• Home
    • Nonfiction
    • Fiction
    • Poetry
    • Multi-Media
    • Art and Photography
    • Interviews
  • Print Archive
    • Music Column
    • Pop Culture Issue
    • Anthology
    • Who We Are
    • Submit
    • Contact
Menu

The Normal School

  • Home
  • GENRES
    • Nonfiction
    • Fiction
    • Poetry
    • Multi-Media
    • Art and Photography
    • Interviews
  • Print Archive
  • Special Features
    • Music Column
    • Pop Culture Issue
    • Anthology
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Submit
    • Contact
 
 

Mornings Are The Hardest by Sarah Terez Rosenblum

December 8, 2021

Does the girl’s desperation feed the thing’s obstinance? Years ago someone (one of the experts?) told the girl that she’s in control; she has choices. But how can that be when occasionally , no matter which button the girl pushes, the thing takes actions paradoxical and perverse?

Read More
In Fiction, Newsletter Tags Mornings Are The Hardest, Sarah Terez Rosenblum, 2021 December, Fiction

Ghosts-4-Hire by Michael Colbert

December 1, 2021

I found the flyer outside the grocery store. Feeling lonely? Ghosts for hire! I would’ve thought it was a prank if I hadn’t been seeing ghost children helping the elderly check expiration dates on bagged granola or deceased personal trainers floating alongside runners, cheering them on.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Ghosts-4-Hire, Michael Colbert, Fiction, 2021 December

Dream Mother by Andrew Bertaina

November 24, 2021

She wasn’t listening. My mother had always been a wonderful listener. Now that she was dead and only a part of my dreams, mother had a bit of a foul mouth and didn’t listen well.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Dream Mother, Andrew Bertaina, Fiction, 2021 November

Vinegar Instead of Blood by Don Malkemes

November 24, 2021

The beets knew what they were doing; Kimbark was patsy perfect. He was a visitor in his father’s house, which was a remarried house with a new mom, new brother, and fruits and vegetables.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Vinegar Instead of Blood, Don Malkemes, Fiction, 2021 November

Florence, Yesterday Evening, Dusk by Jill Witty

November 17, 2021

Among the many Monti possessions, all belonging to the Contessa, none was so highly prized as the Palazzo Principio, a magnificent Renaissance building that sat along the Arno, a stone’s throw from the Ponte Vecchio. Beautifully restored and as large as an entire city block, the Principio was said to be the most valuable privately-owned building in all of Florence.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Florence Yesterday Evening Dark, Jill Witty, Fiction, 2021 November

Cake by Anthony Varallo

November 17, 2021

Time passed. The boy grew older. Taller. Able to reach all the way inside the freezer whenever he felt like it, which wasn’t often. Most of the time, he could find whatever he wanted in the refrigerator.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Cake, Fiction, 2021 November, Anthony Varallo

Little Pelvic Bone by Jessica Fordham Kidd

November 10, 2021

The mother bit the very tiniest tip off the snake’s tail. It tasted metallic and felt tough between her teeth. Then, she tossed the snake into a stand of privet hedge.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Little Pelvic Bone, Jessica Fordham Kidd, 2021 November, fiction

Two Flash Fiction Pieces by Rita Feinstein

November 10, 2021

He looks at me so suddenly that I return to my body in pins and needles. For a moment there, I’d forgotten I exist.

Read More
In Fiction, Newsletter Tags The Champion Walks Into A Bar, My Imaginary Lover Breeds Dragons, Rita Feinstein, Fiction, Flash Fiction, 2021 November

A Guide for Boys (Ages 6+) by Samuel Rafael Barber

November 3, 2021

It’s perfectly normal to imagine becoming a Football Star. Your imaginations need so much practice for where we will be taking you. “The Possible” is as important to imagine as “The Real” you think you see.

Read More
In Fiction Tags A Guide for Boys (Ages 6+), Samuel Rafael Barber, Fiction, 2021 November, BIPOC, Novel Excerpt

Fear of Women by Logan Hoffman-Smith

November 3, 2021

“You have to understand—the Women were hungry, angry, trying to survive—that this is what happens when a Maker cannot love their own creations,” mother tried to explain. Beloved, i would gaze at the invading Women, at their sallow eyes and ruptured hearts, and see only monsters. Perhaps this was why i did what i did.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Fear of Women, Logan Hoffman-Smith, Fiction, 2021 November, Own Voices

Empty and Sparkling by Katherine Indermaur

October 27, 2021

Every night the man came home and saw the progress his wife was making on the mirror. Somehow she found just the right place for each shard, the right edges to slide alongside one another.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Empty and Sparkling, Katherine Indermaur, fiction, 2021 October, flash fiction

Dawn of Graduation by Mike Yunxuan Li

October 27, 2021

When the decision letters came, he didn’t even open a single envelope from the Cali schools. He believed the East was where the heart of the country resided. Surely, people there would notice his intellect and talents. Surely, they would give a shit about the stuff he was passionate about.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Dawn of Graduation, fiction, 2021 October, Mike Yunxuan Li
pexels-daniel-absi-680074 (1).jpg

Fitness Test by Sasha Tandlich

October 13, 2021

The kids say things behind his back when he makes them stand at attention at the start of class. He has three classes at once; there are too many kids and all he’s trying to do is keep them under control. His strictness is read as meanness, but he only looks angry because his transition lenses are taking too long to adjust to the bright Florida sun.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Fitness Test, Sasha Tandlich, Fiction, 2021 October

How to Survive a Date by Holly Pelesky

October 13, 2021

You will show no signs of weaknesses. There is power in your womanhood. You of pants on a first date, of fight classes, of weaponry.

Read More
In Fiction Tags How to Survive a Date, Holly Pelesky, Fiction, 2021 October

Answer Woman by Michael Chin

October 6, 2021

The extent of what she knew for sure about her past was trapped inside the glass dome of a snow globe, the weight at the bottom of her rucksack for every move she had made.

Read More
In Print, Fiction Tags Answer Woman, Michael Chin, Fiction, Throwback, Print, Archive, Speculative, Magical Realism, Family, 2016 fall vol. 9 issue 2

Women's Work by Celeste Colgan

October 6, 2021

I never learned. In a year’s time, Mother, Buck, and the chicken coop were gone. Aunt Betty bought chickens already drawn at the meat counter. I thought a lot about beheadings.

Read More
In Fiction, Newsletter Tags Women's Work, Celeste Colgan, Fiction, 2021 October, Newsletter, October Newsletter

The Only Thing Left by Thomas Price

September 29, 2021

I know it seems odd that that long, strong bone in the leg can think, let alone feel, but it was still part of me, and as it lay in the bed, night into day and day into night, all it could wonder was, with so much of me gone, why hadn’t it been enough?

Read More
In Fiction Tags The Only Thing Left, Thomas Price, Fiction, 2021 October
Black Cactus.jpeg

Black Cactus by Marc Tweed

May 19, 2021

The sun bathes the front of the shop in a new white light as he readies to open. A small gray bird has made its way in somehow, slamming itself repeatedly against the big spotless window and he uses a broom to gently prod it out the propped-open door to freedom.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Black Cactus, Marc Tweed, Fiction, 2021 May
A Man Explodes.jpeg

A Man Explodes by John Honkala

May 12, 2021

They want answers. Did the man explode? Can a man explode? Why have you said nothing? Why is the press silent too? The man with the megaphone climbs a fence and calls to the police station.

Read More
In Fiction Tags A Man Explodes, John Honkala, Fiction, 2021 May
Bulletproof.jpeg

Bulletproof by Bethany Marcel

May 12, 2021

Monica felt her soul leaving her body. It traveled up into the organic, free-range rafters, then looked down at Monica, and laughed and laughed.

Read More
In Fiction Tags Bulletproof, Bethany Marcel, Fiction, 2021 May
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Powered by Squarespace