Blog

|

The Best Short Story I Read in a Lit Mag This Week: “Lunar Facts” by Michele Finn Johnson

Human beings are nothing if not list makers. Grocery lists. Chore lists. Listings of jobs, scores, events. Lists are a way in which we bring order to a chaotic world. The same could be said of stories, which is why lists can make such great story structures. Michele Finn Johnson’s “Lunar Facts” (Necessary Fiction) announces…

Round-Down: Stephen King Releases Exclusive Short Story Audio

Round-Down: Stephen King Releases Exclusive Short Story Audio

In what Alexandra Alter at The New York Times calls an “unusual experiment,” Stephen King has released a short story, “Drunken Fireworks,” which is forthcoming in his collection The Bazaar of Bad Dreams. The collection is slated for a November 2015 release, making this a months-advance sneak peek at the eagerly anticipated work. In the…

An unloaded pistol
|

Guns and Poems: Why is it (almost) impossible to write a great poem about guns?

Poetry has a history of violence. It was true a few hundred years ago, when bards wrote of knights and of great battles, and it is true today, when poets pick up their pens to write about the trauma of war, abuse, or repression. Whether they abhor it or glorify it, there is something about…

|

The Best Short Story I Read in a Lit Mag This Week: “Crash Sheep Plant” by Emily Abrons

  Last week’s column discussed the nature of perception, and the way in which Dan Reiter’s “Shifts” revealed how one mind might battle over the interpretation of the same event. In this week’s story, “Crash Sheep Plant” (Alice Blue Review 26), Emily Abrons juxtaposes a car crash with grazing sheep and plant life, and in…

THE NEUTRAL CORNER: Nicholas Fox Weber’s “The Bauhaus Group”
| |

THE NEUTRAL CORNER: Nicholas Fox Weber’s “The Bauhaus Group”

  The neutral corner is one of the two corners of the ring not used by boxers between rounds. It is also the corner a boxer must retreat to after he has floored his opponent. The Neutral Corner was also a bar in Saratoga Springs, New York, that I frequented when at Yaddo in the late…

“If I could I would cut off my lovers’ heads” : Eunice De Souza’s Nine Indian Women Poets
| | |

“If I could I would cut off my lovers’ heads” : Eunice De Souza’s Nine Indian Women Poets

“Anthologists invariably make enemies,” Eunice De Souza notes in her introduction to Nine Indian Women Poets. This anthology is unlike most anthologies, as De Souza takes up her editorial role to rally against universality, mapmaking, and flattery. De Souza isn’t seeking to make enemies, but she realizes that all choices for anthologies suggest other choices:…