Category: Print Archives

  • Fiction: Peter Clarke’s “Untitled in B”

    Fiction: Peter Clarke’s “Untitled in B”

    My refrigerator in its old age sometimes quivers and hums when its fan turns on. The quivering is completely insignificant, but the humming, I’ve found, is B, the musical note. It’s not sharp or flat; it’s a perfect B. Just like the fan in my crotchety refrigerator, anything that moves fast enough will begin to…

  • Fiction: Timmy Reed’s “The Spider’s Eggs”

    Fiction: Timmy Reed’s “The Spider’s Eggs”

    I woke up after the storm and went outside to see what had been broken. The deck was intact, but all around the trees were crushed like bad teeth. My eye was drawn to the center of the gray deck where above the strewn pine needles and sticks, just inches over a composite-wood plank, there…

  • Fiction: Harmony Neal’s “This Is What It’s Like to Die”

    Fiction: Harmony Neal’s “This Is What It’s Like to Die”

    Jasmine My father beat me for giving the dog some bread. The dog had looked so hungry and scared. Its fur was missing in patches and it only had one eye. The other socket was covered in pus and red bumps. I wasn’t scared of the dog. I wanted to help. I could remember a…

  • Two Poems by Natalie Shapero

    Two Poems by Natalie Shapero

    Half-staff Long enough I have lived in this city—when the flagsits at half-staff, strangers ask me why, and askin vain. I only know the major deaths. I’m best with warsof expansion. On losses beyond that, I have littleto add, except to make clear I trust and do not envythe low clerk charged with every up…

  • Three Poems from Nymphlight: Erin Lyndal Martin

    Three Poems from Nymphlight: Erin Lyndal Martin

    I Want to be Drunk with You So I Can See You Laugh:Les Amants du Pont-Neuf You, my lover, the fire-eater, lay with me atopthe oldest bridge that crosses the Seine, the wine making us hoot and yell.Booms of light flared and blasted, so we stood atop the bridge lookingat Paris—our Paris—and waiting for debris.…

  • Three Fictions by Megan Martin

    Three Fictions by Megan Martin

    Way Beyond Good and Evil I should be admiring and appreciating the Cloroxed whiteness of the shower curtain you Cloroxed yesterday. It certainly is a miracle: the whitest, most disinfected shower curtain upon this rotten earth. In Cloroxing, you have protected me from unimagined dangers like shower-bound disease. Instead, another man—an exciting one—is here in…

  • Essay: Excerpt from Tiny Gradations of Loss by Nicholas Grider

    Essay: Excerpt from Tiny Gradations of Loss by Nicholas Grider

    Tumors that couldn’t have grown fast enough to suffocate her. She died from cancer, she died from causes unknown. With him but already gone, crimson scarlet alone. Still warm. _______________ Day -2 he thinks it must just be all the morphine. He wants to think so. He says it to himself. He says it to…

  • Poetry: Joshua Ware’s “The Divine Mystery of Clothes”

    Poetry: Joshua Ware’s “The Divine Mystery of Clothes”

    cut from fabric in a secondhand store, unravels our emptinessinto closets of cotton, linen, nylon, and silkIn the dream of fashion etiquette not yet discoveredwe speak in hushed tones of a blue taffeta gown you will wearfor the second-coming: a rapture rendingthe naked from the nude, a divide never healedfrom now until nightdress. I cannot…

  • Fiction: Dan Crawley’s “Bonkers”

    Fiction: Dan Crawley’s “Bonkers”

    Becky and Coach stand shoulder to shoulder at the sliding glass door and watch what is going on outside. Earlier, snowflakes the size of teeming confetti poured out of the sky and covered the ground with a few inches. But now with the sun fully out, the white stuff sticking to the small backyard patio…