
In This Issue

I don’t know if I’ve written anything without changing the details.
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My soul is simple; it doesn’t think. Something strange paces there now.
more
The naked trees drifted by, pointing my mother toward the hospital.
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The scream hangs in the past, in the present, and those years between.
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Doisneau might have eyed and shot us for how brazenly we kissed.
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Combat: a series of five new six-word stories from Stanton S. Coerr.
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Her cheek was like a plum about to burst and you had to close your eyes.
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Mrs. Fonss
In the graceful pleasure-gardens behind the Pope’s ancient palace in Avignon stands a bench from which one can overlook the Rhone, the flowery banks of the Durance, hills and fields, and a part of the town.
One October afternoon two Danish ladies were seated on this bench, Mrs. Fonss, a widow, and her daughter Elixir.
Although they had been here several days and were already familiar with the view before them, they nevertheless sat there and marveled that this was the way the Provence looked.
And this really was the Provence! A clayey river with flakes of muddy sand, and endless shores of stone-gray gravel; pale-brown fields without a blade of grass, pale-brown slopes, pale-brown hills and dust-colored roads, and here and there near the white houses, groups of black trees, absolutely black bushes and trees.more
The Arbor
When my neighbor,
who lives
in the apartment below,
opens his water tap
I feel less alone,
and I know this embarrasses you
but further,
to tell the truth,
at such moments
I often look
with interest
at a green and red packet
of sunflower seeds



