Dead Bugs

By Samuel Zagula

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My friend did not have enough money for a broom. He only had a dollar fifty. A broom was four dollars. He needed the broom because he wanted to sweep the dead bugs off his floor. Bugs had a silly habit of dying in the middle of my friend’s room and staying there until somebody did something about it. My friend did not want to pick up the dead bugs even if they were wrapped in a tissue. That was still too close to the dead bugs for his liking. A broom was a good tool for dead bugs. With a broom he could get rid of the bugs while staying sufficiently distant from them. He could pretend that he and the dead bugs resided on separate planes of existence.…

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Short Walk at Sunset

By Paul Bluestein

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The old man and his old dog walk slowly,
their summer shadows stretched out long
ahead of them.
Behind them, the sun fights to remain in the sky
even though it has lost this contest
for billions of years and will soon,
in a green flash,  surrender to the night,
only to rise up in the morning,
born again.

For the old man, it is a short walk
at the end of a long day and he will,
like the sun, soon be on the other side
of the world, out of sight and in darkness.
For now, though, there will be shared food,
the evening news,
and time to rest in the chair by the window
while he watches his old dog’s flank
rise and fall with each breath.…

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Chubasco

By Benjamin Murray

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Two bald eagles soared overhead, circling each other as the afternoon sun started its decline, and we were on our backs, admiring the day, listening to the water clap against the hull of the Chubasco. The docks were still, and we looked at the row of sailboats bobbing in rhythm, slowed by the wall of tires and old wood that surrounded the marina. No one was in sight. The eagles flew to the wooded hillside across the bay, a fish caught in the talons of one.

“Do you think it’ll pick up? The wind?” Mary shifted her back with the hull’s subtle movement. Her brown hair, long as ever, splayed against the dirty white fiberglass.

“Eventually.” I stood and stretched. Eventually, this damned boat will be out of our hands.…

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Cover to Cover with . . . Dominique Carson

By Dominique Carson & Jordan Blum

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Dominique Carson

Dominque Carson is an award-winning community activist, journalist, researcher, and massage therapist. She’s written for NBC News, Ebony, Soultrain.com, and Singersroom.com, among other outlets, and has interviewed a wide range of artists, including Charlie Wilson, Patti Labelle, Tito Jackson, The Isley Brothers, and Regina Belle. Recently, she published a biography called Jon B: Are You Still Down? (which examines the life of R&B icon Jon B). She’s also working on a journaling project regarding the National Women’s History Museum, as well as her next book, The Invisible Betty Boop.

In this episode of Cover to Cover with . . ., Editor-in-Chief Jordan Blum speaks with Carson about her various career paths; her love of music, writing, and helping others; and how she’s been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.…

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Ohio Autumn

By Carol Hamilton

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Their rakes lay forgotten.
Stephen runs, red knitted cap,
red cheeks, the little girls
chasing, one wearing a brace
on her leg. They dash
through cut-glass air to tumble
in the cold flakes of brilliant color
piled thick from the woods …
too many … like trying
to rake in all the stars
and clear the night sky.
But we tried, all of us,
’til our arms ached
even into sleep. In those days
we burned great smoldering heaps,
and the air was scented
with smoke until after first snow.
Stephen is ever aloft
in this photo, one leg kicked back,
one leaping ahead,
and nothing, not one thing,
I promise myself,
has changed in all these years.

– Carol Hamilton

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Ink Like Black Clouds

By Abigail Miles

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           My brother has a tattoo of a dark cloud on the inside of his left forearm, though if you ask him he will deny the fact that it is a cloud at all. When I look at it, all I see is swirled up ink.

            “I don’t know, it just looks cool,” he’ll say to anyone who asks what it is or what it means, and I can’t help but think of Oscar Wilde with his theory of aestheticism. “Art for art’s sake,” he’d say, and my brother would probably agree, even though he probably also wouldn’t entirely know what he was agreeing with.

            When visiting our grandmother he covers it up with sleeves, knowing that she’d likely curse him to hell if she ever caught sight of it, and I can imagine he probably fears she would actually have the power to carry that out.…

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