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A foggy nature scene: trees and a stony creek.

Up Brown Jug Creek by Catherine Halley

November 9, 2022

Of course, this isn’t the witch-thick forest you read about in a fairytale. I am surrounded by green, fast-growing trees and shrubs—buckthorn and black locust and honeysuckle—relentlessly spreading along the banks of the stream. The trunks bow out over the water and form a canopy of shade.

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In Nonfiction Tags Nonfiction, Up Brown Jug Creek by Catherine Halley, 2022 November, Up Brown Jug Creek, Catherine Halley
Lit Jack-O-Lantern seen through a clouded window, being held up by hands, surrounded by cobwebs.

What Does Your Halloween Costume Say About Your Gender?: Quiz Results By Jackie Domenus

October 31, 2022

You stand there silently, breathing candy breath into your mask until your face gets damp. Your best friends are cheerleaders, witches, fairies. But you’re just a structure of a person, an outline of a body, quiet and haunted.

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In Nonfiction Tags Nonfiction, Jackie Domenus, 2022 October, What Does Your Halloween Costume Say About Your Gender?: Quiz Results
A top-down view of a bottle of white pills. The white pills are backlit and seem to glow. The inside of the bottle is a very light green and red.

Drug Facts by Hillary Adams

October 19, 2022

"The first will make you numb, but you’ll be thin so everyone will tell you how good you look and that should equate happiness, or at least not wanting to die."

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In Nonfiction Tags Nonfiction, Hillary Adams, Drug Facts, 2022 October
An analog clock with its hands at 10:30 , on a blank white wall,

Chronostasis by Sarah Fawn Montgomery

September 28, 2022

Tamogotchis are everywhere in middle school, cradled in our hands during math when we learn about angles and remainders, the goal to take what is whole and break it apart. The egg buzzes several times a day as a reminder that survival is not guaranteed.

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In Nonfiction Tags Sarah Fawn Montgomery, Chronostasis, Nonfiction, 2022 October

A Groovy Way to Grab a Musical Bag that Turns On the Sounds of Today by Joe Bonomo

May 31, 2022

The voice to which I’m only half-listening sounds familiar, but something’s off, also. I look up blankly from the records I’m riffling through and realize that I’m hearing Elton John, one of his well-known hits from the early seventies, but I haven’t heard this version before.

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In Nonfiction Tags A Groovy Way to Grab a Musical Bag that Turns On the Sounds of Today, Joe Bonomo, 2022 May, Nonfiction, Music

A Review of My Birth Control Methods by Victoria Buitron

May 4, 2022

I didn’t know there would be anesthesia. I didn’t know there would be blood. I didn’t know my arm would bruise Rorschach. I didn’t know the army greens and deep blues would last so long.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags A Review of My Birth Control Methods, Victoria Buitron, Nonfiction, 2022 May, Newsletter

Reasons to Teach Another Year by Adam Patric Miller

March 30, 2022

Because you remember your teachers, one with wild eyes who wore a cross over his tie, who made algebraic equations turn and spin in your head, who gave you a graduation gift of Genesis in Space and Time…

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In Nonfiction Tags Reasons to Teach Another Year, Adam Patric Miller, Nonfiction, 2022 March

The Liar by J Brooke

March 24, 2022

Thinking myself a nurturer of wonder and awe, I never summoned the simplest truth. This was the Tooth Fairy. This was Santa. Like amassing a grotesque ball of knotted tangled twine, I stretched and contorted tales beneath a guise of creating a magical childhood.

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In Nonfiction Tags The Liar, J Brooke, Nonfiction, 2022 March

Red House by Lauren D. Woods

March 16, 2022

There was a last time, of course, inside the little red house, like a last time for everything, except most of the time you don’t know it will be the last, which is why you don’t remember it, only the accumulation of trains rumbling just outside...

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In Nonfiction Tags Red House, Lauren D. Woods, 2022 March, Nonfiction

Boys Least Likely To by Colin Rafferty

March 14, 2022

Out of the three of us, I am the only one who wasn't wrapped in cardboard. The only one who didn't join the books in the furnace. The only one forgotten, except by the few who take solace in my unknowableness.

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In Nonfiction, Print Tags Boys Least Likely To, Colin Rafferty, Nonfiction, Lyric Essay, Columbine, school shooting, conspiracy, Print, Throwback, 2013 spring vol. 6 issue 1

Southside Buddhist by Ira Sukrungruang

March 9, 2022

The Southside me is like the Southside neighborhoods with the cracked and weedy sidewalks, the eroding brown-brick buildings, the abandoned factories. The Southside resists any type of change, unless it’s for the worse.


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In Nonfiction, Print Tags Southside Buddhist, Ira Sukrungruang, Nonfiction, Throwback, Print, Asian American, BIPOC, Chicago, Class, CNF, Persona, Memoir, 2013 spring vol. 6 issue 1

Ovary-Acting by Melinda Scully

March 9, 2022

The metal tube growls around you like a mechanical dragon with an empty belly. A voice over the intercom reminds you not to shiver as you’re being digested.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags Ovary-Acting, Melinda Scully, Nonfiction, 2022 March

Fireflies by Aimee Nezhukumatathil

February 22, 2022

I know I will search for fireflies all the rest of my days, even though they dwindle a little more each year. I can’t help it. They blink on and off, a lime glow to the summer night air, as if to say: I am still here, you are still here…

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In Nonfiction, Print, Newsletter Tags Fireflies, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Print, Nonfiction, nature writing, nature writer, Asian American writing, wonder, 2016 fall vol. 9 issue 2

There is Always More by Ahsan Butt

February 9, 2022

As the credits rolled, Dad was leaned forward on his crossed leg, rubbing where his forehead touches the mat in prayer—that’s what it is: man becomes animal when death comes.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter, Print Tags There is Always More, Ahsan Butt, Nonfiction, Partition, Borders, Fathers, Pakistan, Twilight Zone, BIPOC, Muslim, 2019 spring vol. 12 issue 1

No Country for Daughters by Sarah Twombly

January 5, 2022

They say this is the age of monster hunting, and we are the monsters: mothers and daughters, heroines and crones. The stench of us riles them. The sight of us sets them to howling.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags No Country for Daughters, Sarah Twombly, Nonfiction, Newsletter, 2022 January

Orange Beach by J.A. Bernstein

December 15, 2021

It catches me, the smell: this ocean drift, tinged with salt. Pungent as seaweed. Sulfurous, perhaps. And for a moment I’m brought back in time: the smell of Galt Drive, Fort Lauderdale, 1983, and the cream-colored pants that my grandfather wore to his chest.

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In Nonfiction Tags Orange Beach, J.A. Bernstein, Nonfiction, 2021 December

Mr. Plimpton's Revenge by Dinty W. Moore

December 8, 2021

So I imagine my rickety-clickety little car didn’t frighten him much. I remember that he was thoroughly gracious. And tall. Very tall.

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In Print, Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags Mr. Plimpton's Revenge, Dinty W. Moore, Print, Archive, 2009 fall vol. 2 issue 2, Map Essay, Plimpton, Paris Review, Famous Writers, Drug Use, Pitt, Visiting Writer, Experimental Essay, Nonfiction

Echoes and Ecotone by Maya Jewel Zeller

December 1, 2021

When I think of ethnopoetics and the poem as a house, I am immediately drawn to ecopoetics, the ecotone, the edge-things, the house that moves, the shape of something inhabited, like a shell, empty, then full. Too full. Sometimes binding, if it isn’t time to be bound.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags Echoes and Ecotone, Maya Jewel Zeller, Nonfiction, 2021 December

Frosty Diamonds by Michael Bishop

November 24, 2021

And so it came to be that on that first night, parked on the roadside gravel abutting Hale’iwa Ali’i Beach Park, across the street from million-dollar homes, with the necessities of life stripped to the bone, my nerves humming with a new kind of freedom, the orange glow of street lamps fractured through Frosty Diamonds into scintillating sunbursts unlike anything I’d seen before.

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In Nonfiction Tags Frosty Diamonds, Michael Bishop, Nonfiction, 2021 November

On The Color Matching System; Or, Marriage by Jehanne Dubrow

November 24, 2021

I might say last August was a faded blue, like a pair of blue jeans worn to softness.

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In Nonfiction Tags On The Color Matching System Or Marriage, Jehanne Dubrow, Nonfiction, 2021 November
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