THE CRUELTY VIRTUES by Seth Brady Tucker
"Solace" is the opening poem of Seth Brady Tucker's new collection, The Cruelty Virtues released by 3: A Taos Press. This is Tucker's third poetry collection. In "Solace," a father observes his children riding skateboards on a half pipe while the speaker views from above behind glass: A man parks ... Read More
3 by Kathy Joyce
"Baseball" is the opening story of Kathy Joyce's debut collection, 3, out now from Ristretto Books, the book arm of Epiphany literary journal. Originally published in Evergreen Review, "Baseball" recounts the narrator's journey into Yankee fandom and bananas with a deliciously goth schtick: ... Read More
THE MORGUE KEEPER by Ruyan Meng
Ruyan Meng's debut novel, The Morgue Keeper, opens with Qing Yuan tending to the corpse of a mother recently delivered.... by Ruyan Meng ... Read More
LOST LAMBS by Madeline Cash
The gnat situation in the church was getting out of hand. It was Miss Winkle’s fault, she had brought the gnats and this was unforgivable, not in the eyes of God but those of Father Andrew ... Read More
EPIPHANY NO. 35 | “Metamorphosis” by Edidiong Uzoma Essien
In Epiphany No. 35: Recognition's issue, editor in chief Sara Lippmann gathers a brilliant collection of stories and poems. In her first Letter from the Editor, Lippmann writes: "Recognize yourself in 'Metamorphisis,' Edidiong Uzoma Essien's eviscerating subversion of the Kafkian trope which takes on sex work, fantasy, revenge, class, and ... Read More
NORTH COUNTRY by Matt Bondurant
North Country by Matt Bondurant released from Blackstone Publishing in November 2025. The literary thriller opens with "Two children of the North Country, up before dawn," a sort of preamble detailing a traumatic moment in the main character's childhood: Their spoons clinked in unison as they ate cereal in the ... Read More
HOLLER, CHILD by LaToya Watkins
LaToya Watkins' collection Holler Child released from Tiny Reparations Books in 2023 and was a finalist for the National Book Award. I first read Watkins' short story "Cutting Horse" and this is where I fell in love with her storytelling. I first heard her read at the 2025 Longleaf Writer's ... Read More
CODE by Charlotte Pence
"Orderly" is the first poem in Charlotte Pence's poetry collection Code, out from Black Lawrence Press. The collection released in 2022. I had the honor of hearing Pence read this summer at the Longleaf Writer's Conference and get a signed copy at the local bookstore, Sundog Books. I find myself ... Read More
GHOST DOGS by Andre Dubus III
I had the honor of being in Andre Dubus III's fiction workshop at Aspen Words. Great group of writers led by Dubus, a dynamic and compassionate workshop leader. He will be featured at the Longleaf Writers Conference on the Gulf ... Read More
WE DESERVE THE GODS WE ASK FOR by Seth Brady Tucker
Had the pleasure of meeting Seth Brady Tucker and a few of the Longleaf group at the Longleaf Writers Conference booth at AWP this year. One of the best parts of AWP is discovering and rediscovering communities and books. Right now, I'm enjoying "Beautiful Boys in Brodie Helmets," the first ... Read More
NERVOSITIES by John Madera
I had the pleasure of hearing John Madera read from his debut flash fiction collection, Nervosities at the KGB Bar in NYC a few weeks ago. Enjoying "Some Varieties of Being and other Non Sequiturs," the first story in the collection of innovative, word-bending flash fiction released by Anti-Oedipus Press ... Read More
WE CONTAIN LANDSCAPES by Patrycja Humienik
Enjoying "Eros and Sorrow" in Patrycja Humienik's poetry collection, We Contain Landscapes (Tin House): "I'm crying after sex. Kettle's going off / and off—the arrows in that / sound could puncture even steel. / I pour slowly, opening a curtain / in the back of mind...." ... Read More
DON’T GO CRAZY WITHOUT ME: A Tragicomic Memoir by Deborah A. Lott
Enjoying the first chapter, "Gotchernose," in Don't Go Crazy Without Me (Red Hen Press) by Deborah A. Lott: "'Gotchernose,' he'd say. Then he'd sweep his hand back across my face and reveal his empty palm to suggest no harm done! and put my nose back on. Roy's trick said that even the most dire ... Read More
ALBA AND OTHER SONGS: Poems and Poemas by Fred Arroyo
Enjoying "Alba Blanca" the first poem in Fred Arroyo's collection Alba and Other Songs released from Gunpowder Press: "My father hardly ever said a word to me. / He held his language, his family / his lovely garden so close to his rolled up sleeves, so tight / within his fists, that words, ... Read More
BETTER TO CRY NOW: Shaping the Flow of a Gay Black Man by Geoffrey Newman
Enjoying Better to Cry Now: Shaping the Flow of a Gay Black Man, a memoir by Geoffrey Newman and out from River Grove Books: Act I: Striving (1956-1964) My French teacher at Calvin Coolidge Public High School in Washington, DC, made a troubling announcement on my first day of tenth grade. "Neither ... Read More
WHITE MULBERRY by Rosa Kwon Easton
Enjoying White Mulberry by Rosa Kwon Easton out from Lake Union Publishing: "...Once, she had seen some young men at the market staring at her sister like this—like she was something they wanted to own. While Bohbeh had blushed at the men's attention, Miyoung had thrust herself into their view. Born in ... Read More
THE TUTOR by Marilee Albert
Enjoying The Tutor, a novel by Marilee Albert, out from Rare Bird Books: "...I caress the smooth stone of the famous martyr burned at the stake for heresy five hundred years ago and muse on his sacrifice. Would anyone today give their life for a cause...?" ... Read More
MY HERESIES by Alina Stefanescu
Enjoying the first poem in My Heresies (Sarabande Books), a poetry collection by Alina Stefanescu: "I am eating raw violets / I am curious about the possessing / in the having been possessed...." I was delighted to receive her first signed copy at AWP 2025 in Los Angeles, California ... Read More
“Frittura” by Judith Goode: Gertrude Stein Award Winner
"They were as light and fluffy as the small white clouds that floated across an otherwise spotless blue sky, of which Raffie and Kip had an unobstructed view from the balcony where they feasted on the fried scallops, clams, shrimp, calamari, and other seafood on the frittura platter. Raffie’s father ... Read More
Monica Marioni
Monica Marioni was born near Treviso in 1972, but moved to the area of Vicenza when she was still very young, and here she still lives several months a year. She instinctively approached art during her studies, enrolling at the Vicenza Institute of Art; nevertheless, she obtained a degree in ... Read More
Valentine’s Day Is Chaucer’s Bitch
I've just been reminded as to why I find Valentine's Day so interestingly ironic. Notice I did not use the word moronic. They only sound alike. It should be noted that many return to St. Valentine as a habit of affection, so I am truly sorry to burst bubbles--well, not ... Read More
Things You Should Be Doing Instead of Reading Kim Kardashian Articles
Get an enema --- i.e., clean out your shit. 2. Petition the Pulitzer Board for the Johnson, Wallace, Russell debacle. 3. Read a book. About something important. 4. Go watch her video. No words needed. 5. Get your nails done. So you can be just like Kim Kardashian. 6. Study ... Read More

