Cartoon Art Volume 2009-10

In This Issue

Interviews
Fiction
Poetry Contest Winners
Poetry
Spring Contest Winners
Nonfiction
Narrative Outloud
Cartoons
Graphic Stories
Features
Classics
Readers' Narratives
First & Second Looks

Summer Fever

By Mary Gordon

Because my mother was a widow and I her only child, she often pressed me into the role of escort. Somehow, it was preferable for her to be accompanied by a child than to go places on her own. She was gregarious and seemed at ease in company but perhaps, more deeply than I saw, she was not at ease at all.

Because of all this I was often in places where I was the only child, and where I knew that my presence made people uncomfortable, although I sensed that my mother was not aware of this discomfort or else didn’t care. I grew used to our being a couple; it was unusual, though, for the couple to expand into a trio. But on the weekend of our trip to the lake in Connecticut, my grandmother joined my mother and me, rendering us simultaneously odder and less odd.more

Amazement

By Shirley Kaufman

Nothing makes
    any sense where
I live and nothing made
    much sense
where I came from, the parts
didn’t work.

                    What I learned best
was to pretend. That made me feel
different from everyone else.
They skipped me in school . . .

more

Narrative Store
Syndicate content