• 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
 
 
Image of close-up scrabble pieces.

Memory Waltz by Anne Gudger

May 15, 2023

I imagined my giant Scrabble board and a pile of letter tiles. Extra vowels, too many U’s. Searching. Wanting to make sense of where I was at with my mom and where she was with herself. Do my memories get erased too when she erases hers?

Read More
In Nonfiction Tags 2023 May, Anne Gudger, Memory Waltz, nonfiction, creative nonfiction

A Normal Interview with Allegra Hyde by Mialise Carney

May 10, 2023

I think artists and writers are really important in terms of addressing the climate crisis. Everybody, ultimately, is important—it’s an all hands on deck kind of situation—but artists and writers have the ability to make sense of a problem that otherwise seems vast and intangible.

Read More
In Interview Tags Interview, Allegra Hyde, Mialise Carney, The Last Catastrophe, Short story, Fiction, 2023 October

Dispatches from the Past Present, or Dick Clark's Face by Joe Bonomo

May 10, 2023

Dick Clark’s face revolving, revolving. This is no fever dream. 20 Years of Rock n’ Roll came packaged with a 'special bonus record,' a cardboard flexi disc emblazoned with, naturally, Clark’s cheery face. The record plays at 33 1/3 rpm, and in an unnerving design bug the spindle hole nailed Clark right between his eyes.

Read More
In Nonfiction Tags 2023 May, Dispatches from the Past Present, or Dick Clark's Face, Joe Bonomo, Music, Nonfiction

Broom Rituals by heidi andrea restrepo rhodes

May 10, 2023

This is how we broom. How we gather dust. A modified ritual of palimpsestic movement. Ceremony in cipher. How we move in the old ways that remain beyond a centuries-long violence.

Read More
In Nonfiction Tags 2023 May, Nonfiction, creative nonfiction, Broom Rituals, heidi andrea restrepo rhodes

Selenium Sulfide by SJ Sindu

May 10, 2023

I’m here tonight because a week ago I woke up and discovered that my inner thighs had started turning white. Not chalk-white. White-girl white.

Read More
In Fiction, Print Tags 2023 May, SJ Sindu, Selenium Sulfide, Story, Short Story, Fiction, Throwback, Archive, Print

Neither, Both by Nadia Born

May 10, 2023

You forgot that this is home sweet home and the shelves have a hundred different cereal boxes.

Read More
In Fiction Tags 2023 May, Fiction, Short story, Neither Both, Nadia Born

The End of Coney Island Avenue by Roohi Choudhry

May 3, 2023

In this country, a man could be lost and no one would know enough to grieve, not even his own mother.

Read More
In Fiction, Print Tags 2023 May, Throwback, Archive, Print, The End of Coney Island Avenue, Roohi Choudhry, 2015 spring vol. 8 issue 1, Fiction, Short Story

Float by Marcia Aldrich

May 3, 2023

I hardly dared open my mouth, even to say something innocuous like “Sure, I’m hungry. I could eat dinner.” My words might be analyzed to reveal something knotty, something sinister I didn’t know I felt but really ought to know I felt.

Read More
In Nonfiction, Print Tags Nonfiction, 2023 May, Print, Throwback, Float, Marcia Aldrich, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1

A Normal Interview with KB Brookins by James O’Bannon

May 3, 2023

Rage is a thing that has to be birthed, because we do so much course correction – or at least my experience has felt like, at multiple times, someone has done something anti-Black to me, someone has done something racist, homophobic, transphobic, and I feel, in that moment, I can’t react the way that I want to.

Read More
In Interview Tags 2023 May, Interview, KB Brookins, James O'Bannon, Freedom House, Poems

Drafting a Eulogy by Hannah Feustle

May 3, 2023

We all know that this is because they recognize pain and want to do something. None of us have to name it.

Read More
In Fiction Tags 2023 May, Drafting a Eulogy, Hannah Feustle, Fiction, Short story
Profile view of a green lizard with orange eyes.

This is a Parable by Isabel Quintero

April 26, 2023

“Your mother is afraid of lizards. This is a constant. In the present or the past, she is always afraid of lizards. When you were a child, one crept in the house when your father was out, probably getting high––though you cannot blame everything on addiction. He might have been working.”

Read More
In Fiction, Print Tags Fiction, Print, Throwback, 2018 spring vol. 11 issue 1, 2023 April, This is a Parable by Isabel Quintero, This is a Parable, Isabel Quintero, BIPOC

Tractor Town by SJ Sindu

April 26, 2023

My cousin is late. And handsome. And very late. And, technically, not my cousin. But sex would be complicated, and he’s probably a virgin, and his English is not so good, so I let it go.

Read More
In Fiction, Print Tags 2023 April, Tractor Town, SJ Sindu, Fiction, Short Story, Throwback, Archive, Print

Orchid Children by Becky Hagenston

April 19, 2023

They sprouted leafy tufts around their necks, their feet took on a moldy sheen, their toenails were atrocious. You couldn’t keep these children inside.

Read More
In Fiction Tags 2023 April, fiction, short story, Orchid Children, Becky Hagenston

Two Poems by Sher Ting Chim

April 19, 2023

Why is it
when we die,
We always remember most
the song from our childhood?

Read More
In Poetry Tags 2023 April, Poems, Poetry, Two Poems, Sher Ting Chim, 藕断丝连:, Everything Is About Dying Except Death Itself

It's Not About the Cat by Kerry Folan

April 19, 2023

I could not have explained this to my mother, but I was uneasy in those moments. The kitten was so tiny, and caring for her felt so serious. I tried in that first week to come up with the perfect pet name, one that would reflect her too-big coat and her shy meow, but I couldn’t. I think I felt unqualified for the job.

Read More
In Nonfiction Tags 2023 April, Nonfiction, Creative nonfiction, It's Not About the Cat, Kerry Folan
Image of a brown street sign with an image of Big Foot, writing says "Big Foot Xing"

Royal Pine by Travis Dahlke

April 19, 2023

Davis is like an actor who saw their scalp on-screen and paid to get hair plugs only for the show to be canceled before its second season ever got to air.

Read More
In Multimedia Tags 2023 April, Multimedia, Royal Pine, Travis Dahlke
The feet of two little girls playing in a grassy field. They are both wearing white dresses and one has black dress shoes, the other white dress shoes.

Hema and Kathy by Anita Felicelli

April 19, 2023

“Hema immediately wanted to please him. Theo was black-haired, handsome in a vulpine way, stocky and muscular, yet agile, and a little older than Kai. He was French, and played professionally in London for ten years before coming to the United States. He’d played for France’s soccer team in 1998 when they won the World Cup. He wanted the girls he coached—girls like Hema—to be tough and fierce, to be consummate sportswomen.”

Read More
In Fiction, Print Tags 2023 April, Print, Throwback, Hema and Kathy, Fiction, 2016 spring vol. 9 issue 1, Hema and Kathy by Anita Felicelli, Hema and Kathi, Anita Felicelli
Image of protestors marching with their fists raised

My Country 'Tis: Listening to Ishmael Read by Ru Freeman

April 12, 2023

this King & Kennedy country
that fast draws
that kills slow

Read More
In Poetry, Print Tags 2023 April, My Country 'Tis: Listening to Ishmael Read, Ru Freeman, Poem, Poetry, Print, Archive, Throwback, 2016 fall vol. 9 issue 2
image of a brown horse in a dark blue forest

Foreign Objects by Lexi Pandell

April 12, 2023

A horse can grow a stone in its stomach the size of a grapefruit.

Read More
In Fiction Tags fiction, short story, Foreign Objects, Lexi Pandell, 2023 April
An image of the author, Maya Pindyck is on the left. She is wearing a black sweater. Her book cover for "Impossible Belonging" is on the right.

A Normal Interview with Maya Pindyck by Caleigh Camara

April 12, 2023

"I think we grapple with those stories we cannot reconcile by writing them again and again, maybe each time with different 'others' in mind, and for a future people we hope to touch."

Read More
In Interview Tags Interview, 2023 April, A Normal Interview with Maya Pindyck by Caleigh Camara, Caleigh Camara, Maya Pindyck
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Powered by Squarespace