Thirty Soul Mates Today we’ll likely witness the first Norton Poetry Lecture partially delivered by keytar. Quiz: considering prior recipients— (a) Eliot, (b) Hancock, (c) Cage, (d) Kentridge— who might’ve said, there are no wrong notes, just better choices? My point being, recent thinking on the state of the soul mate has been … Continue reading
Category Archives: Issue 1
Issue 1 was selected by Erin Sroka, Rochelle Hurt, and Nancy Kim.
Fiction by John Englehardt
Seaside Paul was on the couch, tuning my guitar. He doesn’t know how to tune a guitar, so he was just tightening the E-string. I had already told him to stop once. The string was making that high pitched crackling noise, then it snapped. So I slapped him across the face. For a moment, it … Continue reading
Three poems by Lawrence Eby
Io Metis Amalthea Io Volcanic stalagmite child covered in the blanket of eclipse, I can hear you. Jupiter storms waking your sisters held inside you. Siren sung. Shipwreck. We’ve seen these tropes before. When you settle, what birthed will seem familiar? This brilliant life spewing into the vacant cold of space. We now know it … Continue reading
Poetry by Tina Mozelle Braziel
Allure Song Allure 1. Suede Nude before the mirror, she scrutinizes her sapling legs and the ant-bite swell of breasts, searching for some allure there. She fingers the gold sequined thong, then steps into it the way she’d cross a low wall. Sliding into heels, she grasps her hips. Sashay, she thinks, sashay like the … Continue reading
Two Poems by Patrick Fontes
Two Poems by Patrick Fontes Mi Primo’s Stain The Dust Blower’s Dream Mi Primo’s Stain Mi primo’s canvas painted body monochrome India ink on brown skin blurred scribble on his forearm faded into prison cell walls at juvie 1983 then Corcoran, Wasco, Tracy, Quentin “Damn primo, this is my second strike” he scoops more of … Continue reading
Nonfiction by Katie O’Reilly
The Egg And I by Katie O’Reilly The baby’s body was long and slender, and supposedly he had my coloring. Just as I had twenty-six years prior, he came out bald and beet-red on a crisp, October day. But after he stabilized, a well-off married couple, both brown-haired barristers, took him home to their London flat. … Continue reading
Poetry by Kate Lebo
Two poems by Kate Lebo Ladies, This is the Final Rose Forsythia Ladies, This is the Final Rose with help from ABC’s The Bachelor 1. To the one-armed girl on rollerskates he says You have no reason to be scared. She falls to prove her bravery. This is not the same thing as fear … Continue reading
Fiction by Ahsan Butt
Red Eye by Ahsan Butt Stuck. Laid over between the place I was born and the place I live. Four a.m. spent spacing out, stretching against a stiff seat, legs laid out on my Hilfiger bag. Denim man in the row behind me has never seen anything like me. Black greasy hair of … Continue reading
Poetry by Chelsey Weber-Smith
Three Poems by Chelsey Weber-Smith One day someone important will say this is not a poem Walking up and down the same strip of land Li Po, I heard your drunk ass tried to embrace the moon and drowned One day someone important will say this is not a poem so I’ll join … Continue reading
Fiction by Kamala Puligandla
My Friend Jesus by Kamala Puligandla My friend Jesus says he usually goes by Chuey or Chuchi or Leon, which is his last name, but considering that we’ve just officially met, and we’re at school—“a very official place,” he says—he’ll have me call him Jesus. “Thanks,” I say. “Yeah,” he says offhandedly and then stares … Continue reading