Poetry

Featured image for ““Language of DNA,” “Pierced Ears,” and “Breathwork with an Evergreen””
Featured image for ““witho*t *,” “w*thout *,” and “my ten cents””
Featured image for ““what the humble remember,” “fears rise and pass,” and “a truth””
Featured image for ““Sentience,” “iOS 26.2,” and “”Doxology””
Featured image for ““Wireless,” “narratives in movement,” and “the color of air””
Featured image for ““The Pianist,” “(My) Pain,” and “From Tehran to New York””

Short Story

Featured image for “The New Marisela”

Jeff Hunt

The New Marisela

The fluorescent lights of Sunnyvale Manor didn’t flicker, but they hummed with a low-frequency dread that matched the static in Helena’s brain. For six job-searching months, Helena’s world had been the size of a mattress. She knew the topography of her ceiling fan better than the faces of her friends.
Featured image for “The Dinner Party”

Grace Moore

The Dinner Party

The rain started on a Thursday night and it never quite stopped again. The moments which were not absolute downpours were marked by dark, heavy hours of gusting wind and gnarled thunder from some far-off place outside the city. It was as though the sun had turned in her resignation papers. Or was forced to resign in some galactic government coup.
Featured image for “Fields Beyond”

Will Chesson

Fields Beyond

Moratok towers above the low-country fog at dawn. Regal his great crown of antlers, the pride of grace. Untamed and almost golden, his neck carries shining slivers of tension. Eyes like dark glass marbles, the tenderness unexpected.
Featured image for “Valley of Altars”

Eric Phillip

Valley of Altars

It was cruel that Elder Raena had survived the harshest winter in thirteen years only to die on the fifth day of spring. The remaining three members of the village knew the day was near and feared what it required of them next. Her body was getting colder, more frail over the past two weeks despite the growing warmth in the air.
Featured image for “The Storyteller’s Notes”

Lidia Stanchenko

The Storyteller’s Notes

My mornings always began the same way—I woke up and saw the wall. On that wall was a thin strip of torn wallpaper that grew wider and wider each day. If I managed to tear off too big a piece, I knew it was time to cut my nails.
Featured image for “In Among the Stalks: A Canola’s Memoir”

Minghan Zou

In Among the Stalks: A Canola’s Memoir

Between the yellow canola stalks that whistled in the wind, rippled like waves, shimmered like the hush of sunlight on silk, and towered two heads above me, I forgot the why and the how. They had slipped from my mind like rapeseed, dispersing in a summer wind.
Featured image for “The Estate”

Betina Entzminger

The Estate

“You’re cutting it close, aren’t you?” Frank asked Joanne. He liked to be a little early for lunch to claim his usual table by the window. From it, he could see most of the dining room and the door to the kitchen. He didn’t like the hustle and bustle from the staff or the loud conversations from residents at other tables…
Featured image for “The Crock”

Jeff Fleischer

The Crock

The sky had been clear and blue when Johnny left the pub that morning, the sun so bright his vision blurred as he transitioned from the darkness.
“The last pint might have been a mistake,” he said to nobody in particular as he zipped his windbreaker…

Long Short Story

Featured image for “A Dad”

Quin Yen

A Dad

“He’s coming.” Krystina is the first nurse who spots the new patient’s stretcher in the hallway. Two paramedics walk on each side of the stretcher. Each one holds the rail: one is slightly in the front, the other in the back on the opposite side.
Krystina rushes into the corner room where Julie and Jenny are preparing the patient’s arrival. She waves at Julie, the charge nurse, and then points to the door. Julie gives her a nod of understanding and gestures to Jenny and Krystina to stand by the bedside, one on each side. She straightens her scrub uniform and waits by the door.
Featured image for “Heart of Christ”

Sandro F. Piedrahita

Heart of Christ

Margaret Mary Alacoque saw the Man in the loincloth when she was returning home fromthe dancing and festivities at the great ball which her cousin Corinne had been planning for months. At the time she saw the bearded Man, Margaret Mary was wearing a tight-fitting rose-colored satin gown and was holding her blonde hair in cascading golden curls, all in an effort to play up her beauty and attract potential suitors. When she first saw the bearded Man in the loincloth, she thought He was a specter, for His bloodied body glistened like the moon in the darkness of the night and His smooth lustrous skin appeared to be transparent like a crystal.

Creative Nonfiction

Featured image for “Hard Truths and Plum Pie”

Sarah Harley

Hard Truths and Plum Pie

When our mother’s back was turned, my sister and I dug our fingers into the warm pie. We felt for stones inside the mushy fruit—feeling for a hardness, sharp at its edges. We were seven and nine. If my father didn’t come home, my mother retreated to her bedroom at the far end of the house, drew the curtains, and closed the door.
Featured image for “Yellowjackets”

Anne Schuchman

Yellowjackets

I can remember each and every sting. And how even a dead bee can sting. “Hm, look at that,” my father said. And to my five-year-old eyes, the gold-and-black stripes on the hallway mat looked like a key—a shiny key that would unlock who knew what magical adventure. So I picked it up. I don’t remember much else except that I went to kindergarten late that day, my thumb still swollen and red.
Featured image for “Jigsaw”

Mark Hall

Jigsaw

Sort the pieces:
Spread out all the pieces and flip them face up so you can easily see the image; look for similar colors, patterns, and shapes to group pieces together.
* * *
Late one winter afternoon, the department business manager steps into my office, wagging her cell phone in my direction. “Kendra Kimball?” she says.
“Pardon me,” I say to the student sitting across from me. “Who?”
Featured image for “The Midnight Lamp and Sweet Red Bean Pastry:  My Memory of Living in A Small Town in 1960s South Taiwan”
Featured image for “Juju”

Cynthia Rossi

Juju

I squeeze past a bedraggled goat and other passengers as I snag a stained seat by the window. My foot gently scooches a live chicken to the side while I stuff my belongings below me on the floor. The scented mixture of sweat and damp livestock permeates the air. Outside the bus window where I sit in Nchelenge, young boys shout at riders to buy food. I open a book, attempting to tune out all the chaos around me.
Featured image for “I Didn’t Want my Last Conversation with my Dad to Be about Trump”

Brendan Praniewicz

I Didn’t Want my Last Conversation with my Dad to Be about Trump

There’s no proper reaction when your mother tells you over the phone, “Your father is dead.”
And how words hang in your throat as she explains, through sobs, he died in a tractor accident, when the vehicle flipped, and the rear tire ran over his head—he took his last breath in your mother’s arms.
So you book the fastest flight from San Diego to Pittsburgh.
Featured image for “Rewind: October 3, 2020”

Bergomy Legendre

Rewind: October 3, 2020

Malignant neoplasm of the kidney.
Forest Hill Memorial Gardens.
October 3, 2020.
A rumbling danced under my feet. A hearse violently reversed towards your tombstone. A myriad of cars flooded into the cemetery. Standing under the tent, my hair growing back thick locs falling over my face again. Clods of dirt lifted themselves, peeling away from your body as if the earth were inhaling backward.