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Aquifer by Sean Theodore Stewart

November 1, 2023

"When I spoke, I surprised myself by saying things I had been too bashful to admit to the aquifer before. I gushed. I waited for her response. The water enveloped me."

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In Fiction Tags Sean Theodore Stuart, Aquifer, 2023 November, fiction

A Normal Interview with Béatrice Szymkowiak by sami h. tripp

October 18, 2023

"I think art holds the power to shift and multiply perspectives, which the world desperately needs right now. Single-mindedness is dangerous. What I love about poetry in particular, is its capacity of subversion, of dissent, against ideas but also against language itself, as language and ideas are intertwined."

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In Interview Tags Interview, Béatrice Szymkowiak, sami h. tripp, B/RDS, Poetry, 2023 November

Three Poems by Andrea JurjeviC

October 11, 2023

“Don’t cut the tongue—torn
strips conform smoother to the mold.”

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In Poetry Tags Andrea Jurjević, Learning English, 2023 October, poetry

HOW WAS SALLY ON THE NIGHT OF THE BREAKING? by Abigail Chang

October 11, 2023

Sally’s dresses were too big, they swallowed us, gobbled us up, we tied the cords too tight and they left these great, swooping Xs across our bodies. The day was drawn, frigid, there were goosebumps running across our arms. But Sally wasn’t there and couldn’t say anything. Sally was dead.

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In Fiction Tags Abigail Chang, HOW WAS SALLY ON THE NIGHT OF THE BREAKING, 2023 October, Fiction, BIPOC
Leafless tree in forest

Florida Woman by Lenore Myka

October 11, 2023

The most frequent and famous of the stories sent to me wasn't about a Florida man but a Florida woman. A twenty-something former-model-turned-meth-addict, she'd been responsible for burning down a 3,500-year-old bald cypress tree which, at the time, was considered to be the oldest of its kind and the fifth oldest tree globally.

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In Nonfiction Tags Lenore Myka, Florida Woman, 2023 October, nonfiction

POSTCARDS by Lee Campbell

October 11, 2023

"what you choose to see is up to you..."


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In Multimedia Tags Lee Campbell, POSTCARDS, 2023 October, Multimedia
Image of a woman, up close. Her eyes are closed and she has one hand on her cheek. She has a square, pink paper over her mouth with an "X" drawn on it.

Of Pumps and Death by Marcia Aldrich

May 17, 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.

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In Nonfiction, Print Tags 2023 May, Print, Throwback, Nonfiction, 2011 spring vol. 4 issue 1, Of Pumps and Death, Marcia Aldrich, Of Pumps and Death by Marcia Aldrich

In the Rearview by Gaye Brown

May 17, 2023

When you become invisible, as widows do, you welcome opportunities to reappear.

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In Nonfiction Tags 2023 May, In the Rearview, Gaye Brown, Nonfiction, creative nonfiction

The Sick Diet by Aimee Nezhukumatathil

May 17, 2023

because you left a good-bye note written on paper made of mummies.

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In Print, Poetry Tags 2023 May, Archive, Throwback, Poem, Poetry, The Sick Diet, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, 2008 fall vol. 1 issue 1, print

The Elephant by Riley Kross

May 17, 2023

My wife kept to her alcove. I kept to my nook. The elephant played between us.

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In Fiction, Print Tags 2023 May, Fiction, Story, Short Story, the Elephant, Riley Kross, Archive, Throwback, Print, 2019 spring vol. 12 issue 1
Image of green grass, a lake, and the afternoon sun shining across a light blue sky

The Things Not Seen by Krista Lee Hanson

May 17, 2023

If you are going to stare. If we must be so visible. I want you to know some of the depth, the multitude, the layers of us.

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In Nonfiction Tags 2023 May, The Things Not Seen, Krista Lee Hanson, Nonfiction, creative nonfiction

Joy and Pain, Sunshine and Rain: On Teaching/Reading Ross Gay’s Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude by Aimee Nezhukumatathil

May 17, 2023

Even when his poems take a darker turn, such as recalling the murder of a friend and colleague, or the bittersweet memory of a childhood crush who has since passed away—there are moments of true grace within these elegies—a slowing down, not in pacing but in memory’s leaps.

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In Nonfiction, Print Tags 2023 May, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Joy and Pain Sunshine and Rain: On Teaching Reading Ross Gay's Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, Ross Gay, Print, Archive, Throwback, 2015 fall vol. 8 issue 2, nonfiction

The Last Kiss by Lawdenmarc Decamora

May 15, 2023

I stay alive though, sensing velocity
as an ambulance would in a dream—
brisk, accidental. Remember the first time
your little bones cried for milk?

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In Poetry Tags 2023 May, Poem, Poetry, The Last Kiss, Lawdenmarc Decamora
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?

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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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
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