Poetry

Featured image for ““The Sieve,” “The Styx,” and “A Correction””
Featured image for ““Before the Prelude,” “Night Storm,” and “The Geology of Human Nature””
Featured image for ““Office Hours,” “In the Early Morning,” and “Exit Strategy””
Featured image for ““Antlers,” “Adirondack,” and “Fat Dog””
Featured image for ““Saudade,” “How the Time Goes,” and “Komorebi””
Featured image for ““Centre Stage,” “M.” and “Dunnage””
Featured image for ““Final Voyage of Achilles,” “Inquiring Muse,” and “Heavens Best””
Featured image for ““Foliage,” “The  Specific Gravity of Poetry,” and “Cosi fan Putti””

Short Story

Featured image for “The Alchemy of the Blue Hands”

Douglas Hull

The Alchemy of the Blue Hands

The garish signage along the road offended him the most. Driving out of his leafy suburb, all Joseph Ward saw was a scrawny forest of concrete and metal stalks holding glaring billboards, miles of cable, and faded plastic light boxes. If there had been another route into the office, he would be driving it.
Featured image for “Exit Stage Left”

Tara Lynn Marta

Exit Stage Left

As a missionary living in Shanghai, my father never imagined his daughter in show business. My mother, on the other hand, aspired for me to become a glamorous movie star once we returned to the states.
“I’ll not have my daughter as a show pony,” Daddy huffed. “It’s not dignified.”
Featured image for “The Painting”

Joshua Sabatini

The Painting

Ever since Ariel visited the archway on the road, she had become completely different, like a woman possessed by a new spirit, and Massimo was grateful for it. He had intuited how precious that space she possessed after her mother died…
Featured image for “Finders Keepers”

Camille Gazoul

Finders Keepers

Jesse hadn’t been home in fourteen years. He left the night Pat died and hadn’t spoken to his younger brother since. That is until about three weeks ago when Aaron called and asked him to visit. He even bought his ticket.
Featured image for “Messengers”

Luis Rosa

Messengers

Marvin came back home from school looking troubled.
“What’s up, man?” Claudia said.
“Hm, I don’t know,” he said, “I just don’t know what the point of everything is.”
Claudia didn’t expect that. Ten-year old Marvin sounded like a nihilist. Wasn’t it a bit too early for that?
Featured image for “One Mule”

Sarah Blanchard

One Mule

Jacob Shigomitsu rubbed a shoulder blade against a rough-barked ʻōhiʻa tree as he worked the kinks out of a lariat and contemplated what to do with his mule. The mule swiveled its enormous furry ears toward Jake and stared back from between the rusty bars of the small pipe-panel corral.
It certainly wasn’t your average mud-gray, slab-sided, undersized Hawaiian scrub mule.
Featured image for “Mouse”

Michelle Lowes

Mouse

Where have you gone, my dear Ada, apple of my eye, mother of my child, keeper of my love?
Tonight, I returned home to inhuman stillness and silence. When I unlocked the front door and stepped inside, I immediately noticed the house was missing your quiet presence, absent your soulful essence.
Featured image for “The Mná Feasa”

Amelia Mae Nelson

The Mná Feasa

An old doctor, his bald head reflecting the lights above, rushed to a patient’s side, eyes quickly surveying her state. The flesh of her whole body was charred except for her face, which remained pristine and pale, the skin soft and shining in the fluorescent light. The charcoal skin crinkled in on itself, burns going deep through her body. He could see the shine of white bone deep beneath the layers.
“Third degree burns,” he announced to the room full of ER staff. Their group made eight in total: two surgeons, four nurses, an anesthesiologist, and Dr. Coolidge.
“Heart rate?” he shouted out as a mousy looking nurse pressed a stethoscope against the victim’s chest.
“140!” she called.
“Breathing?”
“Irregular!”
Cold washed over Dr. Coolidge. He snapped his finger, grabbing the attention of the two closest nurses. “You two,” he demanded loudly, “go get Nurse Ó Súilleabháin in here! Now!”
Featured image for “Christ, Crucified, With You”

Sandro F. Piedrahita

Christ, Crucified, With You

Bill Atkinson was a natural-born athlete, having lettered in four sports at Monsignor Bonner High School – football, baseball, tennis, and basketball. Everyone thought he would emulate his older brother Al as a professional sportsman and have a thriving career in the sport of his choice. In fact, many said that of the two brothers, Bill was the more gifted athlete since he was more disciplined and that was saying something since Al was a professional football player who would go on to win the 1969 Super Bowl as a linebacker with the New York Jets. Upon his graduation from Monsignor Bonner High School in 1963, however, Bill abandoned any plans to become a successful athlete and joined the Order of Saint Augustine as a postulant instead. He was young, handsome, strong, athletic, an excellent student, blonde-haired and blue-eyed. He was also a devout Catholic who wanted to consecrate his life to Christ. On November 9, 1964, he moved to the Good Counsel Novitiate in New Hamburg, New York, a campus surrounded by mountains where his life would change radically and forever.

Creative Nonfiction

Featured image for “Jack Dobbs”

Isaac Amend

Jack Dobbs

Jack Dobbs realized he was an idiot on the 29th of May, at 12:43pm while playing basketball. The color of the sky was blue, the sun was shining with yellow hues galore, and a woman nearby was singing to her baby. The grass at the green park beckoned to him, and it struck him, with some mild worry and constipation in his stomach, that he was dumb.
All of his life, Jack had felt smart: his teachers in high school read him Kant and praised his ability to decipher philosophy. His math teacher said he could solve a derivative at the speed of light.
Featured image for “On the Trestle”

Victoria Lewis

On the Trestle

I grip my fishing rod, stand on the edge of the railroad trestle and look at the water fifteen feet below. The wind and an incoming tide jerk the Umpqua River into choppy crests. I take a step forward, my chest tightens and I start to sway.
When my older brother Dave said I could tag along with him this morning, I couldn’t dig the worms fast enough. I pictured casting from the bank behind the sawmill, not walking out on the railroad trestle, a bridge with ties, tracks and no deck.
Featured image for “Disco in Culture”

Andrew Sarewitz

Disco in Culture

There was a time in my distant past when disco ruled the dance clubs and American radio airwaves. I was raised on rock ‘n roll and folk music.
Disco: this heavy-handed beat and sometimes simplistic (or without) lyrics defined my night life for a number of years. Even with an arguably impressive collection of 12-inch singles, music that played in New York City clubs nearly 50 years ago, now stands solely as a reminder of part of my early city history: an era dead and buried.