We stripped naked, chasing each other through the deep green grass. The trees hid their own nakedness with new, pale leaves.
POEM OF THE WEEK
POEM OF THE WEEK
Soft
By Staci Halt
When I die, I wish
a part of me remains.
You’ll stroke it and remark
with surprise and delight
how very soft it is.
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.
NARRATIVE PRIZE WINNER
NARRATIVE PRIZE WINNER
Honey Buns and Cream Soda in the Stairwell
By A. T. Steel
Gold was the color of summer. Then everyone who lived in Harlem could forget for a while that people were dying, and the city hated them.
FICTION
FICTION
FICTION
FICTION
The Flowers in the Desert
By Jennifer Delgadillo
Her children walked next to her without saying a word, each holding together the parts of their collapsing world on the last night they were a family.
FICTION
FICTION
Tort
By Andre Dubus III
Maybe if Jim had not been so lonely himself, she would not have returned that smile with a kiss and their clothes would not be coming off as if something larger than the two of them was pulling the fabric away from their skin.
FICTION
FICTION
FICTION
FICTION
The Horse
By Mary Morris
He took a hammer and drove a nail into the wall of the garage at about my height. Then he tied a short rope to the nail. “That’s your horse,” he said. “You can ride him, just be sure to tie him up again.”
FICTION
FICTION
Restorations
By Emily Russell
Truth commissions, cartels, the oil pipelines, it’s all happening, the world churning on, stories to report, while he sits here night after night, complicit in his own discontent.
NONFICTION
CLASSICS
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
Tilting at Windmills
By Dean Rader
There was a structure off on its own that I would pass from a distance. I could not see it well, but from what I could tell, it was the ugliest sculpture in the history of art. Maybe the world.
CLASSICS
CLASSICS
Walking Out
By David Quammen
The boy knew he was supposed to feel great shame, but he felt little. His father could no longer hurt him as he once could, because the boy was coming to understand him. His father could not help himself.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Hard-Boiled Mystery
By David Grubin
The Cautious Coquette showed up first, next The Negligent Nymph, The Terrified Typist, The Vagabond
Virgin, my father’s paperbacks, 35 cents a pop.
POETRY
POETRY
They Who Loved the Smell of Burning
By Robert Hedin
And by the time the sun was barely over the trees, they’d already started in, burning. They burned the crops, the vineyards, then torched the forests. They burned all that day and into the next.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
Stutter Poetica
By Talia Isaacson
O syntax of connective fiber, O blanched oak, alluviated wood, nothing is beyond texture. Wind mouths the shape of clouds as they pass.
POETRY
POETRY
Letter to Metune from Lahontan Reservoir
By Lindsay Wilson
I wanted to stop wanting. I wanted to leap from that cliff to know whose true face I’d see just before I broke the surface, so then I might know how I look to others and learn a lesson from falling.
GRAPHIC STORIES
CARTOONS
GRAPHIC STORIES
GRAPHIC STORIES
Hey EV
By Glynnis Fawkes
A humorous account of technology, memory, and love.
CARTOONS
CARTOONS
Cartoon Art Volume 2025-11
By Various Artists
North Pole, God, Flamingoes, Relationships, and Public Speaking. New toons making merry this holiday season.
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