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The Velvet Air of Gaza: A Conversation with Three Palestinian Writers

February 28, 2024

I still think it is essential to at least sometimes focus on aspects of Palestinian culture and heritage outside of the conflict with Zionists. Doing this shows that we are not only defined by the current suffering and brutality; it is definitely part of the Palestinian experience, but it is not all of it.

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In Interview Tags Susan Muaddi Darraj, The Velvet Air of Gaza: A Conversation With Three Palestinian Writers, Lena Mubsutina, Deema K. Shehabi, Samina Najmi, Interview, Palestine, 2024 February

Minor Lightning by Victoria Barrett

February 16, 2024

We walk straight toward the things we want or need or have to reach, leaving a wake of our longing in the bare dirt behind us. We roll our eyes at the olds’ advice to slow down, to “savor,” such corny bullshit, we’ll slow down, maybe, when we arrive.

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In Fiction Tags Victoria Barrett, Minor Lightning, 2024 February, fiction

The Smokers’ Daughter by Rosemary Harp

February 14, 2024

My mother lit her first cigarette on waking. My father smoked himself to sleep at night. They smoked as we carved pumpkins, sang Christmas carols around the piano, dipped eggs into bright dye. They smoked in our bedrooms while they read aloud to my brother and me. My mother, a skillful and innovative cook, especially for the time, smoked while making dinner every night, an ashtray balanced on the back end of the stove, lighting cigarette after cigarette on the gas burners under simmering pots.

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In Nonfiction Tags The Smokers’ Daughter, Rosemary Harp, 2024 February, Nonfiction

Still Life With Chair by Jericho Parms

February 14, 2024

The canvas hung askew. Thickly coated in acrylic, the painting bore the abstract depiction of a chair, singular and empty, in a room of three distorted walls. I didn’t recognize the painting, nor did I particularly care for it, but I appreciated the expressionist approach.

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In Print Tags Still Life With Chair, Jericho Parms, fall 2015 vol. 8 issue 2, Throwback, Archive

Laurels by Tara A. Elliott

February 14, 2024

"...arms now/ berry-covered branch/ —how awfully/ they must ache."

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In Poetry Tags Laurels, Tara A. Elliott, 2024 February, Poetry

A Normal Interview with Myriam Gurba by Monique Quintana

February 1, 2024

A Gothic style is ideal for narrating the conquest of the West because it’s a horror story that continues to unfold. Horror tropes that have their roots in the Gothic are ideal mechanisms for that type of narrative.

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In Interview Tags Myriam Gurba, Interview, author interview, 2024 February

The Antipodal Point of Fear by David H Weinberger

January 17, 2024

After discovering antipodal points and remembering Australia, I immediately started digging. It made no sense to believe that I could dig through the core of the earth but it didn’t make any sense to live the way me and my family, my neighbors, were living: threatened and afraid all the time.

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In Fiction Tags David H Weinberger, The Antipodal Point of Fear, 2024 January, Fiction

MISCELLANEOUS GRIEVANCES by Ji Hyun Joo

January 13, 2024

My doppelgänger smells like wet fur and Old Spice. Even when we’re sitting in the dry air conditioning of my Jeep Cherokee, the scent — heavy with notes of yeast and nutmeg — is overpowering.

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In Fiction Tags Ji Hyun Joo, MISCELLANEOUS GRIEVANCES, 2024 January, Fiction, BIPOC

Pulp Poem by Nathaniel Lachenmeyer

January 10, 2024

Mirror, mirror on the wall / Look down in mercy / The wheel is fixed / In a lonely place

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In Multimedia Tags Pulp Poems, Nathaniel Lachenmeyer, 2024 January, Multimedia

Will We Hear it Coming? by Amy Benson

January 10, 2024

I adopted my father’s fears, but the fear on tap at church spoke to what felt like my native suspicions—that harm was gestating in me in the shadow of an inevitable but unpredictable cataclysm. I learned to be in constant fear of my thoughts, lest something unforgivable dash across them at the very moment of the apocalypse.

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In Nonfiction Tags Will We Hear it Coming?, Amy Benson, nonfiction, 2024 January

Margo Price Macro Doses by Joe Bonomo

December 19, 2023

Price is a difficult artist to box-up, for those so inclined. She’s lived in Nashville, Tennessee for decades, and has both courted and been denied Music City’s trappings. A dynamic study in contrasts, she grew up in rural Illinois but sings with a southern accent; her debut album was released on maverick Jack White’s Third Man Records, hardly a Nashville industry staple (though it may be on its way); she cut a live album at historic and revered Ryman Auditorium, waltzing (and rocking) within a storied tradition.

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In Nonfiction Tags Margo Price Macro Doses, Joe Bonomo, Nonfiction, Music, 2023 December

Two Poems by Laura S. Marshall

December 14, 2023

"The doctors call me ugly,/ draw over my bone structure,/ trace the routes where the/ coral will fuse."

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In Poetry Tags Boneyard, Decay (Taphonomy), Laura S. Marshall, poetry, 2023 December

Sleepless by Ann Hood

December 13, 2023

“But here was evidence that maybe, if this ever did happen, I wouldn’t be able to scream or run out the door. That something—fear, disbelief, paralysis—might keep me right there, in place.”

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In Print, Nonfiction Tags Sleepless, Ann Hood, 2023 December, 2014 fall vol. 7 issue 2, Nonfiction, throwback

Moms by Marguerite Alley

December 12, 2023

A few times, he reached for her breast, but the moment his fingers collided with the skin of her chest she involuntarily felt herself disengage in surprise, as though shocked that this should be a place his hand might be inclined to rest, to explore

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In Fiction Tags Marguerite Alley, Moms, Fiction, 2023 December

Henrietta by Dan Shields

December 6, 2023

Scuttling toward me with the fat pink knuckles of her claws, assembled inside the shell I’d just thrown. Her body at home in the ugliness I’d created. She was my best friend instantly. I named her Henrietta.

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In Fiction Tags Dan Shields, Henrietta, 2023 December, fiction

The Plague of Lice by Julie Marie Wade

December 6, 2023

Lousy: a permissible way to express displeasure, even contempt, without resorting to the verboten profane. Profanity, after all, could get you sent to your room, your mouth scrubbed out with soap, or worse if the Lord’s name was taken in vain. But lousy had a strange twist to it, a little corkscrew in the language that opened a different bottle.

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In Nonfiction Tags the plague of lice, Julie Marie Wade, 2023 December, nonfiction

A 1993 ZR1 Spyder by Rachel Sudbeck

November 15, 2023

The hotel where I worked saw a pilgrimage then of portly old men with mustaches and cabbie hats, their stomachs tucked into ill-fit jeans. They came into the lobby weeping, clutching at their thinning hair like the oracle at Delphi, asking God or me or whoever else was in the room why this had to happen to those beautiful machines.

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In Nonfiction Tags A 1993 ZR1 Spyder, Rachel Sudbeck, 2023 November, nonfiction

Two Poems by Jane Zwart

November 8, 2023

"My dad is not making it up, but art cannot/ leave freak beauties be. He will have to add more—/ a plastic bag snagged on a sapling’s ankle—"

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In Poetry Tags Jane Zwart, Plastic Bag, The Gateway Arch, poetry, 2023 November

A Normal Interview with Ghassan Zeineddine by Lena Mubsutina

November 8, 2023

I have always loved creating different kinds of characters from various generations, genders, sexual orientations, and socioeconomic classes. I think it’s just a matter of doing those characters justice and treating them with empathy and compassion.

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In Interview Tags Ghassan Zeineddine, Interview, Lena Mubsutina, Fiction, 2023 December

Pregnancy, Art, and Censorship by Sarah Dalton

November 8, 2023

To the best of my knowledge, unless you include women’s private photo albums or personal social media feeds, there is no Madonna with Gestational Diabetes, Madonna of the Amniocentesis, or Madonna of the IV Tower and Labor and Delivery Room. I feel kinship with these images that portray the complexities of being pregnant. They challenge the demands for silence and censorship around experiences that do not follow the prescribed, imposed narrative of a joyful and celebratory pregnancy. These images revolve around loss, distress, powerlessness, a beauty often called grotesque, and, despite all its astonishing advances, a medical system that sometimes leaves more questions than answers.

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In Multimedia Tags Sarah Dalton, Pregnancy Art and Censorship, 2023 November, Multimedia, pregnancy, women
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