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.
Features • Spring 2026 - Fear
By no means is this a famous story. It takes place in Huntsville, Utah, a small town of under six-hundred residents, located in Ogden Valley on Pineview Reservoir. Surrounded by three ski resorts (Snowbasin, Powder Mountain, and Nordic Valley) there is no shortage of idyllic views, nor a shortage of seasoned skiers wishing to park amongst these idyllic views. This is observed by the abundance of Parking by Permit Only signs that prohibit parking west of 7300 E Street, made possible by the Huntsville Town Ordinance on April 19th, 2018.
Fiction • Spring 2026 - Fear
Big John stood near me with the electric blue above us, screaming out with its shine for everyone to drink it. Lines of neon stretched and twisted into a beauty of advertising brilliance. We were drinking it and the bottles were sweating and it made me feel good for the first time all day.
The fresh online pieces we experiment with outside of our print cycle. Formerly known as Blog.
From the Archives
Features • Fall / Winter 2023
Miracle No. 1: Light
March 2002 – March 2019
I am going to be broken again and again by miracles. I know this. I think I’ve known this from the moment I met the first puzzle of my life: light. So much light that the air was thick with it. I imagine that then, new and swaddled, I was thoughtless — wordless, too — completely lost in a puzzle with no boundaries or betrayals. I didn’t believe in anything then: milk, maybe. Maybe, warmth. Each moment of early life was new, each object seen exclusively for its form — the model around which meaning would one day be built. It was a time ripe with the instinct of pattern-finding. Only later would I grow into the suspicion that light might have been my first encounter with the miraculous.
Poetry • Fall 2013
I hide in the family woods and
wait for it.
Brother and Sister,
Ask and Embla come
to the edge.
I was born from driftwood.
I made myself
a thrush—
the song is smoke over the fire now.
Aspens are charred limbs.
They are abstract.
Brother and Sister set this
I hold the veiny leaves
falling blackened to the dirt.
Impress them in my palm they come apart.
The trees contort
from heat, they
groan—the branches scribble furiously and
I am separated
in the burning. Plumes float over.
Now I recover form.
I walk the limbs and am forever forgetting
what was my name
Life or zest or Leaf or Lifprasir
what was my detail-soaked skin—
Not this
the convulsion didn’t save the other
half of things.
What was here
before they came through the unveiled sex of
the sky and left fire
for small things?
Ask and Embla,
Brother and Sister made
a perfect forest.
It is perfect. I remember my limb.
Poetry • Spring 2016
there is no approaching
infinity, nothing
taught
or finagled in
roots and the bodied. divining
link and
link invert and
whether letters push
hollow air or beads
of jowl. it could
be emerald—be,
could emerald!
or should not—should
have
been infuriated
since wu. for leibniz
the people
applauded
and fucked
and the lake
was not
placid at all. axes
shift disbanding
salaciousness and there
is device
that steals
from the magpies
—push
gdp,
make usefulness
smaller, no one
wants to see it, it
is indecent. it reeks
of boredom and
fuck you, john, who
was ever bored?
try and ask—
Features • Spring 2016
*2013*
I don’t know when the AIDS crisis happens. In the sixties? Seventies?
The eighties. My AP U.S. History teacher calls the virus “hiv”, like it doesn’t stand for something else, like it’s supposed to be funny. When we watch *Forrest Gump *in class,he says that’s what Jenny probably died from. Nobody understands how. A contaminated needle? Sex work?
“All right, calm down,” he tells us. “It was hiv that killed her, definitely. You all have heard of it. Okay. Anyway. Now, Reaganomics.”
I’ve never heard of Reaganomics before, nor do I care much for Ronald Reagan, but I do know about HIV. Or, at least, I know about AIDS. My babysitter, a twenty-five year old from Mali, had told my sister and me about it when we were children.
“You have to take medication forever,” she said. “No cure at all.”
“How do you get it?”
“You have to touch body fluid.”
“So what if you want to kiss your baby?”
“You can’t.”
I am 15 years old clicking a pen in the back of the classroom, thinking about the babysitter and her miseducation. Mine, too: I take Health on Tuesday and Thursday mornings but sex ed consists of researching the statistics of condom failure and taking quizzes on the effects of latex versus those of polyurethane. I am 15 and have never touched a condom even in its wrapper, don’t know what one looks like in real life or how to put one on a banana. That it prevents HIV infection I know from watching *Grey’s Anatomy *and *Degrassi*, the same way I pieced together sex years after my classmates had already started doing it.
My pediatrician never asks me if I’m sexually active. He’s from Ghana and has known me since I was a baby. When he retires in May and I have to go to an out-of-town medical center to do my physical, the doctor ends up being a Nigerian who goes to my church. She also does not bother asking me if I’m sexually active, but there are papers taped to the wall reminding girls over the age of fourteen to get tested for HIV.
She sees me staring. “It’s important,” she says. “For girls in this area.” It doesn’t occur to me to even ask about the boys.
*2016*
For Africa I could see the realism. Photos of rail-thin women, their robes falling down, and their children starving, flies swarming their mouths.
My mother never talked to us about AIDS in Nigeria. By the time I could understand the connections people made between Africans and disease, I was old enough to brush off the jokes as First World ignorance. It didn’t matter, anyway—she didn’t tell us much about her country in general. My sister and I only knew about the dust, from visiting in 2001, and the bombings because of the newspapers, and then the rice at parties.
My mother, though, has actually lived in the United States longer than she has lived in Nigeria. She came here in 1986, a nineteen-year old graduate student living with her brother and his family in Brooklyn. The first cases of AIDS in the U.S. had been published in newspapers five years earlier. When I asked her what she thought about the epidemic at the time, she texted back:
**I was not Scare because I knew what to do .. I knew Aids is spread in certain way and people need to use Condom I was not having unprotect ed sex nor was i using contaminated needles.**
I responded:
**it wasn’t a scary thing, all those people dying? even if you weren’t affected?**
She called me then. “It’s not that I didn’t care,” she said. “It’s just that I wasn’t scared, because I knew.”
College in Nigeria had taught her well: safe sex workshops and doctors coming to speak about how AIDS *really *kills, more than malaria or polio.
“How did they teach you?”
“Workshops.”
“What kind of workshops?”
“Just workshops.” She pauses. “Why do you like this class so much, anyway?”
She’s referring to the one class I’m required to take as a freshman at Harvard, Expository Writing. I’d told her I put HIV/AIDS in Culture as my first choice.
“You shouldn’t have it as a first choice,” she continues. “Those times are done, it won’t help you to learn about it. AIDS? Why would you want to learn about that?”
I’m not very sure how to answer that question. I have read *Three Junes*, *How I Loved You, Just Between Us, *and *The Hours*—all novels with HIV-positive gay men as central characters. I’ve read *Two Boys Kissing *and felt my eyes widen with horror at the author’s description of death, constant death, before this new wave of LGBTQ liberation. AIDS, for me, is associated with terrible loss. For my mother, though, AIDS is not about homosexuality at all. It’s about the stigmatization of her homeland, racial slurs against her people, Africa becoming an embodiment of contamination. In America, she only saw the illness on the news and heard about protests on the radio, but she did not know the extent to which AIDS was ravaging the cities. I think of her sitting on the subway in her long skirts and sweaters, Jeri-curled hair, staring, perplexed, at an ACT UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) poster wheat-pasted on the other side of the train.
My father might also have seen these posters, but on the Capital Metro in Austin where he was an undergrad at the University of Texas. When I call to ask him what he thought about AIDS in the eighties, he says, “Oh, it was very, very scary. We didn’t really know what was going on. Nobody know what was going on, people sick, dying, left to right…there was so much people, nobody I knew but still…nobody knew what was AIDS...”
It’s an answer I hadn’t expected. My mother is typically more aware of her surroundings, and of current events, than he is. But she had come from the village and America was paradise. My father, in contrast, came from a very wealthy family in Nigeria, and consequently poverty was not a characteristic he was trying to shake off; he came to study in the U.S. only because he failed his WAEC, West Africa’s version of the SAT. His confusion throughout the years of the epidemic, as he goes on to explain to me, stemmed from everyone else’s confusion. People said you could get it from touching hands. People said that was impossible, you could only get it from sex. People said heterosexuals didn’t have to worry about contracting anything.
“You see,” he tells me. “Very crazy. Very scary.”
“What was the government doing? Reagan, or whoever.”
“Eh. A lot of stuff, I think. The disease was just very bad.”
But on Reagan’s Wikipedia page, his response to the AIDS epidemic consists of two thin paragraphs detailing how the administration mostly ignored the crisis. Even the War on Drugs and a list of his filmography both have lengthy descriptions (and links to their own separate articles), and there is nothing about AIDS in regards to his legacy. Instead, Wikipedia describes his restoration of the American morale and a renewal of the American Dream.
“Why are you asking?” my father wants to know, and so I answer him the way I answered my mother: “Because I don’t have much knowledge about that time in history.”
He makes no comment about it. My mother had repeated, “But how is *that* going to help *you*?”
*2014*
There is a new drug called Truvada that prevents HIV infection. I learn about it at an AIDS Walk in July, an end-of-the-year activity planned by my STEP program.
At this point, I have a love-hate relationship with the STEP program. On one hand, I like it better than school because of all the friends I’ve made there. On the other, I’d undeclared myself pre-med in February, and attending the Saturday classes remind me of the nightmare that was tenth grade chemistry.
Despite the program’s deep emphasis on medicine, we receive no information about HIV and AIDS before assembling on 168th Street to board the train together. The event is sent to the email list, highlighted mandatory, and that’s that. We are expected to show up robust and attentive.
It’s the twenty-eighth annual AIDS Walk NY, hosted by the GMHC. Nobody has any idea what GMHC stands for. My friend Jude suggests that it is a medical insurance company, perhaps, or some kind of fundraising organization like the American Cancer Society. There are stands named after people who’ve died from AIDS, testing stations, merchandise being given out. Tearful black women thanking us for our support. We are too confused to understand why. Even more confused when the STEP administrator asks us to hold up signs with the program’s name on them.
“We’re representing the university,” he says, but it just seems so strange to me, so callous, when everyone else is carrying signs with the names of the dead.
DeBlasio speaks about the cost of the pills for high risk populations and I raise up my arms to take snapchats of him, a tiny glowing figure at the podium under the American flag. Smells of body, as we are all so close together, sounds of crying as DeBlasio addresses the audience. People start the walk in tears. We, a blue-shirted, poster-wielding group of high school students, complain about the humidity along the checkpoints, stopping at random to pose for group photos.
I don’t even make it out until the end. It gets too hot, I’m tired, and once I can see the streets over Central Park’s hills, I duck under the security tape and dash into a convenience store for air conditioning.
*Why is AIDS such a big thing in New York City anyway? *I wonder, fanning myself against the wall, wiping the sweat off my phone screen to scroll through my Legião Urbana albums. *Nobody dies from it in America anymore.*
My birthday’s passed but I have not yet read *Three Junes, *and so I don’t know about Malachy Burns dying alone in his Greenwich Village apartment. I know, however, that the lead singer of Legião Urbana, Renato Russo, died of complications due to AIDS in 1996. But I have seen him too many times on YouTube, strolling across the stage, sinking to his knees and wailing into the microphone. The greatest artist of all time could not have died horrifically.
I picture Jenny from* Forrest Gump*, dressed in white with flowers in her hair, peacefully going in her sleep—*that’s how it must have been,* I think, *for lots of people*.
*2016*
I’ve cried a lot this semester because of Expository Writing. I finish watching *The Normal Heart *at 2 a.m. and sit there on my bed in the dark, sobbing. One of the documentaries we’re asked to watch, *How to Survive a Plague, *almost brings me to tears in the common room. In the car over spring break, I read *Angels in America, *one of our required texts, and my mother asks me if I’m developing a cold, from the sound of my sniffling.
“No,” I say. “It’s this book.”
“What about the book?”
“Just. The book.”
Actually, the readings. And the “Kissing Doesn’t Kill” posters. And the pictures of emaciated bodies tied up in garbage bags, turned away from funeral homes: one of the nation’s greatest manifestations of indifference. How disturbing that it was a relief at that time, when my AP U.S. History teacher skipped over the unit, to not have to take another test on something else.
We don’t take exams in Expos, but we don’t skip over anything related to the epidemic either. We analyze ACT UP t-shirt designs and learn that if we were to be transported back into the nineties, most students on campus would have been wearing them, and we would have had SILENCE=DEATH buttons on our backpacks.
*Would I have had a button on my backpack?*
I look to my bare laptop, no stickers that identify me as a supporter of anything significant. The only rally I’ve ever attended was that AIDS Walk in 2014, and as a child, had accompanied my mother to a March for Life. There were other demonstrations, ones sponsored by Black Lives Matter and Occupy Wall Street, but they were in New York City and my suburban lifestyle encouraged laziness: the Long Island Rail Road was expensive, I could never figure out how to navigate the subway trains, and moreover, I was deathly afraid of getting arrested for protesting.
I am not, however, afraid of reading about AIDS. Or talking about it. In fact, I call my mother all the time to tell her about the literature we read and the films I’ve watched. Every time I say, “So in my HIV/AIDS class…” I can feel her discomfort on the other end of the line. *Which is totally okay*, I want to tell her. For a lot of people, it’s an uncomfortable topic.
She doesn’t ask me why I care about the class anymore, she just listens to me. And that is the most gratifying part.
Poetry • Winter 2014 - Trial
That the sequelae of
such love has no
such effect can’t change
a bit where here
we are in this
coarse mood swing’s doldrums.
Tense is the season
where time usurps a
ginger snap, tachycardia enlists
the wrong man to
the job of whatever
job this really is—
a flank of venison
that outputs offshoots erratically
in tempered limb drop.
I fake back pain
and conceive of highjinks
suited to the rondure
of a crystal lapis
conference umbrella. There, love,
the park menu awaits.
Chilly denizens of fairy
bedtime stories do breaststrokes
in the heat of
fair espousal, gender removal,
plus and minus bargaining.
You must not love
me now nor ever
again says the creatine
injection with suave inflection.
Denuded for the evening,
suffering Bell’s Palsy, honored
by the draping hard-on
in the wind’s backtalk,
we settle up our
score and make way
on immobile yachts high
above the derby tides.
You move with prolix
spasms, inflated misdemeanors, even
a ringlet of pewter
that you place in
glass ashtrays for mother.
Today and tomorrow are
not polyandrous—in fact
suffrage comes in bins
on liners from token
deposits of a rough
Neanderthal mandarin. Oranges. Stencil
stashes. Sigh. Exhale. Scoop
the muscle tissue contraction
that has too its
Indo-European roots—we
all do, you know.
We all do. Yet
love has channeled the
age’s decorum into a
rare late-hour affect.
Pudgy bottom trawlers, all
of us and them.
When was it one
first heard the spray
at the back of
the throat that clicked
its graceshaped cap in
some kind of rhomboidal
romp? I don’t know.
O, verily, I don’t.
BP has continued setting
out its continued commitment
to environmental restoration efforts
in the Gulf region
despite the company’s legal
challenge to the misinterpretation
of the settlement’s agreement
with the Plaintiffs’ Steering
Committee. Arousal. Keystone Light.
Flick me with the
teeth of your smile
in the patchy dust
rigger you call home
my positive legacy love.
From small denomination bills
a wad is born.
And, your Highness, to
my utter amazement’s grotesque
patience, at least $4
billion donations a year
await gas development plans.
It’s Labor Day, 1935.
A tropical cyclone plunks
down its bushy arms
in Floridian climes, alas.
A flood burgeons its
safe bet, breaks its
belt, a statewide panic
claims anonymous residents lost
in their casual historicity.
Fire. Tornado outbreak. Exploitation.
Silicosis at Coconut Grove.
Explosion in Texas City.
Dam failure: Santa Clarita.
You can keep stemming
the laundry lists of
American disasters privately, which
is to say morosely,
or you can do
so in this poem
and be judged for
it—rightly?—I think.
USS *Indianapolis* goes
down—near Guam—direct
action (military)—drowning, shark
attack, hypothermia, 879 people
taken. The conceit is
plain, now, it exists
on a plain now.
A plane called Now.
Part of the tragedy
of dying in a
tragedy is losing one’s
dignity, one’s right to
personal, exclusive mourning—a
myth, yes, but one
we’d like not to
have robbed in front
of our very faces.
Rubbed out, the smokestack
plantation mill burned down
in the mudslide with
surprising caution, the witnesses,
onlookers, townsfolk, germs. Considerate.
It’s time. That terrible
time again. The scene
in the movie where
they must go and
part—and we’re not
even really sure the
tenuity of their... Bored
people are cruel because
now comes the momentum
of last resort. Hell
and habitude incurred by
salesgirls with failed aplomb,
pulling, milling, mulling, pilling.
I try to get
you to talk to
me and prop you
up and stuff you
with projected imagined speech.
The charming part is
you do not speak
even then what I
want you to—and
this is called something.
Junior jurors run away.
The fact seems to
be, however, a bullet—
a heart attack, company
dinners, unrelated fifteenths trying
to begin the enterprise
quite. Too many call
this something—this resort—
I try to get
even then what I—
resilient green and shaky
the lives lengthen custodial
bliss, worthwhile forays, unsaid.
Like the Jewish homosexuals
in Proust, we were
poison-ivy heroes, forgotten
on outer limits, played
badly by cameo Demerol
memorials. Is it right
for the dim vision
before me to salute
the end of my
qualities with a glass
of gin? Sometimes, your
voice, an imitation, a
thing said, a point,
is enough to let
gentle nature have its
most ungentle way. The
thriller is ending.
The thriller has ended.
The thrills are gone.
Most profound and subtle sense
be with me, tonight—
my love has evacuated
their sentimental fluids in
borrowed clothes from another
generation—one I hear
about so often, never
see, and this makes
me very lonely, depraved,
abject, foregone, a wasp
and wisp and gasp
with lisp. The cusp
of my love is
love, I think. A
kind of Calvinism in
reverse, if you think
about it. Love, goodnight.
Poetry • Winter 2021 - Fast
Uncomprehending, overwhelming, combative
Regressive, regretful, insincere
Engulfed, disgraced, contrary, forgotten
Misbegotten, misshapen, miscellaneous mister.
Unscrupulous, overweening comrade-in-arms.
Regicidal regimental insectivore.
Englishman dispatched convivially forth,
Misty missiles misfiring mischievously.
Underwater ova combing
Regal regions inland.
Engines disbursing countrified fucks
Mislead meshugana Miss Mishkin.
Missing-the-mark, misery mistakes miso
For continental dish engendering
Insubordinate regurgitas—pregnancy—
Combustible overcoats—until
Dingdong: Helmeted wombats
Caress egrets, sinkholes.
Fried rice condoms go
Begging apes for cellophane terraria.
U owe community
Wreathes, rental-income, inch-long
Engravings your racist coot forges.
Miss us, miscreant? Miss missing?
Apprehensive, well-meaning, we’ve
Aggressively retched in sync,
Unfed, effaced, eerily gotten,
Gotten by happenstance, skeletally, Sir.











