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Don’t Talk to Strangers by Bonnie E. Carlson

November 28, 2018

If someone had asked Jake O’Malley if he was lonely, he’d probably have said no, loneliness being such an unmanly emotion. He just had a lot of time on his hands. After all, he had his dog, Milo, a little gray mutt with curly, wiry hair, his constant companion. No, he never thought he was lonely until he met Zoe in the park.

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In Fiction Tags Bonnie E. Carlson, Fiction, Don't Talk to Strangers
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Farewell, Cassini, How Far You've Come by Gabriela Denise Frank

November 27, 2018

Cassini’s impending doom stirred an inexplicable sadness in me. As the broadcast went on, I felt the bitter irony of human gains: here, we create a technological marvel who faithfully increases our knowledge—for two decades, Cassini has delivered images and data of thrilling celestial phenomena to our fingertips—and, in return, we send it on a suicide mission.

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In Nonfiction Tags Gabriela Denise Frank, Cassini, Farewell Cassini How Far You've Come, Nonfiction
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Telway Lament by Andrew Collard

November 22, 2018

And then one morning, just before the sunlight turns to bees

at my bedroom window, I will see it, through fog—

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In Poetry Tags Andrew Collard, Telway Lament, Poetry
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A Normal Interview with Jessica Jacobs

November 20, 2018

“To not include landscape in my poems is like telling only half the story.”

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In Interview Tags Jessica Jacobs, Stacey Balkun, Take Me with You, Wherever You’re Going, Interview
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A Normal Interview with C.G. Hanzlicek

November 16, 2018

“[W]hen you live with a government run by The Liars’ Club, it can be a comfort to turn to poetry, since poets are only part-time liars.”

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In Interview Tags C.G. Hanzlicek, poetry, Mariah Bosch, author interview
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Three Poems by Alessandra Narváez-Varela

November 15, 2018

When I sit on the toilet, my thighs,/ purple and mold-green, file against / each other, mercilessly. My neck hairs / rise, dandelion-like, aware of her thighs

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In Poetry Tags Alessandra Narváez-Varela, Poetry, Bruise Kiss, Hoe, Monster
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Beemoor Romance by John Hearn

November 14, 2018

The first thing she told me was that she works at Victoria Secret, which I took as a way of saying she’s very sexual, very accepting of all kinds of shenanigans. And that she’s good at sex. That’s how I took it. But at that time she was already pushing seventy or so and I found it hard to picture her liver-spotted hands and bony fingers holding up a black and pink corset, bringing it up to her slightly hunched frame to give a customer a sense of how it would hang, how it would look to the guy she was planning to have sex with next.

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In Fiction Tags John Hearn, romance, Fiction, Beemoor Romance
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Smallmouth by Justin Hocking

November 13, 2018

So many things fell into place after that dental exam. The twenty-seven previous years of painful shyness. My trouble pushing words through this tiny oral aperture. Everyone always asking me to speak up. The dentist helped me understand that my social anxiety has a physical component, right here on my face.

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In Nonfiction Tags small mouth, Justin Hocking, social anxiety, Bigmouth Competition, Angolan Jaw of Awe, Nonfiction
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Malus by Geoff Anderson

November 8, 2018

I find the last crabapple—rotted, not fallen
from the branch but buried up in the leaves.
What has stopped the cankered globe from falling?

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In Poetry Tags crabapples, life and death, Geoff Anderson, Poetry, Malus
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By Any Other Name by Carissa Halston

November 7, 2018

When you were a teenager, you volunteered for an organization in the town where you grew up, a town so small most people called it by the name of the city beside it. The organization raised money for people living with HIV and AIDS. You’ve forgotten the name of the organization, but not the names of the people you met there. Michael. Terry. Anthony. Angel. Always men, even when their names were fluid.

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In Fiction Tags Carissa Halston, by any other name, gender, gay, parents, Fiction

Curses by Berry Grass

November 6, 2018

TNS stands in solidarity with the trans community. As a show of support, we are proud to reprint and celebrate the work of Berry Grass.

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In Nonfiction Tags Berry Grass, World Series, Chicago Cubs, billy goat, Curses, Nonfiction
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Learning How to be Female by Annie Lampman

November 1, 2018

As a child of the late 70s and early 80s, I was convinced that glossy “magazine women” were a distinct subspecies of human females who came out of the womb painted like colorful aliens, born complete with purple eyelids, black-lined eyes and thick-coated lashes, bright pink cheeks, and shiny-plump red lips. I studied them for hours, fascinated by their colorful flawlessness compared to the plain imperfection of “normal women.”

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In Nonfiction Tags Annie Lampman, women, women studies, being a woman, female, how to be female, Nonfiction
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immigrant treatise by Bernard Ferguson

October 31, 2018

the sun is retreating from yet another day that wishes to lay claim

over our bodies & my friends have taken to the streets in my name.

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In Poetry Tags immigrant treatise, immigrants, Bernard Ferguson, Poetry
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Edge of a Piece of Cloth, Made Strong by Holly Willis

October 30, 2018

If I could I would sew for my sister a coat of soft leather. I would ply malleable pink hide for an effort so vital, but a gabardine twill is perhaps more practical. Gleaned from the coats of animals, culled from the cocoons of silkworms, scavenged from the seeds and leaves and stems of plants, remnants, vestiges, reckoning, reckoning.

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In Nonfiction Tags cloth, needlework, Holly Willis, Edge of a Piece of Cloth Made Strong, Nonfiction
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Clementine, My Darling (an almost-memoir) by Joanna Brichetto

October 25, 2018

It was the clementine that killed me. I peeled it for your lunchbox because you need Fruit to complement the Protein and the Crunchy, and because school lunch is so short and you get busy chatting and if I don't peel it for you and break it into segments, the whole thing comes back home in its BPA-free, nesting container (labeled with your name in silver Sharpie).

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In Fiction Tags clementines, Cuties, parenting, school lunch, Joanna Brichetto, Clementine My Darling
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On Becoming a Person of Color by Anne Liu Kellor

October 23, 2018

She is used to defining herself in the negative—not quite this or that; or as divided—only half or part. She is mixed, which means that she has never seen herself entirely as Chinese, nor entirely as white. As a teenager, her friends were mostly white, in a school that was mostly black and white, so she identified with the white kids. Her friends would eagerly ingest her mom’s Chinese leftovers after a night of partying (where she’d teach them how to say, We are going to drink a lot of beer tonight! in Mandarin); she was their fun Asian friend, different, yet rooted in the same pop culture, white culture.

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In Nonfiction Tags becoming a person of color, person of color, Anne Liu Kellor, Asian-American history, Nonfiction
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Neighbor by Virginia Marshall

October 18, 2018

Virginia Marshall is a writer and audio producer. Her work has been published in The Harvard Review, Brevity, Atlas Obscura, and has aired on NPR and WBUR.

Photo by David Hoffman '41 on Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA
In Multimedia, Nonfiction Tags Virginia Marshall, Joan Didion, Garrison Keillor, Gayle King
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What'll I Do by M. A. Vizsolyi

October 16, 2018

She thought she heard someone say her name—not loudly, but not loud enough that she could make out the melody of vowel sounds that comprised her name—Laura, it said—in a way that asked her to look quickly, as if there were something to see suddenly alighting just behind her on the shelf of the bookcase—but she didn’t see anything—and things like this happened to her once and a while, but not so much that she thought it odd.

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In Fiction Tags What'll I Do, M. A. Vizsolyi, Fiction
Last Day Dream

Two Poems by Robert Krut

October 11, 2018

And as the curtain above turns
to black with the absence of time,
we lie here, backs on grass,
dew climbing up and over our thighs.

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In Poetry Tags Robert Krut, Poetry, Repeat and Again Repeat Together, Neighborly Gestures
Quite Mad: An American Pharma Memoir brilliantly blends author Sarah Fawn Montgomery’s own experiences with mental illness with research about the history of mental illness (and treatments) in the United States and interrogation of the gendered stig…

Quite Mad: An American Pharma Memoir brilliantly blends author Sarah Fawn Montgomery’s own experiences with mental illness with research about the history of mental illness (and treatments) in the United States and interrogation of the gendered stigma surrounding mental health. I recently had the chance to talk with Montgomery about the process of writing and publishing the book—due out from Mad Creek Books this fall—as well as why we read and write creative nonfiction and the ways that nonlinearity and memory often go hand-in-hand.

An Interview with Sarah Fawn Montgomery

October 10, 2018

Owning Our Experiences on the Page

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In Interview Tags Quite Mad: An American Pharma Memoir, Sarah Fawn Montgomery, Silas Hansen, Mad Creek Books, Interview
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