What they needed was to be themselves. To be among their kind. I had tried to prove myself through sacrifice, but the real test was letting go.
POEM OF THE WEEK
POEM OF THE WEEK
Tidal Motif
By Henk Rossouw
I speak at the edge of something else—Pacific asters sinuate in the wind, the shorebirds arriving and leaving without cease, your fingers arthritic.
FINAL WEEK TO ENTER
FINAL WEEK TO ENTER
Deadline: Fri., July 10, at 11:59 p.m., PST.
Open to all fiction and nonfiction writers. We’re looking for short stories, essays, memoirs, photo essays, graphic stories, all forms of literary nonfiction, and excerpts.
Please see the Guidelines.
POETRY
POETRY
What It Requires
By Sharon Olds
I do not know the extremes of feeling. I have been protected from them, I have protected myself. The depths of being I’ve observed but not felt—too afraid to feel.
FiNAL MONTH TO ENTER
FiNAL MONTH TO ENTER
Deadline: Wed., July 29, at 11:59 p.m., PST.
“Poetry is a matter of life, not just a matter of language,” wrote Lucille Clifton, and we couldn’t agree more. We’re looking for work that moves with intention, that reveals something we didn’t know we were missing.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
This Wednesday
By Katie Condon
Where is the door that will take us to the inner world, the one where memory lives unburdened by our ability to recall it? It’s easy to take stock of this place, this Wednesday in a library.
POETRY
POETRY
His Last Days
By Dan Gerber
He saw each bird as a kind of feeling he’d known, imagining its movements as his own. Thrill of cool water finding its way between feathers and let himself become feathers.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
The Murder of Louisa Suckraw
By Ted Kooser
There are too many stories under these pine cones, this sod, to remember them all, but Louisa Suckraw’s is gouged in stone. It tells and tells.
POETRY
POETRY
White Birds
By Maria Giesbrecht
At three, I stepped on Dad’s liquor bottle and now there’s a robin’s nest, faint and white, on the inside of my left foot.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Sweeter
By Yong-Yu Huang
This is what passes for dreaming in the blue house, the decay of my good days. Again, the bowl of fruit awash in the creeping light.
POETRY
POETRY
Illicit
By Cate Lycurgus
touching you is a dash in the paragraph of not touching you fragment in the sentence of not seeing you seeing you is a colon amid clauses of not seeing
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Long Love—Betsy and Andrew Wyeth
By Melissa McKinstry
What I want to know is, will someone in the future, after stringed instruments disappear, remember the sound? Music’s evanescence, like smoke swirled and held in a jar.
POETRY
POETRY
My Daughter’s Daughter Is Sad
By Luisa Muradyan
My mother’s mother had to keep her mother on the tenth floor of our Soviet apartment building. There was no elevator and no way for her to get outside during the day.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
A Posteriori
By Ananya Kanai Shah
Now the years recant in a clean, even stroke. In the annex of the mind, a chair. From it I watch the city swirl into renaissance, toad-like cars chasing their own vapor.
POETRY
POETRY
The Legend of Zelda
By Brian Tierney
All we wanna do is play Nintendo till it’s dark out and can’t, the grid’s still down. Blackout to last another day and the heat for three and the Phils are blowing a wildcard chance, WHYY reports.
FICTION
CLASSIC
FICTION
FICTION
The Red Shoes
By Lavanya Vasudevan
At her nalangu, the girl would not sit quietly on the wooden plank and let us paint her feet with turmeric. She put on her strange red shoes.
CLASSIC
CLASSIC
The Weary Blues
By Langston Hughes
I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins. My soul has grown deep like the rivers.
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
Private Planet
By Dina Kleiner
Picturing herself in the future was a comfort because it was a confirmation. She believed any confirmation at all, desirable or undesirable, was favorable over the unknown.
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
Regional Hospitals
By Alice Ryan
She has no recollection of any restaurant, but she knows how important it is to her father that his old life connects to his new life, so she nods into the pitch-black of the car park of the regional hospital.
STORY CONTEST WINNERS
The Day of the Dog
By Maria Giesbrecht
Working. That has been our entire world for the two months that we and other Mennonite families have come from Mexico to work in Canada. “Good, honest, godly work,” Father says. “We’ll be blessed.”
CARTOONS
GRAPHIC STORY
CARTOONS
CARTOONS
Cartoon Art Volume 2026-06
By Various Artists
Let these toons by Kyle Bravo, J.C. Duffy, Rose Anne Prevec, P. C. Vey, and Kaamran Hafeez brighten your day.
GRAPHIC STORY
GRAPHIC STORY
My Father
By Shannon Wheeler
In 1967 he adopted an Open Land Policy: anyone who wanted could come and live for free.
LEARN!
FEATURES
LEARN!
LEARN!
Letters to a Young Writer
By Richard Bausch
You can make your own way in the world, and in your own life make sure you never utter one epithet that takes away another human being’s dignity.
FEATURES
FEATURES
Best Advice
By Kirstin Valdez Quade
The fiction writer must merge with the character on the page and see things clearly though the character’s eyes.
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