Poetry

Featured image for ““The Tide Comes In,” “Sorrow,” and “Tough””
Featured image for ““Dear Reader,” “My Sorrow Sang To Me,” and “When Nothing Happens””
Featured image for ““Chartreuse”, “Nature Boy,” and “Dandelion Heads””
Featured image for ““Reclaim the Abandoned Room,” “Going On,” and “The Poem””
Featured image for ““One More Time,” “Hurly Burly California-Fall, 2020,” and “Coming to Terms””
Featured image for ““Heady,” “Pretty,” and “Gun Show””
Featured image for ““author’s note,” “growing through,” and “The End (of the Spool)””
Featured image for ““Twelve Moons” and “PBR””

Kristen Allen

“Twelve Moons” and “PBR”

January is alight in possibilities.
It’s feeling the cold air as you breathe it in, seeing it exhale out.
It’s the smoke the fire sends up the chimney to greet you from the outside.
It’s your back tingling as you warm near its flames.
Featured image for ““Sometimes” and “Stuck””

Short Story

Featured image for “Bank the 8”

Kiyoshi Hirawa

Bank the 8

The town of Curly had a single billboard, a faded, wind-wavering sign welcoming motorists to the Sandhills town of two hundred and forty-seven residents. There had been a complementary billboard on the opposite edge of town, but a twister had churned through decades ago, obliterating the sign.
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Sandro F. Piedrahita

The Miraculous Infant of Prague

The worst thing about my condition was the insomnia, the inability to get a good night’s sleep. I would go to bed early in the evening, exhausted by the torments of the day, and would promptly fall asleep, but by three o’clock in the morning I was fully awake again.
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Madeleine Belden

The Wake

I refused to greet silver-haired mourners or point teary-eyed people toward the casket or absorb touching stories about Mona. Instead, I stayed glued to a metal folding chair at the front of the room, twirling my hair, staring at my mother’s waxy, shriveled body.
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Richard Bertram Peterson

A Girl of the High Country

Delwyn nodded to the woman as he walked from his allocated parking space. She was leaning against a directional sign, her legs crossed at the ankles in a pose of inappropriate insouciance, a cigarette paused between her fingers, her face wreathed in a fine gray ash. He thought it unseemly for women to smoke and certainly not a good look for the hospital.
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Ken Leland

Beyond All Reason

Robbie Crossman was five when his mother, Sally May, told him Bible stories, but her stories were different than those he heard in Sunday School. Instead of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, her stories were about Robbie himself and his parents. Even at a young age, he knew the place they lived wasn’t Judea; it was Indiana, and Indiana was in America.
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C.W. Bigelow

Crashing the Club

I had a reputation for having a surly temperament. The surliness was a defense to the constant beratement from my father and his group at the club. I kept being told I was wrong, but I knew better. They were wrong. They lived in a wealthy bubble, protected from the real world where problems wandered the streets and seeped into the homes and apartments…
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Mark Crimmins

Panic for Sale

For a thousand easy bucks, I could lie all right. I had the gift all great liars had: the uncanny ability to figure out exactly what Herr Other wanted to hear, and if in this case he had a medical degree and a Ph.D. in Psychiatry and ran his own clinic, all the greater the satisfaction would be when I duped him right there on his home turf. I listened carefully to Dr. Berman and proceeded to spew forth fallacies with the reckless abandon of a seasoned mendax.
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Patrick Hueller

Toddler

Unlike the others, Greg hadn’t been able to wait until the first game was over to crack open a beer. After two months of sitting in those bleachers, watching through the backstop as his girlfriend Kim’s team played weekly double headers, he needed the beer just to get through the next inning, the next batter, the next pitch. Lately, he’d begun to experience this desperation as anger, even fury, and he couldn’t account for the sheer quantity of it.

Creative Nonfiction

Featured image for “What Brings Us Together”

Carol Ann Wilson

What Brings Us Together

2018
Dodging cyclists, I scurried across the narrow road and headed toward Gaiole’s town center. A small Tuscan village of twenty-seven hundred souls in the Chianti region, Gaiole is known for its idyllic beauty, and these days for L’Eroica, an increasingly popular vintage cycling event.
Featured image for “Aphrodite and Antigone”
Featured image for “Sanctuary of A Writer”

Juan Scheuren

Sanctuary of A Writer

The word “Books” has a few meanings in my view. Books could mean the following: a rectangular cover folded in the middle with sewn pages inside it, an item with a story, collection of text in an orderly composition that has a beginning, middle, and end. Reading books, in my opinion, is an escape from reality.
Featured image for “St. George the Dragon Slayer”
Featured image for “Little Boy at Home”

David Meischen

Little Boy at Home

On our way to the family reunion west of Yorktown, Texas, we stop at Uncle Anton and Aunt Frieda’s house. Inside, my sister and I wander among the tumbled syllables of German. It is a language we can no more comprehend than the calls of cows and sheep and chickens.