You got to live in one of those apartments in the sky where you can see the Statue of Liberty from your window. Otherwise, you’re down here with us, jumping the subway and eating bagels out of the trash.
POEM OF THE WEEK
POEM OF THE WEEK
To Hold a Kingdom
By Brian Gyamfi
Let father be a man walking to the river. A man ready to bargain with water, ready to float. But God, if father must fall in his mind, let it be soft.
17th ANNUAL POETRY CONTEST
17th ANNUAL POETRY CONTEST
Poetry is “the eldest sister of all arts, and parent of most,” wrote William Congreve. We agree and are seeking poets and poems to celebrate with prizes and publication.
Please see the Guidelines.
SPRING 2025 STORY CONTEST
SPRING 2025 STORY CONTEST
Our Spring 2025 Story Contest, which offers $5,000 in awards, is now open to all fiction and nonfiction writers.
Please see the Guidelines.
FINAL DAYS TO ENTER
FINAL DAYS TO ENTER
Deadline: Sun., June 15, at 11:59 p.m., PDT.
THE $5,000 NARRATIVE PRIZE is awarded annually for the best work by a new or emerging writer.
Please see the Guidelines.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Cameo
By Katie Beswick
And Mum, driving, notices nothing; she’s parsing familiar streets sketched weird in moonlight. Carrie’s white eyelashes blink.
POETRY
POETRY
Skylight
By Jaswinder Bolina
Now I’m no longer the buzzards glooming over the mango tree. Now I’m the fuzzy orange sunbeam glazing the buzzards’ shoulders.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Failure to Appear
By Rosalie Moffett
To be the grass someone’s memory spins its wheels in, the globe brimming with gumballs, or the palm—but I’m not, maybe never.
POETRY
POETRY
Derelict
By Nina Peláez
The sun starts its strain, rupturing through clouds, melting dusts of snow. My shadow appears and disappears in front of me
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Willamette Shipyard Blues
By Alex Tretbar
Lost when they let me out
Just my welding gun
So I went down to the
shipyard
Where it all began
POETRY
POETRY
Reasons to Go On
By Craig van Rooyen
Because grass sprouts from the stump’s rings like tiny soldiers, lost in a labyrinth. Because this mess I’ve made I haven’t made alone.
FICTION
NONFICTION
FICTION
FICTION
So Far Gone
By Jess Walter
Books covered every available surface and much of the floor. Leah loved books more than she loved anything in the world, but this . . . this seemed like a sickness, like an infestation of words.
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
John Irving at Iowa
By Ron Hansen
Suddenly John was there, in slim blue jeans and a rough white shirt that could have belonged to a Spanish troubadour or a sixteenth-century pirate.
CARTOONS
GRAPHIC STORIES
CARTOONS
CARTOONS
Cartoon Art Volume 2025-05
By Various Artists
Great new toons by Dan Misdea, Theora Kvitka, Peter Vey, Kyle Bravo, and Chris Weyant.
GRAPHIC STORIES
GRAPHIC STORIES
Let’s Learn English!
By Tracey K. Berglund
A visual exploration of some amusing homophones and homonyms in the English language.
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