Poetry

Featured image for ““Elkhorn,” “Badlands,” and “Grand Canyon””
Featured image for ““Sit Tibi Terra Levis,” “To Li Po,” and “Dilly Dali””
Featured image for ““Life from the Perspective of a Coffee Cup” and “The Season of Almost-Gone””
Featured image for ““We Need Love,” “Passion Pop,” and “Always At Home””
Featured image for ““Institutionalized Hopelessness,” “Steeplechase,” and “Transcendent””
Featured image for ““Parenting without Punctuation,” “Grief cannot be Out Run,” and “Coin of existence””
Featured image for ““Hoping Against Wisdom,” “Agape,” and “Youth””
Featured image for ““The Daughter,” “The Mother,” and “The Grandma””

Short Story

Featured image for “Four Keys”

Jessica Fisher Riches

Four Keys

“Welcome to the building. Save the boy.”
Nikola heard the words distinctly, but there was no one around. She tightened her grip on her backpack strap and turned back to the message board in the dimly lit průjezd. The passage was chilly and darker than it should have been, as if the winter afternoon light had stopped at the threshold and refused to come further.
Featured image for “Godless City”

Henrick Karoliszyn

Godless City

Spyder woke to rain chewing the tin roof and the smell of somebody else’s cigarettes. For a second he reached where Teresa used to be, fingers finding only cold sheet and a torn seam he kept promising himself he’d stitch. He lay there and listened until obligation got him upright.
His knees cracked when he swung them off the mattress. Forty-seven and already moving like a hinge in need of oil.
Featured image for “Of The Heart”

Star Galasyn

Of The Heart

Bridget didn’t believe in love at first sight, but when the pretty girl walked through the door, Bridget would have thought that Cupid himself had stabbed her with a love-laced arrow. It happened quickly, the way things always do when they concern love. Bridget felt the heat rise to her cheeks when, in all her staring, the girl actually stared back. Bridget looked away. She had never seen her before…
Featured image for “Prime Time TV”

Amanda Draznin

Prime Time TV

As I get home from the dance studio, I see Mom in the kitchen. Cooking. I’m flabbergasted. Why would my mom be cooking? She hates it. My parents had the arrangement that my dad would cook while my mom would clean. Like everything else in this family, it was taken to the extreme.
Featured image for “The Letters”

Pin-Han Li

The Letters

BR31. 15 hours and 24 minutes. From JFK to TPE. Departs at 1:33 a.m. I’m going back—to see my family, and of course, you.
When I heard your name from my mom on the phone last night, it felt like only yesterday we had lingered after school, as if time would never touch us—we were on your bike, laughing and talking, or in our usual corner beside the banyan tree
Featured image for “Ten and Eight”

Joseph Gulino

Ten and Eight

Vance Whitaker was going to win the 1973 Maine State Amateur.
I know there are no sure things in sports, especially golf. It’s a game full of bad breaks. Bad bounces, lip outs, weather that turns on you. Match play only makes it worse. Five rounds over four days can turn anything sideways. Maine golf was no joke in the seventies.
Featured image for “Double Bind”

Emily Bilman

Double Bind

Rowan walked along the oak forest immersed in a conscientious dilemma. He could not decide whether he should enlist in the army to counteract war casualties in Praetorium. He had a conflict between his conscience and his ego. His ego spurred him towards self-preservation whereas his conscience urged him to enlist in the armed forces.
Rowan was a geographer and writer who lived alone in a restored stone cottage in the countryside of Nova Brescia. That year, spring was deployed like an air-inflated parachute on the countryside. On bright days when the mist lifted from the valley and the fields, he could hear the stream flowing along the cottage. Then, he would stop writing to listen to the stream skipping on the grit of the riverbed. The sound of the stream soothed him.

Creative Nonfiction

Featured image for “Pappagallo”

Candi Sary

Pappagallo

My dad died a few months ago and yet I still hear him. I can’t listen to bands like the Doobie Brother’s without hearing his voice in the mix—even if he did make up his own words half the time. I still hear his signature catchphrases that always made my sisters and me laugh.
“He was a prince and a horse, but mostly horse,” he’d say to describe someone.
Featured image for “Jean Pierre”

Brendan Praniewicz

Jean Pierre

In 2008, for my college graduation, my family and I took a cruise on the now infamous Carnival Triumph. I don’t recall what we ate for dinner that first night, but I still remember our waiter. A dashing black man with a French accent dazzled us with a card trick before taking our drink orders. Glimmers of chandelier light reflected in his glasses as he introduced himself as Jean Pierre, and his name tag said he originated from Haiti.
Featured image for “Estuary Peace”

Gloria Buckley

Estuary Peace

I have found your maternal spirit at the top of the Point as I breathe in the salty mist of the Delaware Bay estuary in Lewes. This is where I have landed. A place I do wish you would have ventured with me. I talk to the sea now instead of you. I talk to the creatures that I believe live in the sea deep within the confines of each ecosystem whether aquatic or in the forests. My conversations in the marsh I will share with you as it is my journey now.