Facing Forwards / Tree Dance
By Sarah Deckro
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an independent creative arts journal
By Sarah Deckro
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By Cameron Mitchell
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Mother pushes us out the door and across the porch, yelling for us to hurry
“Come on,” my mother says, reaching
her arm out, urging my sister to get in the car. …
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By Teresa Morse
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A
fledgling fell from the steep
elm branches last night, never learning
to fly. We crept over dew, thinking it asleep,
and learned the truth.
Hallmark strangeness
of childhood, finding things can die.
Like learning our parents had names,
it tumbled us out of ourselves
into an expanding world
where the metallic twist of pennies
on tongues echoed
in blood.
Life released slowly to us, unfolding
letting us stay small and close.
But it rushed
when we lifted feathers
limp and cold, light,
and folded death in a box
atop a broken nest.
If life came all at once,
we could never learn to breathe,
to speak. Never learn bird and flight and tree,
fall or death or broken,
never
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By Jordan Blum & Ari Rosenschein
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Ari Rosenschein is a Seattle-based writer whose essays and fiction appear in Entropy, Noisey, Drunk Monkeys, P.S. I Love You, Observer, The Big Takeover, PopMatters, and elsewhere. He holds an MFA in creative writing from Antioch Los Angeles. A lifelong musician, Ari currently records and performs with his bands, The Royal Oui and
In this episode of Cover to Cover with . . ., Editor-in-Chief Jordan Blum speaks with Rosenschein about the creation and reception of Coasting, as well as his experiences as a musician and music journalist.
By Abegail Morley
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We all start in water ‒ endure its fullness,
bellies hoarding each molecule,
the swell of its ocean yelling
to our bones.
So when her tide breaks,
she’s hauled from
the house with the knowledge
she’s rupturing.
I brim mid-stride
on the uneven pavement, split our blood
for the first time. She watches me
glisten across tarmac,
takes her fulsome weight from the kerb
to the taxi, hopes to replenish
us both with a sack full of saline,
knows
she’s not the right one
to receive the cuckoo-baby nestling
in the thud of her pelvic bones.
– Abegail Morley…
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By Heather Warren
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You are four years old. Your father hands you a brick. He says, “This is lighter than it feels.”
You are in a garage. The walls are cluttered with newspaper – photos of aftermaths. Rusted tools hang from the ceiling. The concrete floor is splattered with grease. Your father grunts against a band saw. Sawdust floats into your breath.
You drop the brick while you are testing its lightness. You stare at the blood. You stare at your separation. Your toenail ripped off. The flesh underneath is hot pink. You can’t remember if you cried.
Your father begins sanding wood.
– Heather Warren…
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By Karolina Zapal
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Women tend to apologize. I, a woman, toss apologies here & there, as if playing ring toss to win the world. I do not aim at a singular target. I pick up ducks whose colored dots mean something—a different reason for guilt. & guilt-trips, though they are inherently trips, burrow me, the traveler, in inner-city first-floor hotel rooms, where the view is dark & damp; frankly there is no view at all. Women, my apologies. I am #sorrynotsorry for the #sorrynotsorry movement, which did not win the war on apology, but did equip the troops with a bossier attitude. People who interact with me, including women, take my apologies for granted; another shipment lies in wait.
The apology
epidemic extends to women writers, specifically those writing nonfiction.…
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