfather. A thin old man always stooped over, the ridges of his spine bulging against his flannel, baggy corduroys hanging from his bony hips. He’s standing in the shadows of the porch, dusty shadows crammed with old wooden chairs split at the seat and mildewed couches sagging under milk crates stuffed with odds and ends. All this leading into a narrow house just as dark and just as choked with dust, the whole house tottering into its last stage of disrepair. Zeke wants to scream at everything and he wants to smash it all.

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In Fiction Tags Dustin Heron, Oracle, Fiction
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Punch Line By Jason Manganaro

April 5, 2018

One Wednesday, a man sat on a bench under a bus shelter, sipping a cup of Dunkin Donuts coffee. The coffee was too hot, making each sip unbearable, but he kept at it. Car after car whizzed past, upsetting the brisk morning air with a sharp swoosh that the man found oddly soothing. Like waves from a derelict sea, chopping at the shore.

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In Fiction Tags Jason Manganaro, Punch Line, Fiction
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 Northern Straits by Anne Trooper

April 1, 2018

The carpenters and fishermen come into Ralph’s for breakfast. They used to eye me up and down, but with a baby growing in my belly, I guess I’m not good for that anymore. I have on the brown, canvas, second-hand coat I found at the Trading Post. A man’s coat, but it fits pretty well, and I can’t see me in cute dresses with bows on the front, or tops that say baby on board.

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In Fiction, Print Tags fiction, northern straits, anne trooper, 2018 spring vol. 11 issue 1
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The Bubble Wrapped Heart By Geoffrey Line

February 14, 2018

When Petra was little her papa hurt her, and so she put her heart in bubble wrap. Layer upon layer upon layer of unspooled, suffocating plastic that padded her vital organ in an impenetrable fortress that could go anywhere, endure anything, no matter the fragility of its contents. Pigtails, lollypops, and monkey bar skills, that was her, but she performed her brutal surgery all the same.

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In Fiction Tags Valentine's Day, Heart, Bubble Wrap, Geoffrey Line, The Bubble Wrapped Heart, Fiction
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Exit 105 by Lindsay Haber

December 7, 2017

Glen’s wasn’t one of those fucking cliché cancer stories. It wasn’t fighting for survival, lamenting with his wife and kids, telling everyone to go on without him. Glen’s was stomach pains that led to six weeks to live which was really four and a half, every moment of which he was fucking sick and despondent, and couldn’t walk for more than a few minutes, and could barely talk or swallow. When people would see him, they’d whisper about how terrible he looked, like he was already dead.

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In Fiction Tags Lindsay Haber, Exit 105, Fiction
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The Tower by Veronique Bizot

May 19, 2017

My friend Saez will have spent no more than an hour of his life in the company of his father-in-law, no more than the time it took to pick him up at the airport and bring him back to the apartment on the 26th floor where Saez lives with his wife, Marie. The moment he set foot in the apartment, Saez’s father-in-law, who until then had never left the mountains of the Armenian Caucasus, walked straight to the bay window, leaned out, ostensibly to take in the view, and vanished.

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In Fiction Tags Véronique Bizot, The Tower, Fiction
Must Believe in Ghost

Must Believe in Ghost by Jeremy John Parker

January 31, 2017

I heard about Bob through a notice on the library bulletin board. Normally, it was unremarkable, filled with posters for the community theatre’s production of SPECTACULATHON!—all of Grimm’s fairy-tales compressed into “an unbelievable ninety minutes!”—and the Bread and Soup Dinner (suggested donation $2) on Wednesday at the First Baptist Church of Heartland. A “best of the 50s, 60s, and 70s!” cover band (Skyrock!) was looking for a new drummer.

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In Fiction Tags Jeremy John Parker, ghosts, Must Believe in Ghost, Fiction
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Clara Aguilera's Holy Lungs by Molly Olguin

December 1, 2016

Clara died, as all the others did, at God’s hand. He sent an asteroid hurtling toward the world, and the world sent bombs to shoot it out of the sky, narrowly averting an age of ash and death. But of course God had the last word.

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In Fiction, Print Tags Molly Olguin, 2016 fall vol. 9 issue 2
Danny and Fred

Danny & Fred by Courtney Harler

November 4, 2016

In the winter of the blizzards that persisted into March, my father took a contract job three hours away in Ohio. He lived there during the week and only came home on the weekends. A programmer by day and a farmer by night, his daily chores fell to me, a senior in high school. We’d catch up on the major chores every weekend—like hauling hay and repairing the barn—but daily I milked the goats and gathered the eggs and grain-fed our fat, happy quarter horses.

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In Fiction Tags Courtney Harler, Danny & Fred, Fiction
Swallow Stephanie A. Vega

Swallow by Stephanie A. Vega

October 18, 2016

Liliana stood between the metal filing cabinet and the cardboard boxes in the dimly lit office, transferring folders as fast as she could, barely scanning the peeling labels as she pulled them out of the drawer in bunches. She recognized one. Instinctively, she leafed through it and landed on a familiar name.

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In Fiction Tags Stephanie A. Vega, Swallow, Fiction
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Birds by Ben Gwin

September 22, 2016

I sign up for summer class at the community college so I can finally get my associates, and on the first day I see a girl who reminds me of my old babysitter. I sit in front of the girl, by the window and pretend to look at the traffic passing on Mountain View, but really I’m watching her reflection. Chapped pink lips. Tattoo edging up her collarbone. Hair everywhere and the color of daffodils, all drawn out faint and slippery over the glass.

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In Fiction Tags Ben Gwin, Birds, Fiction
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Speed by Maria Kuznetsova

May 1, 2016

We were spying on my parents. This was something we started a few weeks ago, when I noticed that they were worth spying on.

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In Fiction, Print Tags Maria Kuznetsova, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1
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Here I Am by Xu Xi

May 1, 2016

He was not a zombie. Nor was he a ghoul, mummy, wraith, ambulatory skeleton, or operatic phantom. He wasn’t even 殭 屍 (geong si), a dressed-to-the-nines Qing dynasty vampire that could at least do an approximation of the Lindy Hop, transcending time and culture into the Jazz Age. However, he was clearly dead, or undead, if you parsed language to its core.

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In Fiction, Print Tags Xu Xi, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1
White Birds by Jennifer Zaynab Maccani

White Birds by Jennifer Zeynab Maccani

May 1, 2016

What do the dancing white birds say, looking down upon burnt meadows?

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In Fiction, Print Tags Jennifer Zeynab Maccani, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1
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BodSwap with Moses by Wendy Rawlings

May 1, 2016

Manuela in scrub top and cheetah pants hasn’t even finished telling us what to expect from our new bodies when the Kenyans stride in on their excellent legs.

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In Fiction, Print Tags Wendy Rawlings, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1
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Fall by Marysa LaRowe

April 19, 2016

It started with the birds.

It was New Year’s Eve. We were sitting in the living room, watching the footage of fireworks in Australia, Tel Aviv, Berlin, London. Outside, people were setting off fireworks and bottle rockets of their own. You’d hear them whistle and pop every now and then, first far away, then close.

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In Fiction Tags Marysa LaRowe, Fall, Fiction
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The News by C. Dale Young

March 31, 2016

The potted ficus in the corner of Flora Diaz’s kitchen, the ficus barely four-feet tall and planted in a rust-colored ceramic pot, the one that she watered every six days had, for the first time in the almost four decades she had owned it, started showing some yellowing leaves. This did not escape Flora Diaz’s attention. Nor had it escaped Javier Castillo’s attention; he made a point of pointing it out when he first told me about that particular time in his life.

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In Fiction Tags C. Dale Young, The News, Fiction
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Rest Stop by Ana Crouch Ureña

March 29, 2016

Since I can remember, I’ve spent summers at my grandmother’s house on the coast. It’s a long drive, but this year will be the last time I make it. Mimi died in the spring. I was so upset, I even told my students about her. I was as surprised as they to find myself recounting how Mimi came to the US as a war bride. Really, I knew almost nothing about it; she never talked about that time.

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In Fiction Tags Ana Crouch Ureña, Rest Stop, Fiction
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Down on the Ass Farm by Samuel Ligon

March 10, 2016

Remember how we’d handle snakes, diamondbacks and cottonmouths, praying we’d be okay someday and away from this place? We’d quote from scripture, glowing with the words we whispered: And they will take up snakes, and if they should drink lethal poison, it will not harm them, and they will place their hands on the sick. But we didn’t place our hands on the sick. And we didn’t drink lethal poison. We drank Father Tim’s whiskey and placed our hands on each other, saying yes to darkness and drink and the pleasures of the flesh. Do you remember?

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In Fiction Tags Samuel Ligon, Down on the Ass Farm, Fiction
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