Issue 39

  • Fiction,  Issue 39

    Jakob as Worm

    "Still City Full Moon" painting by Nuala McEvoy

    by David Leo Rice

    This story marks the beginning of The New House 2: The Chapel of Humiliation, sequel to the 2022 novel The New House, about a family of outsider artists roaming the American interior in search of The New Jerusalem, which they believe will only be revealed in dreams. At the end of that novel, an adolescent boy, Jakob, watched his father sacrifice his mother in his stead, and vanish into the woods, leaving him alone with her headless body.

  • Hybrid,  Issue 39

    Life Without The Brady Bunch

    by Francis Fernandes

    
    

    Francis Fernandes grew up and studied in Montréal, Canada. Since spring 2020, his writing has been featured in numerous literary journals, including Jerry Jazz Musician, Saint Katherine Review, The Orchards Poetry Journal, Third Wednesday, The Brussels Review. He lives in Frankfurt,
  • Issue 39,  Poetry

    Hallucinyx

    "As All Can Be" art by Edward Lee

    by Dana Curtis

    “The literary equivalent of a hallucinogen; or:qualities of a hallucinogen reduced to literary essence”
    -Steve Erickson, American Stutter

    I look for the opium den or
    the library because I need
    the sweet addled sleep of
    the damned, the endlessly
    levitated and furious, fearless
    on the collapsed couch, words
    leaking out the corners
    of my mouth. It’s the only way
    to look at a sunset,

  • Issue 39,  Poetry

    Bildungsroman 

    "Ecumenical" painting by Michael Moreth

    by Seth Hagen

    I was a cabinetmaker commissioned

    To construct the King’s sex chair.

    I was a maypole flag wet with June dew

    I was half-mouse, half-toad.

    Like a dog now paraplegic

    I wore a bright coat.

    Like a dog now paraplegic

    I wheeled on.

    A room. A braided rug. Two doors.

    One half-open, the other half-closed.

    Like a spoonbill splayed

    And two owls in a mangled oak.

  • Issue 39,  Poetry

    It’s a tender gap, a handclap

    "Golden Orb Weaver" collage by Tiffany Dugan

    by Ashleigh A. Allen

    Starting next week, we pray loud
    in the direction of memory.
    Face forest like a flag, mount the lions.
    Your insides hairy and damp as concrete.
    Sundays full of worry and worms, socks
    hour the clocks full of snow, the doorway
    is deliberate. In the garden, flattening
    the lawn. Your song comes to me eyes
    first, lands on warm lashes, saliva
    across a naked face, you look up, ask for sky
    but all you get is god,

  • Issue 39,  Poetry

    Waiting for Leonora Carrington at Cafe Alma Negra

    "Storm Brewing Over the City" painting by Nuala McEvoy

    by Laurel Benjamin

    wouldn’t order for you because I don’t know your coffee tastes,
    but this place has a steel reputation. I heard rumors
    about your cloistered ways, how you’ve grabbed a sack and thrown it
    dripping on the threshold, creature with fangs and octopus eyes
    birthed. Frankly, all I could imagine,
    dark roast, though the art photos
    plastered on the walls don’t jive with your paintings,
    especially the mohawk woman. I expected
    your small flames to fan at the table
    on time,