Category: Side A

  • Side A Graphic Essay: “Fire” by Jesse Lee Kercheval

    Side A Graphic Essay: “Fire” by Jesse Lee Kercheval

    Mini-interview with Jesse Lee Kercheval HFR: Can you share a moment that has shaped you as a writer (or continues to)? JLK: My very first writing teacher—and a wonderful one—was Janet Burroway, who many people know from her textbook Writing Fiction. We met again, after I had finished my first novel, The Museum of Happiness,…

  • Side A Prose Poem: “Peonies” by Tiffany Troy

    Side A Prose Poem: “Peonies” by Tiffany Troy

    Peonies The chiaroscuro of my breasts hanging from my nightgown under the lamp light. His voice soothes as buds take root over my skin in droves. The buttons undone, I open the hem of the dress to my waist, as I take in the day’s sweat and decay. I detach parts of myself as he…

  • Side A Poem by YF Wang: “Love, There Is a Snake in Your Closet”

    Side A Poem by YF Wang: “Love, There Is a Snake in Your Closet”

    I think of you with tapeworms in my tummy, like Medusa had stuck her head through my vagina & at seventeen, Ella tells me she thinks she might be pregnant—“My mother is going to kill me”—she says over the bathroom sink, our skins tattooed by the mirror graffiti. A familiar tune rings out the Wellesley…

  • Side A Poetry: “It Might as Well Be” by Max Winter

    Side A Poetry: “It Might as Well Be” by Max Winter

    It Might as Well Be Which is a stateIf the weather holdsAnd the wind arrives timelyIf it’s right it’s easyAs being hit by a carOr scooped from a litterHappiness for everybodyAnd a carbonated lime drinkWith a talking sailboatFinishing my sentencesAt moments you think for meLittle boatLittle squireI bequeath you everythingBut we’re not thereYet are weI…

  • New Side A Short Story: “In Cahoots” by Terese Svoboda

    New Side A Short Story: “In Cahoots” by Terese Svoboda

    In Cahoots My son looked at his plate and looked at the dog and said he needed to go. I was still serving myself, my wrist flicking out sauce from a pot with a spoon. I sighed, placed my half-filled plate on the table, and took his hand in mine. After finding the key that…

  • Side A Poem: “To the First Twenty Years, Give or Take” by Anthony Robinson

    Side A Poem: “To the First Twenty Years, Give or Take” by Anthony Robinson

    To the First Twenty Years, Give or Take It was a childhood of chain link fences &a dozen kinds of rain an alluvial epochof brain & bone & polyhedral dicemuddy ditches & fir trees mailbox rows Dogs in single file. these words a surfeit of clinking changerender the past a cosmic vending machine primer gray…

  • New Poem for Side A: “Kandinsky” by Sandy Berrgian

    New Poem for Side A: “Kandinsky” by Sandy Berrgian

    Kandinsky I entered a dream worldof color and fireDay and nightgarden and fieldegg and dragonflyFlag and footballThis form a science fiction. Mini-interview with Sandy Berrgian by Rod Roland RR: What can you tell me about this poem? SB: Kandinsky is one of my most favorite artists. I was probably at the Guggenheim. I don’t know…

  • Short Fiction for Side A: “An Evening Jog by the Lake” by Stacey Lounsberry

    Short Fiction for Side A: “An Evening Jog by the Lake” by Stacey Lounsberry

    An Evening Jog by the Lake A human man with the top of a taxidermized bison head, its breast of fur still fluffed like a winter scarf, pushes a baby stroller just ahead of me. Its wheels bump fist-sized rocks, jarring the carriage; the man’s knuckles flash white like a warning. He stops to watch…

  • Fiction for Side A: “Tell me how it tastes” by Arielle M. DeVito

    Fiction for Side A: “Tell me how it tastes” by Arielle M. DeVito

    Tell me how it tastes Mia’s dead ex-wife turns up in the middle of the night, dripping. She’s soggy with the smell of the lakebed and gets stinking mud all over the mat. Mia doesn’t know what to do with her, but she runs a bath that’s probably too hot and sits with her back…