Issue 17Winter 2023

Fiction

The Pianists by Cristina Legarda

I.   Lexi was reluctant to be Matthias Gerner’s accompanist for the gala concert, but not for the reasons her colleagues at the Manila Youth Conservatory imagined. It wasn’t that she missed the limelight and wanted center stage for herself, or that she had nerves about performing. She simply didn’t know if she could trust […]

the deadlands by Joel Fishbane

I Justine is nineteen and living in Toronto when she learns her mother has been killed. It’s November and she’s pretending to love chemistry when what she really wants to do is act. She works at a pub to pay for the scene study classes that she takes in secret. Her sister is the only […]

The Travelers by Katherine Joshi

Myra and Tom fanned their faces with wadded newspapers as they made their way through Jaipur’s City Palace. The tour guide aggressively ushered them through the palace, saying “Take picture take picture take picture,” seizing their camera and asking them to “Cheeseburger smile” in front of the marble elephants, Diwan-I-Khas, huge silver water jugs one […]

Interviews and Extras

Non-Fiction

The Perils of Dating a Robot by Katherine Varga

Early in the German sci-fi rom-com I’m Your Man, Alma, a fairly nondescript middle-aged white woman, enters a Berlin dance club. Inside, she encounters a crowd of fashionably dressed people smoking, flirting with each other, and dancing to a live band. She isn’t fooled. The people are holograms—part of a meticulously designed romantic atmosphere. They […]

Poetry

Richard Remembers by D. Keali‘i MacKenzie

splice the remaining fragments             smell of vodka, basement room filled with debris, sharp pull of hands      zippers             teethed             apart with drunken care   what were we supposed to trust but collapsed filaments?   we embraced teenage stupidity          left ourselves a sticky residue          […]

Ran by Clayton Adam Clark

I crashed through clouds of insects on my riverside run and carried some away from their copulation   and the rising warmth of a sodden bank. Were they me, humans, I’d name the juggernaut of my body a natural disaster   … [Click here to purchase a copy of the magazine]

Hot Buttered Lostcat by Adrian Matias Bell

we averted our eyes from the blown-out tire by animal instinct, though it was not flesh, its singed inverted fibers waving invertebrate in the blackened wind. at the horse-themed mexican restaurant, i took 1 photo of my body in the mirror and my phone died. body my house my STORMIN PROUD PAPA my HANDFUL OF […]

A Dream Where Every Child Gets to Go Home From School by Karl Michael Iglesias

The dark brown doors to the playground are heavy behind our early arms. Without windows. We are used to holding small hands, so, once and a while, a teacher will help us push. To find. If we hide then maybe there is someone counting with their face in their hands / excited to see us. […]

Self-Portrait as Another Spring by Amie Whittemore

– after Nancy Reddy I’ve never longed for a longer winter, for those ghosts that bed down with geraniums, then float loose, like early pollen. My father and I flip pennies heads-up when they glisten in our paths to give others better luck. Everywhere, violets. Violets on the sofa, violets in the neighbor’s yard, violets […]

Pale Blue by Rose DeMaris

She contained innumerable bodies. For ages, she had swallowed our deceased so neatly. With woven roots and grasses, she’d mended shut the million mouths we’d cut and dug into her skin. She’d rebirthed our departed into night-blooming jasmine, cats, avocado trees, snow, razor clams, and delicate blue moths. But hers was the kind of body […]

Stage/Screen Writing

Essay on Capitalism by Brian A. Salmons

DRAMATIS PERSONAE, one performer in a dual role PRINCIPAL _____ – an elementary school principal, where _____ is the name of the performer, e.g. PRINCIPAL SALMONS MARINE LE PEN MIZELLE – 10 year old girl (A stage, as in an elementary school auditorium, with a microphone on a stand or podium. PRINCIPAL _____ enters.) PRINCIPAL […]

Delayed by Sophia Naylor

CHARACTERS Arthur…………………………..man, any age, any ethnicity Felicity…………………………woman, any age, any ethnicity Announcement SETTING A train stop platform with tracks below TIME Present PRODUCTION NOTES The Announcement’s italicized dialogue represents robotic word/number inserts: ex. “The train is 1 minute late.” The announcement can be pre-recorded, or played by an actor on a mic offstage. The set […]

The Writing Life

Lessons in Work/Life Balance by Ashley Warlick

Monday morning, make the lists; divide them by church and state, by job: bookselling, bookmaking, bookteaching. Start with the list for bookselling because it is made of tasks that can be completed, instead of ethereal images, snips of song, effluvia, menu items, instead of Mandy’s problem with POV, Ben’s novel outline he sent you though […]