STORY OF THE WEEK

STORY OF THE WEEK

Winter Dreams By F. Scott Fitzgerald

Winter Dreams

He wanted not association with glittering things and glittering people—he wanted the glittering things themselves.

POEM OF THE WEEK

POEM OF THE WEEK

Good Morning By Daniel Halpern

Good Morning

Her hand a detector not for coins or rings, the odd metallic thing, but for the perfect, untouched spiral of a shell, the sound entrapped there.

SIX-WORD STORIES

SIX-WORD STORIES

SIX-WORD STORIES
Six-word stories combine poetry and drama into a short form difficult to achieve. We’re looking for six-word stories that can stand alongside the best that have been written. See the Guidelines.

FROM THE LIBRARY

FROM THE LIBRARY

In Passing By Ru Freeman

In Passing

My brothers and I continue to watch, to listen, bereft and yet not entirely conscious of our own mortality, conscious only of overwhelming grief.

NARRATIVE PRIZE WINNER

SPRING CONTEST WINNER

NARRATIVE PRIZE WINNER

NARRATIVE PRIZE WINNER

October Phone Call and Other Poems By Madeleine Cravens

October Phone Call and Other Poems

My loneliness is not less because I understand it more, or because I have condoned it. Mist and roads in all directions.

SPRING CONTEST WINNER

SPRING CONTEST WINNER

Something Left Behind By Madelena Grossmann

Something Left Behind

She knew you’d gone, that wasn’t what she’d come to hear; on this small island, everyone knows who comes, who goes.

FICTION

NARRATIVE 10

FICTION

FICTION

Any Good Child By Tryphena L. Yeboah

Any Good Child

I’m convinced that Ma wants me to see, needs me to step into her world and learn its songs but never actually dance to its tune until it’s time.

NARRATIVE 10

NARRATIVE 10

Narrative 10 By Tom Jenks

Narrative 10

If a story succeeds, the words carry the reader all the way home, back to life outside the story, having received gifts along the way.

NONFICTION

NONFICTION

NONFICTION

NONFICTION

Antibes 1926: The Torment of Scott Fitzgerald By Bill Barich

Antibes 1926: The Torment of Scott Fitzgerald

I hadn’t intended the trip to be a literary pilgrimage, although it evolved into one without my willing it.

NONFICTION

NONFICTION

The Art of Becoming a Citizen By Gail Godwin

The Art of Becoming a Citizen

One of the perks of living a long life is that you get to drop down and look around and see what happened afterward.

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The Clean-Out, a story By Yasmin Adele MajeedIntroduced by Anthony Marra

The Clean-Out, a story

I was going to Williams in the fall. It would be my first time leaving California, and my first time leaving home.

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Earth in the Time of Billie Holiday, a story By Canisia LubrinIntroduced by Saidiya Hartman

Earth in the Time of Billie Holiday, a story

Combat commanded no serious loyalty from me or Siem, though it did have a first taste, a sound.

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CARTOONS

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Dead Man’s Run, a story By Olufunke OgundimuIntroduced by Tryphena L. Yeboah

Dead Man’s Run, a story

One of the ghosts I walk with is me. It lives the life I left and continues to thrive as if I did not leave.

CARTOONS

CARTOONS

Cartoon Art Volume 2024-11 By Various Artists

Cartoon Art Volume 2024-11

New laughs at the grocery store, in pointedly choosing companions, while struggling to finish dinner, and more.

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

Egress By Saddiq Dzukogi

Egress

In Gwoza it was a simple announcement: they have been taken. Others are dead. The barn is on fire. Another, demolished.

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

About Suffering and Other Poems By Julia Kolchinsky

About Suffering and Other Poems

How wrong they were, the old masters who mourned endings as though there was another way to return to water.

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

POETRY CONTEST WINNERS

This Close to Dark By Brian Tierney

This Close to Dark

I can be the longest song on the jukebox. The coats people drape over their chairs to say Yes, I’m still here, I’ll be back soon.

POETRY

POETRY

The Free Tower By Ted Kooser

The Free Tower

Behind her I slowly climbed, passing through a life’s history of all her odors, those years now happening all over again as I climbed through them.

POETRY

Brothel By Edward Salem

Brothel

I walked to the olive grove and stood among the trees, trying to memorize my awe. I stood among them as if in a brothel and inhaled the wind.

POETRY

POETRY

The Trade-Off By Chase Twichell

The Trade-Off

Strange then, strange now, to choose the white loneliness over the gathering next door, the air scented with lilacs and barbecue, with laughing.