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Until It Hits Something Solid by Daniel Mazzacane

April 7, 2021

Wilder met Corey four months after moving to Oakhurst when Wilder managed to get a spot on the logging crew mid-season.

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In Fiction, Newsletter Tags Until It Hits Something Solid, Daniel Mazzacane, Fiction, Newsletter, 2021 April, Fresno, Oakhurst, Southern California, snow
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Two Poems by Eileen Pettycrew

March 10, 2021

we float like bubbles, but I can't help thinking / about our hearts--shaped in darkness, arriving / with a sadness that turns us to fragments, like notes / cut loose from their songs.

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In Poetry, Newsletter Tags Poems, Poetry, Eileen Pettycrew, Heading East on I-84, Small Shape of the Future, Newsletter, 2021 March
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A Normal Interview with Hanif Abdurraqib by Mialise Carney

March 10, 2021

I think I enjoy how many people can perceive the same performance in different ways, and how those ways might be directly linked to the way those people are perceived by the public when not performing anything beyond simply living.

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In Interview, Newsletter Tags Normal Interview, Hanif Abdurraqib, Mialise Carney, 2021 March, Newsletter
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InnerChild4U by Bowie Rowan

March 3, 2021

Imagine you are walking through tall grass, your hand brushing against green blade after blade. Walk through your memories like they are tall blades of grass. Let them brush up against you.

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In Multimedia, Newsletter Tags InnerChild4U, Bowie Rowan, Multimedia, 2021 March, Newsletter
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To See Clearly by Amy Hassinger

March 3, 2021

A song can be a revelation, a reminder of the continual apocalypse that every living moment brings into being: the now that ends with each phrase, the new now that begins with the next. A song can cut through the smog of fear we breathe each day, helping us to—even if momentarily—see more clearly.

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In Newsletter, Nonfiction Tags To See Clearly, Amy Hassinger, Nonfiction, Creative Nonfiction, Newsletter, 2021 March
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The Unraveling by Natalie Teal McAllister

March 3, 2021

The beginnings of new threads emerge. This time she puts her palms against the threads, pushes them back into place on his skin, holds them as one might hold together something glued.

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In Fiction, Newsletter Tags The Unraveling, Natalie Teal McAllister, Fiction, 2021 March
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The Fish as Healer by Kelly Gray

February 10, 2021

By the pressure of water / my arms glide back / seraphic, / my fingers catching in the sea grass. / Here, I pray for the sting of salt in my eyes.

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In Poetry, Newsletter Tags The Fish as Healer, Kelly Gray, Poetry, Newsletter, 2021 February
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A Normal Interview with Monica Sok by Mariah Bosch

February 10, 2021

I write down dreams as they tell themselves to me. I write down as much as I can remember, trying to get the details and the order of events right––not interpreting them but documenting them. But I think there’s a little bit of freedom in figuring out how a dream takes shape on the page.

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In Interview, Newsletter Tags Monica Sok, Interview, Mariah Bosch, A Nail the Evening Hangs On, 2021 February

Contingency Plans by Belle (Bom) Kim

February 10, 2021

Perhaps I won't be wholly lost if I can make something from this pain.

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In Multimedia, Newsletter Tags Belle (Bon) Kim, Contingency Plans, Multimedia, 2021 February
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On Epistaxis by Cameron Martin

February 10, 2021

'I get nosebleeds.' I almost wish we all did at awkward moments. How much more easily the awkwardness might be diffused in the humanizing light of the body’s nor “I get nosebleeds.” I almost wish we all did at awkward moments. How much more easily the awkwardness might be diffused in the humanizing light of the body’s normal frailty.

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In Newsletter, Nonfiction Tags On Epistaxis, Cameron Martin, Nonfiction, LGBTQIA+, Nosebleeds, 2021 February
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Perennials by Shelley Wong

February 3, 2021

Still, I lose: I cannot even recall/our common silences. The years have transposed/into any year

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In Print, Poetry, Newsletter Tags Poetry, Perennials, Shelley Wong, BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, Asian American, NormalPrize
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Ghost Child by Danusha Laméris

January 13, 2021

Only he is not my son. / He’s the one I was expecting that season / my belly grew taut as a honeydew.

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In Print, Poetry, Newsletter Tags Poetry, Ghost Child, Danusha Laméris, 2021 January, BIPOC, Child Loss, BIPOC Poets, Poems of Grief, Bonfireopera, PittPoetrySeries, UniversityofPittsburgPress, California Poems
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Do You Eat Monkey Brains? by Arvin Ramgoolam

January 6, 2021

What did the future have in store for me when my only cultural touchstones were Apu from The Simpsons, the evil Mola Ram, and the village of starved, tattered clothed Indians offering the hero their last bits of rice?

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In Fiction, Newsletter Tags Fiction, Do You Eat Monkey Brains?, Arvin Ramgoolam, Indiana Jones, 2021 January
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A Normal Interview with Khaty Xiong by Jer Xiong

January 6, 2021

A lot of things have changed me as a poet since 2015, but what these changes have ultimately revealed is that I cannot live without poetry. I need it to commune with the living, to commune with the dead, and to meet the many burdens of grief that come with being alive.

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In Interview, Newsletter Tags Interview, Khaty Xiong, Jer Xiong, 2021 January, Poor Anima

Amerikan Swamp by Sonya Bilocerkowycz and Chris Stevens

January 6, 2021

Recall how deep the roots that gulp this ground. There is no draining what’s already drowned.

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In Multimedia, Newsletter Tags Amerikan Swamp, Sonya Bilocerkowycz, Chris Stevens, Multimedia, Video, 2021 January
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Reclaiming a Name by Negesti Kaudo

January 6, 2021

For years, I’d pronounced my own name wrong because it was easier, it fit into other people’s mouths better. My mom wants me to embody my name. 'I gave you a strong name,' she says.

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In Nonfiction, Newsletter Tags Reclaiming a Name, Nonfiction, Negesti Kaudo, 2021 January, BIPOC
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Fountain Square by Emma DePanise

January 6, 2021

Face-up underwater gazing up bright, the rippled / branches were always more mesmerizing in motion

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In Poetry, Newsletter Tags Poetry, Fountain Square, Emma DePanise, 2021 January
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Invasive Species by Sara Moore Wagner

December 9, 2020

And there they are, our little / babies in the pond moss wetland / of the yard, all blonde amidst / the fallen limbs, the jagged lines / of timber.

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In Poetry, Newsletter Tags Poetry, Poem, Sara Moore Wagner, Invasive Species, 2020 December
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A Normal Interview with torrin a. greathouse, by Angel Gonzales

December 9, 2020

I often know — or think I know — that I have found the right language for relating an experience when the act of speaking a poem out loud makes me shake.

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In Interview, Newsletter Tags Interview, torrin a. greathouse, Angel Gonzales, LGBTQIA+, 2020 December
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Hairy Govinda by Kathy Anderson

December 9, 2020

This old yoga lady next to me throws her legs up in the air and farts. That’s okay by me.

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In Fiction, Newsletter, Print Tags Hairy Govinda, Kathy Anderson, Yoga, Kundalini Yoga, Love Story, Yoga Class, LGBTQIA+, 2020 December, Archive, Fiction, 2018 fall vol. 11 issue 2
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