Poetry Dawn Ellis Poetry Dawn Ellis

Not to Blame My Hair by Dawn Ellis

My hair is naturally curly now.
It never has been before.
When my children were young,
When I was a single, working mother,
When I delivered my children
To their father every other weekend
And spent those weekends missing the kids,
And planted myself on the couch, watching movies,
My hair was straight . . . and flat.

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Micro Essay Genevieve Arnold Micro Essay Genevieve Arnold

A Perfect Brightness of Hope by Genevieve Arnold

I’ve always had hope, not wishes or desires, but hallelujah hope. The kind that thrusts you out of bed in the morning. Since my earliest years, hope has been my companion. She introduced us. At first, she loaned me hers until I found my own. When I did, it became our shared love language and the expectant eyes through which we viewed the world. That’s why it was ok when she died. I wasn’t ready (is anyone?) Death showed up breathless and raring to go like it was late for a very important date. Feeling sick on Sunday; gone on Friday. Not necessarily a surprise. She was sick: leukemia.

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Short Story James K. Smith Short Story James K. Smith

Stuffed Monkey by James K. Smith

“The Miami Conference is different than other conferences,” Dr. Hines told me one day, when he came to my dental parlor for a new crown on his second molar. “The heat just gets into your pores. Everybody goes a little crazy. I saw a well-respected oral surgeon from Ohio run off with some woman’s Pomeranian. I guess he took it back to his hotel room and fed it an entire pizza.”

“Pomeranians aren’t supposed to eat pizza,” I said.

“Not that one, anyway.”

I first became acquainted with Dr. Hines in the fall of 1934, at the North Dakota School of Dentistry. I do not know whether it was luck or pure coincidence which led us both to begin our practices in Chicago, but he allowed no one but myself to perform dentistry on him, and, at the time, I was newly divorced and grateful for the company.

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Short Story Elizabeth Beck Short Story Elizabeth Beck

We Began in the Garden by Elizabeth Beck

Ruth and Grace passed their youth in unquestioning contentedness. As they came of age, each began to see boundaries only as a challenge to be met. With time, the sisters felt increasingly drawn to the domain beyond the black iron gates of their father’s estate.

From their view through the bars, the world on the other side looked much the same, except for a dirt road that outran their sight. They often longed to uproot themselves and find the road’s end. The twin girls would watch carriages fly past as they sat in the garden, busying themselves weaving daisy chains or pulling weeds. 

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Short Story Samuel Snoek-Brown Short Story Samuel Snoek-Brown

Of All The Wants And Hungers by Samuel Snoek-Brown

There had been gossip lately among the neighbors that a pair of foxes were living in an abandoned lot. Lock up your cats, they said.

I’d seen one of the foxes on a walk a while ago, the slender red face peering from under a bush down near the railroad tracks. It seemed friendly enough, or maybe I would say cautious. Not menacing, anyway, and small enough that most of the neighborhood’s bruiser cats could handle the fox in a fight. Those bright eyes in the undergrowth seemed almost timid, at a distance.

But then, sure enough, Gene’s cat went missing. And Gene’s cat was one of those bruisers, a big tabby who ruled his block and went where he pleased, including into neighbors’ homes if they left their dog flaps unmonitored.

Whatever got it was no fox, Gene insisted.

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Hole Wall (an excerpt) by Jonah Barnett
Short Story Jonah Barnett Short Story Jonah Barnett

Hole Wall (an excerpt) by Jonah Barnett

Emily owned too much stuff, and it became pretty apparent as we loaded the U-Haul that she wouldn’t part with any of it. It had been a puzzle, fitting it all in, but we had succeeded in real life Tetris and were on our way to Astoria. We drove parallel to the sea, separated only by a jagged line of rocks running between ocean and asphalt. Choppy gray waters crashing against the rocks in impressive displays, while a bright fog permeated the landscape as flocks of seabirds littered the white abyss like flies. Rain shouted against the windshield.

“I really should’ve thought of this sooner,” Emily drove the U-Haul through the weather like it was nothing. “Cuz like, my uncle’s always complained about never having enough help at the hotel, and I get to live on a beach guys!” She laughed at the thought of her new life, two hours south into the wilderness away from everyone she loved, helping her uncle’s business while living in a cottage by the sea.

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Fiction Jonny Eberle Fiction Jonny Eberle

Reviews of Sanctuary Creek Honey Farm by Jonny Eberle

“Best honey EVER”
I am obsessed with this place.The honey at Sanctuary Creek is the best—100% organic, too.

“Weird vibes from the bee lady”
stingmeonce replied:
I had a similar experience when I went there with my son. Farm management showed a complete lack of regard for safety and continues to put their customers in danger.

Owner replied:
Something has changed. Something is happening.

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Poem Hannah Trontvet Poem Hannah Trontvet

Backstop to a Rumble by Hannah Trontvet

Little neighbor girl, your head once bounced above my fence to the creak of trampoline springs. That night your neck bent down below your kitchen table to shelter from the shell shot. One grazed your abdomen. They say you are okay, but your trampoline is still quiet.

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Short Story James A. Gilletti Short Story James A. Gilletti

Year of the Pig by James A. Gilletti

Usually, the strange invasion of unwanted touch throws my ogre switch in a heartbeat, but at that moment, it soothed me. Like that first sip of bourbon from a new bottle, she warmed something in me that had gone untended for ages. Careful, I thought to myself. If this night’s headed where I think it is, I’d better keep my nightshirt on. I wouldn’t want her to catch a glimpse of those old battle scars and run away screaming.

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Short Story Miel MacRae Short Story Miel MacRae

Red by Miel MacRae

The gun was clean. Loaded. Double-checked. His knife, the one he had carried always, she held a moment before strapping it to her belt. There were five who must die today. Outside her blinded window, dawn was about to break over the minarets. The muezzin sing-songed beckonings to adhan.

The men who took him last night hadn’t seen her. His body would not get cold before she enacted her revenge. The first was Gadi. He was a whore-lover. The second was Azzam, he had a scar across his face from his penchant for bar fights. Zero was famously addicted to opium. Marid sold carpets at the bazaar. Jibril was a gambler. Despite the call the adhan, she knew the hypocrites wouldn’t be among the crowds.

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Short Story William Turbyfill Short Story William Turbyfill

Squirrels Hate Robots by William Turbyfill

“Squirrels hate robots.” He says it with such earnestness that it catches me off guard

“I beg your pardon.”

“Squirrels. Hate. Robots. It’s really not that complicated.” The five year old is right. It is not a complicated concept to comprehend and yet, I have questions, not the least of which is, ‘if squirrels hate robots, do robots in turn, hate squirrels?’ “I could draw you a picture of it if that would make it easier for you.” I’m not a fan of his condescending attitude.

“How do you know this, about the robots and the squirrels and what not?” I say this while looking for a pencil and paper. As much as I want to smack him, if I’m honest, I also really want him to draw me a picture of squirrels hating on robots.

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Poetry Elizabeth Beck Poetry Elizabeth Beck

Why I Married the House Carpenter by Elizabeth Beck

A phantom is always easier to chase/The chill always easier than/warm sheets on summer nights. Wrapped in the comfort of your distant interest and cold vows/The ghost of your jawline against the very present curve/of my cheek and I can almost smell you lingering in the doorway/The prickling wind, heavy/with tidal changes, delivering/then casting

off

away

I am the anchor, I am the sturdy mast to which you are lashed

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Short Story Christian Carvajal Short Story Christian Carvajal

A Boy and His God by Christian Carvajal

My dad’s so twentieth century. F’real, though, he tries to be cool, but everything he does makes him stick out like a total noob. “Jake,” he says, patting my shoulder in what he hopes is a fatherly way, “the world hasn’t changed. People have all the same hopes and fears they ever had, no matter what the calendar says.” This from the guy who still pines for his old computer keyboard. Mom threw that out years ago, back when pretty much all of Western civilization went forty-gig universal WiFi. Poor old Pops still hasn’t figured out how to talk to the web through his implants.

“Dad,” I remind him, “we don’t use calendars anymore. We have nanos for that. Join the planet you live on.” I think Dad might be the last surviving Alzheimer’s patient. He’s adorable, I swear, even when he slumps around the house bitching under his breath about living in the goddamn Matrix. The Matrix was an old two-D sim for kids. Like I said, he’s a fossil; but, you know, he’s my dad and, like, what can you do.

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Short Story Nicholas Stillman Short Story Nicholas Stillman

Dedicated to Steak Knife by Nicholas Stillman

Thomas tried to avoid eye contact with the homeless milling around his apartment. He possessed a long-standing fear of being mugged on his walks to and from the university. He knew he presented a target. His clothes might as well be a bullseye buttoned smartly to his body. Today was no exception as it was Oxford day, both in shoes and choice in button-up. Oxford, he thought about the college with longing–one day he would make it there. One day his novel would get him in.

It was early and the mist limited his sight line to a matter of feet. He tried to walk confidently down 11th, but this was the most dangerous block of his commute, so his ears were perked sonar detectors.

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Prose Leah Mueller Prose Leah Mueller

Cities Where You’ve Lived, As Boyfriends by Leah Mueller

Portland is your hipster boyfriend with a tongue ring, the one who is always stoned, the guy who can’t be counted on for a commitment. He wants to have many other lovers, and doesn’t care if you have them, too. Portland will get together with you when he feels like it, not the other way around. Portland insists that you be hyper-aware of popular culture, and treats you as if you are stupid if you are unable to keep pace with him. You won’t be able to keep pace, because Portland lives for Doug Fir concerts, shots at the Sandy Hut, and standing in long lines for doughnuts and tacos while sporting a three-day beard growth. You and Portland have a stormy but loveless romance, and you finally leave him for Kalamazoo. When you see Portland again a few years later, you marvel about how much he has matured, and feel sad that the two of you met at the time that you did. Portland then acts like he wants you back, but he really doesn’t.

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Poem Michael Haeflinger Poem Michael Haeflinger

Trash Day by Michael Haeflinger

Rainfall, a broken piece of floor, linoleum,
recycling to the rim with beer cans,
two neighbor girls off to school,
someplace behind the pull of sky,
a line of buildings dark all day.

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Short Story Daniel Rahe Short Story Daniel Rahe

Chuy and Friends by Daniel Rahe

It was clear the instant they drove into the campground that this would not be the kind of camping adventure warmly recalled years later. The site itself was faultless — a shady valley divided by a creek that emptied into a mountain lake. For the two young couples crammed into a Subaru that would still smell like a new car if not for the can of beer that had spilled on the carpet, who had driven across the entirety of a state to be here, a dream was about to be dashed. And what a beautiful dream: old friends huddled beside a popping-hot fire under the stars, drinking from a small bar lovingly packed into an old Samsonite briefcase — a night of karaoke without a soundtrack, half-true stories, shit-shooting, blowing off steam. Laughing. When do we ever laugh as hard as we do when we are camping and drinking?

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