Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
Gezi
Once again, a newborn cried for the first time. The bald scream carried her voice through crowds in a chestnut-smelling street, rousing the cats from their curbside sleep. The sound stretched farther on to the trees of Taksim as they shuddered with an intensity foreign to them. The cats knew of what was coming before us. They found Spirit in a corner of İstiklal, licked and nursed her. They were the ones who would tell her about the name of the street, about how long before it meant independence, it meant dismissal and rebellion. They told her, as she cried, that she was rebelling even now when she did not know the word for it. They were the ones who decided that the time was right and carried the newborn to a nearby park. The cats, from atop the branches of Gezi, all silent in their knowing, wanted to show Spirit the trees.
Poetry • Spring 2026 - Fear
There’s something to be said about those little birds inside the eggs, with the sticky baby down and bones melted tender. This morning, you call me soup-for-brains and I imagine a boy’s guts cupped inside the feathered belly on my plate—another boy pressed open like a drum, a membrane. I drink the brine from a jar of Koon Chun plums for breakfast. Practice, I say, and you call me Pussy for the first time all week. They say it doesn’t taste like anything. Just the salt of the duck and the blood-tang of marrow. But I forgot you’re tutoring Leah Wong at her place today, so I turn and face your black-feathered buzzcut. No time for a game behind the school with the Chus’ half-popped basketball, which yesterday I poked till it dimpled and likened it to one of her mom’s big fake ones, and you hit me. For a split-second I thought I saw your eyes turn milky and your spine go baby-bent, but I pulled up your T-shirt and you were still hairless as a girl, your skin opaque. So it’s dinnertime and Mom isn’t home yet and all I have is the chick in my egg. He’s just boiled awake, beak parting to call me Dumbass. Soft. My fingers turn to yellow protein in calcium dust, prying you into this wet, scalding kitchen. Walls gum-pink and beating; I take you where heat reigns.
The fresh online pieces we experiment with outside of our print cycle. Formerly known as Blog.
From the Archives
Poetry • Spring 2024
after Halyna Kruk
Good sons have found me crying
in local park ditches, where I’ve been
called chink & faggot all the times
before & after. Still, I return. I keep
trying, like a good son, though not quite
as good. I’m more bird than human,
rolling in the mud I’ve made. Above me,
forefathers looking down from pavements,
carrying guns like bodies, kissing guns
like bodies. I let them repeat history.
The flowering branches in my way—snapped.
The cicadas that warned—sorry, sung—too loudly,
they squashed for me. I’m in good hands,
wrapped in good guns. When released,
there are bullets in the trees chirping
about standards, phone calls flying
in between trees, the trees moving
toward me with legs. I don’t remember
why I was crying, but there were guns
all around the clearing. Big beautiful guns
shoved into my mouth & don’t kill.
Poetry • Winter 2016 - Danger
Upon a time,
thin black stalks meet the slope
turn into
a lean boar
runs into pine
hide hide hide
the hunters drop red coals
will cut shaft in heart vine
a needle hole
for tapestry
embroidery
pressed against the wall
since century thirteen
olive grove infested with strange worms
unpleasant, expressing
discord, plucked, shaved, sanctified
by Murasaki, beloved of Genji
Murasaki who knows the turn
of a dull knife
who knows the ill luck of the tide
kamikaze wind blots
port
O is the yaw O is the yaw
which is open O is the bowl
which is open and which will put
O is the jaw which will put and out
will spill
ears. They look nothing like the ocean.
In memory of Sindbad:
the steel bite beats
around aft yellow
cannonballs ping hollow
floorboards the adam
apple slides over
cut glass and peels
Adonis with premature wrinkles. Time to take
the epigraph? No, there is a lake
yet, lotus bending over reflection
maps across landmass. Shoreline
more complex upon closer inspection
is a fractal to follow is twine
linking cheek to cheek will meet
at nose. Treasure trove of Atlantis
hidden at the keel.
Call tort
the Queen’s strong men
witches brew and bad stepmother
the golden hen
forgotten brother
had been wronged
prosecution stand behind the tooth
tongue and court
fore, aft, head, heel
it’s cracked
but cured by pumice and lime
a slick volcano does smooth
lines cut fissures make no mark
but imprints in ash the last
amphoras
Coast of Sicily
siren sets up keen incessant
keening spiral through
a plane
which meets
filigree frame
at ninety degree bend
Once upon a time,
again gold, again young, again
twelve princesses spiral underground
feet by feet wearing shoes
for dancing the tambourin
follow reed across lake
follow whisper of worms
lost their way lost their men
no good anyhow
each sister the face of
another
each eye its own color
each eye its own specter
drops from the vine
never found
blinks black in dark
the end
Fiction • Commencement 2013
“I am afraid that life is a game.”
“What sort of game?”
Our patient’s hands are clasped over his gut. His right heel rests on his left ankle. He is pained by this question. We can observe his memory twitching as he tries to recreate the experience of this life is a game anxiety.
Poetry • Spring 2013
The body near the screen tests itself, rests on itself, akimbo as windowcurtains pinned
back, just a touch, green kimono cinched in pale rope, as one might flinch if
pressed into soul’s glinting weight. Quick now, quick, those little lamps
have all burned down, now your blue dune of breastbone isn’t
seen except as remembered, and I will not sleep turned
in here, will not sleep anyplace else than curled in
streams panned with gold and no, this day is no
such, pinching into its vise, steadies itself for
night’s oiled blade, pillow-cold,
inevitable, not this twisting,
not I-who-cut-out,
not I-who-knew-
who-sang-
I.
Features • Commencement 2013
Giacomo applies a pen to the paper napkin, sketching a circle and tearing the tissue at the ends of his marks.
“And like this?”
“We’d say full moon,” I tell him.
We are at a house in L’Aquila, and it is the end of the summer.
“*Plenilunio*,” he responds.
Giacomo is my host father in Italy the summer I turn seventeen. We are all spending a weekend in a city some distance from the family’s hometown of Rieti.
Giacomo was not really his name, I should say. I could only remember that maybe it started with a G, so I’ve named him after my father’s grandfather.
“And this?”
“That’s a crescent moon.”
It is a warm evening and we have just finished dinner out behind the house. Maybe the town is not L’Aquila. This morning I asked the old boyfriend from those years if I mentioned the town or the man’s name in any of the emails I sent him that summer, which I’ve lost.
He said I hadn’t, but recommended the name Giuseppe.
Giacomo, or Giuseppe, draws another crescent moon.
“And this?”
“That’s a crescent moon,” I repeat.
He indicates that I had said that about the other one.
“They’re both crescent moons. They’re the same.”
“They are not the same.”
We must be speaking a language between English and Italian. It’s likely that he is speaking English and that I am speaking Italian, except for the translated lunar phases. My host mother would often chide him for practicing his English with me, since I was there to learn.
The two images look the same to me.
“They are not the same.”
The two moons he has drawn are mirror images, a fact I overlook because there is no linguistic distinction between them in common English. I feel foolish when I realize. They had seemed truly identical to me.
In Italian, the one bowed towards the right is a luna crescente, like ours. The left is a luna calante, or declining moon. We would say waxing and waning. The Italian terms make more sense: crescent, like crescendo or increase, implies that the moon is inflating towards its full circle. *Waxing crescent* and *waning crescent* are respectively redundant and contradictory.
I double-checked with my father that his grandfather’s name was Giacomo.
The point of this story is that you can stare at something for a long time and overlook its obvious qualities.
* So, I used to spend a lot of nights looking at the moon, to get a sense of the surface of the moon. You’ve got the maps, but because of the reflective properties of it, you can only see one small section at a time. As it goes from waxing to waning, the line from dark to light moves across the surface, and you can only see it at the line because of the direct light.
**You had to go out there for two months of the summer to be able to see it.*
In 1961, America needed something to capture its collective imagination. Yuri Gagarin, on behalf of the Soviets, had just become the first human to orbit the planet, and America was flagging in the space race. The next year, Kennedy made his Address at Rice University on the Nation’s Space Effort, in which he famously said, “We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard...” It was a sweltering Texas day when he delivered the speech, and it was a hot Florida night when Apollo 11 took off, seven years and two presidents later. Not that it mattered past the launch: There’s no weather on the moon, just shadow.
It was an era of discord, of race riots, a downward-turning economy, and a war in Vietnam. It was easy to argue that the moon project was frivolous—that putting money towards the space program was ludicrous when there was still poverty in America. Other proposed projects for the money included public school lunches. But the moon became Kennedy’s frontier. My father says that his own working class family, with his mother as the notable exception, was skeptical about the whole thing for a while.
*Well, ever since Kennedy in his inauguration talked about putting a man on the moon Before This Decade Is Out, the whole space program was a top of mind thing. There were missions every few months. The sort of anti-Communist thing, the Space Race with the Russians, was less compelling than the idea that this was some kind of prophecy. Manifest Destiny. They used to stop class for us to watch rocket launches.
** It comes into consciousness with me when Glenn takes off and they interrupt Romper Room and I’m annoyed and my grandmother snaps and says, “Hey, this is history. Watch it.”*
Dr. Abe Silverstein was reading a book of mythology at home in 1960 when he chose the name Apollo for the manned missions to the moon and back. “Apollo riding his chariot across the Sun was appropriate to the grand scale of the proposed program.”
Grand and dangerous, pulling the sun across the sky is no easy task. Take the story of Phaethon. There are many versions, but the one in Ovid’s *Metamorphoses* goes like this: Apollo had a son with a woman named Clymene, and the son grew up without knowing the god. The son, Phaethon, doubted that Apollo was his father, so he traveled to the palace of the sun to ask. Apollo welcomed him, and promised Phaethon any favor to banish his doubts. Phaethon immediately asked to drive his father’s chariot for one day. Apollo tried to dissuade him, arguing that even Jupiter could not control the team of horses or ride against the momentum of the turning sky. Along the track were the beasts of the constellations: Taurus, Sagittarius, Cancer. Apollo feared for his son, and asked that Phaethon look him in the face and instead accept his *patrio metu*, fatherly anxiety, as proof of his paternity.
Phaethon, however, insisted. Apollo had made a promise, and could do nothing but implore his son to reign the horses firmly and follow the wheel marks in the sky.
When the horses left the earth, they felt the lighter load of Apollo’s son and immediately strayed from the track, setting fire to normally cold constellations and—when Phaethon dropped the reigns—scorching the fields, cities and nations below. The earth herself implored Jupiter to end the catastrophe, and since the clouds and rain had been burned away, Jupiter’s only choice was to demolish the chariot. He launched a lightning bolt at Phaethon, who then fell, burning, from the sky. He was buried with the inscription:
*hic situs est phaethon currus auriga paterni
**quem si non tenuit magnis tamen excidit ausis*
Here lies Phaethon, driver of his father’s chariot
which, though he could not manage, he
nevertheless fell from a deed of great daring.
The technology the ancients used to get to the moon would be like doing it today with pocket calculators.
*There’s always this beep. The Federal regulation says there has to be a tone every twenty-five, thirty seconds. Finally they open the door, video, you see him taking steps down the ladder. He pauses at the bottom of the ladder and says, “One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind,” and then takes a step on the moon.
** And I didn’t realize at the time: he kind of blew the line. It’s supposed to be “a man.”
But then they kind of change the camera around so you can see they’re actually on the moon, see them hopping around like bunny rabbits. You can see they’re starting to have fun with it. Pogoing. They unfurl the flag—it’s got a wire thing in it to keep it out. And it was just great.*
That we even have a moon is a peculiar feature of our planet. Moons are uncommon on planets close to their stars, because the massive pull of a sun far overwhelms the rocky bodies that immediately surround it. The moon also has an unusual composition: a rock with no metal, the same density as our mantle, it is larger and lighter than the more common moons of the outer planets, which are often composed of passing solar system debris picked up and looped into orbit.
The reigning speculation as to why the moon is there is the giant impact hypothesis, which postulates that a large, Mars-sized object hit Earth four and a half billion years ago. A singularly unlikely event. The impact would have been sufficiently powerful to heat the Earth enough to melt its surface and essentially splash planetary material out into space, where it would accrete into a satellite as it circled the earth.
The presence of this large satellite stabilizes the Earth’s axial rotation; it does not wobble far from its twenty-three and a half degree tilt. This creates the climate consistency that allows for the evolution of complex, multi-cellular organisms. The reliable rhythms of the planet’s water throughout its history are thanks in large part to the moon. Without it, it is unlikely that life as we know it would have formed.
* They’re doing all these collections they had to do. I think the guy hit a golf ball, you know, and that’s it! It was kind of dumb, just a flag and the guys doing a moonbounce. But it was exhilarating, and there was also a sense of peace.
When I think of it in retrospect, there was a sense of peace that came from it. Deep. An abiding sense of peace.*
On their 1968 mission, the Apollo 8 astronauts were able to take a picture of the whole earth from the moon—the first picture of its kind. The most famous image of the earth though, *Blue Marble*, was taken four years later. In his thesis for Reed College, *Dao of Dasein*, Ahmed Moharram Kabil collected responses to such a perspective from figures such as the Dalai Lama: “The image of a blue planet floating in deep space, glowing like the full moon on a clear night, brought home powerfully to me the recognition that we are indeed all members of a single family sharing one little house.” Or Heidegger: “I was certainly scared when I recently saw the photographs of the earth taken from the moon. We don’t need an atom bomb at all; the uprooting of human beings is already taking place. We only have purely technological conditions left. It is no longer an earth on which human beings live today.”
Such an image has the potential to be both a totalizing and alien experience. A photograph of the planet from an exterior body, the moon, both unifies and otherizes the Earth. It emphatically declares that it is an object: one of many.
*You just never saw edges like that on earth, you know. There’s something different or beautiful about it. The purity of the color. So that was my **experience of the moon in 1969.
And you know partly it’s self-referential and partly it was social and partly it was aesthetic. But in the end I think you know the landing itself felt transient and it was a way of focusing on this object that was kind of strange and beautiful.*
My father was eleven years old when Apollo 11 launched. I called him because I was writing about the moon and I wanted to hear a first-hand account of the landing.
*So we’re out visiting my father and his wife Loretta. I loved Loretta because she was very kind to us. It was pretty good living because my mother—my father had this apartment, it was a corner apartment which was cool. It looked out over Great South Bay. It was a hot night. We didn’t have air conditioning, so the windows were open.
** My father is there, he’s excited, because he was a jet pilot in the sixties, and this was just the ultimate. Like oh God, that could have been me. He was fascinated and excited by it, but also down on himself.
Loretta’s making us food and keeping things fun.
We’re all sitting in this big queen-sized bed, waiting for this thing to happen.*
* With grateful acknowledgement to Charles Langmuir’s How to Build A Habitable Planet for information about the moon’s formation and planetary effects, and to NASA’s website for details about the Apollo missions. *
Fiction • Winter 2013 - Origin
Once there was a man who wanted to write, but he didn’t know how to do it.
You just figure out the story and sit down and write it, everyone said. It’s easy!
So the man sat down and tried and tried, but for some reason it didn’t seem to work.
What’s the story? he said. How do you know? How do you know what it is?
Then one day the man saw on the news that a famous writer was in town. He was giving a reading at the local bookstore.
I’ll go ask him! said the man.
At the reading that night, the man sat and listened politely while the famous writer read. And afterward, he raised his hand.
I would like to be a writer, he said. But for some reason, I just can’t do it. I’m having trouble with the story part. I don’t understand how you know what it is. How do you know what to write?
The famous writer sat there and looked at him.
Well, he said, it’s easy. You start at the beginning, and let it unfold. When you get to the end, walk away.
Okay, said the man, and went home to his desk. He sat there and stared at the page.
But what’s the beginning? he said in frustration. None of this makes any sense!
That night the man drove to the next town over, where the famous writer was doing another reading.
But how do you know what the beginning is? he yelled, when the writer had finally closed his book.
The writer sat there and looked at him.
Look, he said. You listen. You sit very still, and listen to your heart. When your heart speaks, you start taking dictation.
So the man went home and grabbed some paper. He sharpened his pencil and sat down at his desk. He closed his eyes and took a breath, and listened to the inside of himself.
He stayed like that for a long, long time, but nothing at all ever happened. He waited and waited for his heart to speak.
This is stupid, he finally said. I’m going walking.
So the man stood up and walked out the door. He walked down the path to the road. And then he just kept walking on. He never once looked back.
He walked and walked across the town, and then across the state. And then he just wandered aimlessly.
Sometimes he traveled freight.
He lived that way for many, many years. He went everywhere, met people, did things. He was always busy; he had no time to stop and think. It never even dawned on him to sleep.
But then one night the man was in a bar, and he saw the famous writer in the back. The writer was laughing and drinking with friends.
The man stayed there and watched them all night.
And when the writer left, the man followed him discreetly—from a distance, like a detective on TV. And when the writer turned into his fancy hotel, the man watched for a light to go on from the street.
Late that night, the man broke into the writer’s room, and stood over his bed in the dark. He looked at the writer lying there before him.




