Even when his poems take a darker turn, such as recalling the murder of a friend and colleague, or the bittersweet memory of a childhood crush who has since passed away—there are moments of true grace within these elegies—a slowing down, not in pacing but in memory’s leaps.
Read MoreLodestone and Weathervane by Jae Towle
“One never changes the past, Roshelle says. Fundamental misunderstanding. Each incarnation of reality must be internally consistent—that is, if one goes backward in time, it’s not a disruption of the plan; it’s what always happened.”
Read MoreWolf Biter by Sarah Viren
When our habits deform our bodies, we can’t hide the proof of what we do.
Read MoreFirst Story by Sarah Gambito
"What do you say to someone who has been gone for so long."
Read MoreBafflement, Clarity, and Malice by Joe Bonomo
How can something I don’t understand come to mean so much?
Read MoreFour Poems by Nathalie Handal
I asked you not to hurt me
the way history did