Category: Print Archives

  • Poetry: Matthew Harrison’s “Learning Circles”

    Poetry: Matthew Harrison’s “Learning Circles”

    I learned to dance by dropping soap in the showerand catching it. You should see me cut a lineon the raised floor that flashes beside the roller rink.A head spin: that’s something I don’t do, but I do noodle.Windmill. Worm. The Manic Alligator. I learned to roller skateby sliding in acrylic socks across the polished…

  • Four Crash Studies by Scott Teplin

    Four Crash Studies by Scott Teplin

    *Ed.’s Note: click images to view larger size. Chopped Shadow Clamper Tire Drop Shadow Gap-Toothed Shadow Scott Teplin is an artist living in Brooklyn, New York. More: teplin.com.

  • Three Poems by Joseph Mulholland

    Three Poems by Joseph Mulholland

    Transmigration, Volume One Did you recognize the sensation of olive meat hugging its cold pit for warmth? Her blood-belly protrudes over the ruined slipstream—secrets of torn flesh pinpush in the gunshot light. The walls of this open hymnal shine jukebox-pink—she adjusts fingers under the elastic band, glassglued to inconstancy, afflicted. Your morning electric chair shrinking…

  • Two Poems by M.A. Schaffner

    Two Poems by M.A. Schaffner

    So Morbid, So What? -1- Okay it’s not death but the long preludeof appointments, tests, and troubling results,followed by additional procedures.It’s called a crab because it moves sidewaysand picks almost delicately with its clawswhere instruments can see, if not respond,until the final stage of tearing outwhat weakness it finds, which is everywhere. Here’s more knowledge…

  • Fiction: Amanda Goldblatt’s “The Way We Feel Sometimes”

    Fiction: Amanda Goldblatt’s “The Way We Feel Sometimes”

    First I’m confrontational with shift workers. The pharmacist asks for my signature, if I have any questions, if the dosage is correct. “Obviously,” I hammer. She is small with rosacea. I am not tall; I feel tall in her presence. I watch her wilt. Give her what she wants. Regarding any transaction, I’m taciturn. When…

  • Fiction: Daniel J. Cecil’s “The Stages of Orbit”

    Fiction: Daniel J. Cecil’s “The Stages of Orbit”

    -1- Jonathan was drawn back by a force when the airlock opened. It was the vision of the kitchen floor, which was another opening, and another loss of air—something he wasn’t quite expecting the weight of. That day was like this one. The lack of oxygen was what he felt. When his friend returned home…

  • Fiction: Justin Lawrence Daugherty’s “Whatever Don’t Drown Will Always Rise”

    Fiction: Justin Lawrence Daugherty’s “Whatever Don’t Drown Will Always Rise”

    People hear Nebraska and they think Omaha, the big city, or they think nothing at all. They don’t think about Indians crossing over from the rez in South Dakota for a drink, falling asleep in the highways, opening flesh like exposed empty pockets, begging for wounds. My neighbor told me about seventeen dead horses found…

  • Essay: “HOW EVERY LIVING THING IS IN ITSELF A HOUSE ON FIRE” by David Tomaloff

    Essay: “HOW EVERY LIVING THING IS IN ITSELF A HOUSE ON FIRE” by David Tomaloff

    *Ed.’s Note: click images to view larger sizes. ONE///DWELLINGS [1] [1] the dwellings we are as dirt, our pillars raised quieter than blood. ONE///VESSELS [2] [2] the vessels we are as ghosts; wet like fingers, treading the dry of leaves. ONE///LINES [3] [3] the lines we are as birds; cages held in ransom; the back of a mirror or a lens.…

  • Fiction: Delaney Nolan’s “Apple/Arcadia”

    Fiction: Delaney Nolan’s “Apple/Arcadia”

    Six months after Katrina, you jump head-first into shallow bayou water and break your fool neck. I’m not there when it happens, but Jean is, shooting at raccoons. He fishes you out and pulls you onto the slimy bank. You aren’t moving your limbs any, but Jean can see your chest heaving: in, out, in.…