Author: Heavy Feather

  • Every Kiss a War, stories by Leesa Cross-Smith, reviewed by Justin Brouckaert

    Every Kiss a War, stories by Leesa Cross-Smith, reviewed by Justin Brouckaert

    In the opening lines of “Hold On, Hold On,” a character named Violet offers what could be a manifesto for Leesa Cross-Smith’s debut collection: My husband, Dominic, got angry the second time I ran away. Because I promised I’d never do it again and because I didn’t have a reason. Because I didn’t need a…

  • Rigger Death & Hoist Another, poetry by Laura McCullough, reviewed by J.Y. Hopkins

    Rigger Death & Hoist Another, poetry by Laura McCullough, reviewed by J.Y. Hopkins

    Rigger Death & Hoist Another is Laura McCullough’s fifth book of poetry (not counting two chapbooks). It is a collection of material previously published in a wide array of venues, sometimes reworked and retitled. While some take a more abstract turn, the poems are generally straight-forward, though not always simplistic. The statements are linear and…

  • Galaga, nonfiction by Michael Kimball, reviewed by Matt Weinkam

    Galaga, nonfiction by Michael Kimball, reviewed by Matt Weinkam

    Let’s say you’re interested in reading a book on Galaga. Remember Galaga? Let’s say you’re a lifelong fan of the 80s bug-shooting arcade game in which case of course you remember. You spent your childhood in the local arcade feeding a pocketful of quarters into the machine and maybe you never got the hang of…

  • Some Churches, poetry by Tasha Cotter, reviewed by Jeremy Behreandt

    Some Churches, poetry by Tasha Cotter, reviewed by Jeremy Behreandt

    A fertile confusion punctuates contemporary English via the language’s conflation of second person singular and plural. The best we get is the contraction, ‘y’all.’ On top of that, we use ‘you’ as hypothetical, or normative, what you might do or rather what one might do were you—I mean, one—in a situation. On occasions where the…

  • Sam Price Reviews The Shimmering Go-Between, a novel by Lee Klein

    Sam Price Reviews The Shimmering Go-Between, a novel by Lee Klein

    Lee Klein’s The Shimmering Go-Between asks for no spoilers on the jacket copy. A piece of paper lodged in the review copy almost demands it. Mostly I’d argue that all plots have been seen before (this argument in itself is simply a rehash of one made many times before by other, more scholarly people, who…

  • Contributors’ Corner: Laura Ellen Scott

    Contributors’ Corner: Laura Ellen Scott

    Welcome to “Contributors’ Corner,” where each week we open the floor to one of our contributors to the journal. This week, we hear from Laura Ellen Scott, whose story “A Texas” appears in 2.2. Laura Ellen Scott is author of the novel Death Wishing (Ig Publishing, 2011), a comic fantasy set in post-Katrina New Orleans and…

  • Talkativeness, poetry by Michael Earl Craig, reviewed by Kyle Harvey

    Talkativeness, poetry by Michael Earl Craig, reviewed by Kyle Harvey

    There is a disorienting, though familiar, quality to Talkativeness, the new collection of poems by Michael Earl Craig.  I’m ashamed to admit that, although I have run across his poems in journals, I had never spent any real time with Craig’s work. Perhaps this is why reading the first half of this collection felt a…

  • “I Think We Recognize Ourselves in the Flawed”: An Interview with Charles Dodd White by Linda Michel-Cassidy

    “I Think We Recognize Ourselves in the Flawed”: An Interview with Charles Dodd White by Linda Michel-Cassidy

    A Shelter of Others, by Charles Dodd White (Fiddleback ltd), is set near the southern border of North Carolina, in a rugged holler punctuated by alcohol abuse, drug trade and brutish policemen. While the extremes to which these characters are pushed nears the surreal, White never allows them to become the other. By the time…

  • Understudies, a short novel by Ravi Mangla, reviewed by Merridawn Duckler

    Understudies, a short novel by Ravi Mangla, reviewed by Merridawn Duckler

    In Ravi Mangla’s Understudies the unnamed, first-person narrator, a high school teacher, helps his mother overcome her fear of flying, chills with a neighbor obsessed with a female movie star who’s moved into the neighborhood, and learns he’s about to be a father. He speaks in episodic vignettes about his job, his friends, his live-in…