Author: Heavy Feather

  • New Fiction for Bad Survivalist: “Warehouse” by Chase Burke

    New Fiction for Bad Survivalist: “Warehouse” by Chase Burke

    Amazon’s warehouses are warehouses of commerce. Every item an American might desire, shelved and organized from floor to ceiling over acres of glazed concrete. Likewise Walmart—containing multitudes, now minus the hyphen. Likewise every mall of America. Ditto the dumpster. If trash is a record of consumption then it is also a record of purchasing power.…

  • Poetry by Tamer Sa’id Mostafa: from triliteral roots

    Poetry by Tamer Sa’id Mostafa: from triliteral roots

    —after Craig Santos Perez   [ra-ha-meem              (womb):] i named my first star               on a farmhouse roofin Kafr El Zayat                      flooding fennel seedinto the divots of a mortar                   an oud’s fifth stringdanced like a caudex [rahma            (compassion):] the moon blued its dust to our voicesa mother tongue unadulterated           a nasheedof desert roses surrendering    to their stems…

  • A Hawk in the Woods, a supernatural road novel by Carrie Laben (An Excerpt)

    A Hawk in the Woods, a supernatural road novel by Carrie Laben (An Excerpt)

    When newscaster Abby Waite is diagnosed with a potentially terminal illness, she decides to do the logical thing … break her twin sister Martha out of prison and hit the road. Their destination is the Waite family cabin in Minnesota where Abby plans a family reunion of sorts. But when you come from a family…

  • Five Poems by Vanessa Saunders

    Five Poems by Vanessa Saunders

    Blame It on a Woman Blame it on a woman. She who argues not for the accuracy, but for the integrity of our Art. How I could not sleep. The slow systemic death of our garden. The sound of your voice. All of your belongings, just as you left them. Baby, I’ve found God. Are…

  • Bad Survivalist Fiction: “Abandonment Issue” by Jason Hardung

    Bad Survivalist Fiction: “Abandonment Issue” by Jason Hardung

    Up in the corner, above my bed, a spider floats in the air. I’ve been watching it for an hour now. It must be magic, the way it hovers like that. Like everything else it’s reminding me of Krista. The first day she arrived in the Amazon she emailed me a video of a huge…

  • “The Minister’s Black Mass,” a short story by Chase Dearinger for Haunted Passages

    “The Minister’s Black Mass,” a short story by Chase Dearinger for Haunted Passages

    When the fireplace was so full that the air grew heavy and beads of sweat broke out across his forehead, Tom went to bed. But the hallway where he expected to find the doors to his family wasn’t the narrow, wood-paneled one he expected. What he found instead: floral wallpaper, rose-tinted golden sconces, thick red…

  • “Outside the door there is an animal writing my name in the blood of other animals”: William Lessard Interviews Adam Tedesco, Author of Mary Oliver

    “Outside the door there is an animal writing my name in the blood of other animals”: William Lessard Interviews Adam Tedesco, Author of Mary Oliver

    With the publication of Mary Oliver (Lithic Press, 2019), Adam Tedesco gives us a cycle of poems that places topics like addiction and recovery outside the expected psychological frame. A video artist as well as a poet, Tedesco brings a fluid sense of medium as well as outlook. The result is not Robert Lowell-style confessionalism…

  • A Haunted Passages Excerpt from A Spectral Hue, a horror novel by Craig Laurance Gidney

    A Haunted Passages Excerpt from A Spectral Hue, a horror novel by Craig Laurance Gidney

    For generations, the marsh-surrounded town of Shimmer, Maryland has played host to a loose movement of African-American artists, all working in different media, but all utilizing the same haunting color. Landscape paintings, trompe l’oeil quilts, decorated dolls, mixed-media assemblages, and more, all featuring the same peculiar hue, a shifting pigment somewhere between purple and pink,…

  • “Hear the Chorus Underfoot”: Jesi Buell Reviews Alice Hatcher’s Novel The Wonder That Was Ours

    “Hear the Chorus Underfoot”: Jesi Buell Reviews Alice Hatcher’s Novel The Wonder That Was Ours

     “How hard a thing is life to the lowly,and yet how human and real!”—W. E. B. Du Bois The Wonder That Was Ours begins innocently as a Caribbean cabbie picks up new passengers but quickly maneuvers past increasing racial, psychological, and ideological tensions until it crescendos at an apocalyptic fever pitch. The narrative and topical…