Poetry

Featured image for ““Real name,” “To understand,” and “Glory””
Featured image for ““Synonyms for an IC3 Female,” “I posed for Egon Schiele on a Gynaecological Ward,” and “Go Back to the Root Word””
Featured image for ““Georges on My Mind” and “(She Left Him for) A Chevy Suburban””

Robert Eugene Rubino

“Georges on My Mind” and “(She Left Him for) A Chevy Suburban”

Photo by John Kostyk on Unsplash Georges On My Mind (Impressions after seeing Ken Burns’ six-part documentary The American Revolution on PBS)Quill-feathery high-minded rhetoric declaiming on life liberty … well … try pursuing happiness if you’re woman if you’re enslaved or poor unpropertied or indigenous facing genocide. Militias marching against the crown’s taxation the redcoats’ military occupation subjugation. Muskets popping rip-roaring canon killing maiming bloody blood-thirsty bleeding brutality. There’s rape
Featured image for ““Initiation to Flight,” “Perennity,” and “The Gauzed Interior””
Featured image for ““The Moon Watches Us Come and Go,” “How My Dad Thinks the World Will End,” and “Recipe for Cake””
Featured image for ““Firmament,” “Pioneers,” and “Saw-whet””

Short Story

Featured image for “A Mind of Vents”

Trae Stewart

A Mind of Vents

By the third time the thought arrives, I’ve learned its manners. It doesn’t kick the door in. It doesn’t announce itself with a villain’s laugh. It comes the way a smell comes when someone two apartments down starts frying onions at midnight. A faint, unmistakable curl in the air. A suggestion. A maybe.
Featured image for “All That is Left is the Air”

Jena Webb

All That is Left is the Air

Rose had always been a profoundly uncurious person. Which is not the same thing as being stupid. Conventional you would say. To be frank, she went into medicine for the money. Yet, the allure of convention also prompted her to become a doctor. Medicine is prescriptive, not only in terms of the prescriptions doled out to the patient, but also in the actions dictated by the medical canon for the physician.
Featured image for “Mr Fallow”

Ian Griffiths

Mr Fallow

I think we all agreed that Mr Fallow was the best and most interesting teacher in the school. That much was clear after only a few months. It wasn’t until Cerys Davies expressed curiosity in his sexuality, however, that he really became a figure of fascination for us all and perhaps for me especially. He wasn’t from around here, you see.
Featured image for “The Conquistador”

Ben Chavez

The Conquistador

Old Francisco Gutierrez lay in his bed, his stomach heavy and bloated. A white porcelain soup bowl crusted with the remnants of lunch cluttered his nightstand, joined by numerous orange plastic prescription vials, some tipped on their sides with a few crumbled pills inside, as if defeated by the weight of their responsibilities.
Featured image for “Peak Divinity”

Rob Moore

Peak Divinity

Ang Tuin’s temple was large and airy and now painted white, which he hated. All through his second life, there had been wood panelling which had filled the space with a rich scent of beeswax and nutmeg, but the tall men had come to make another one of their changes.
Featured image for “Emergency”

Gary Duehr

Emergency

I am an emergency. My name is Bernie Smith, my colleagues at HR Block used to call me St. Bernard, like the hospital on the South Side, because I was always trying to save someone a few bucks. I still live a couple blocks from the hospital, near where the Dan Ryan Expressway split the old neighborhood in half, in a post-war cottage. It’s nice, white brick, with a long narrow backyard like a bowling alley.
Featured image for “A Eulogy”

Taylor Bianca

A Eulogy

The bright, green grass was covered in early morning dew drops. They slide down its blades and leave wet spots on my pumps. Rocking my weight on to the heel, and then back to my toes, I focus on how each shift digs the shoes further into the soft ground. I wish I could just take them off, stand even, and feel the earth with my toes.
Featured image for “Masculine Enough”

Juan Scheuren

Masculine Enough

All it took was one presentation to boost the B to an A plus. If it wasn’t for the awkward pauses, Macson would be enjoying the rest of the day. Students walked along the sidewalk under the awning of the film building. Macson sat on the edge of the sidewalk, staring at the drenched parking lot with rain splashing onto the pavement. His eyes were sunk. He ignored the tight knot that beat inside his throat.

Long Short Story

Featured image for “The Supermarket”

Ayshe Dengtash

The Supermarket

The vast interior of the store hummed around her as she stood where she always stood between the stacked baskets and the queue of people. The soles of her feet pulsed, concentrated at the heels, and it was only when her tummy gurgled, an elongated growl which petered out into a squeak, that she could take her mind off her soreness for a second and focus instead on the incessant murmurs of customers, some discussing whether to buy one brand of biscuit over another, others talking on the phone about things they did not really care about, employees greeting customers and waving them bye-bye, with a backdrop of the supermarket jingles she’d been listening to for the two and a half months.

Creative Nonfiction

Featured image for “Comparisons”

Meena Ramakrishnan

Comparisons

The house we live in is built into the side of a hill where invasive French broom and oleander plants grow wild after it rains. The treetops above the ridge shield the state of the sky, so I look to the west to see what kind of day it will be. Usually visible is Mount Tamalpais, a point so tall it pokes above the thick, opaque fog that rolls in and out like the tide.
Featured image for “Green Eyes”

Marianne Dalton

Green Eyes

It’s a chilly Sunday afternoon in late October; I drive past a busy garage sale and pull over to check it out. I navigate the lawn’s clutter, heading straight for the garage. The first thing I notice upon entering is an unusual doll sitting on the edge of a shelf.
Featured image for “Good Girl Hood”

Karen Travis

Good Girl Hood

Good girls can’t lie, but they can’t always tell the truth, either. We must be well behaved but not prudish. Smart, but not boastful. Attuned to others’ without being needy. Strong, but silent. It’s a club I began subscribing to after my parents’ divorce. I joined without anyone telling me I had to, embracing the unwritten code without giving it a second thought.
Featured image for “Catfish”

Alexandra Grant

Catfish

Here comes another one. Amelia was scrolling through her social media platforms looking for amusement when an instant message pops up on her screen. She clicked the message, saw that a famous actor was messaging her and asking her to friend him.
Amelia was by now well-versed in how this interaction would go.