Interview w/ Nan Sanders Pokerwinski

By Carol Smallwood

Posted on

Nan Sanders Pokerwinski

Nan Sanders Pokerwinski was a science writer at the Detroit Free Press for more than a decade, and she worked as a science writer for the University of Michigan News Service for fourteen years. She’s been a contributing editor to Health and Alternative Medicine magazines and has written for More, Fitness, Dallas Morning News, and other print and online publications. Her journalistic byline is Nancy Ross-Flanigan and she’s received a Pulitzer nomination and several awards.

What awards has Mango Rash won so far? How did you come to write it and how long did it take?

Mango Rash won first place in the memoir/nonfiction category of the 2018 Pacific Northwest Writers Association Literary Awards and was a finalist for the Northern Colorado Writers Top of the Mountain Book Award, the Tucson Festival of Books Literary Awards (twice), and the 43rd New Millennium Writings Literary Awards.…

...continue reading

Veneration

By Joe Baumann

Posted on

     The church made of ice did not melt despite the air so hot it smelled like breath exhaled from a mouth full of never-brushed teeth.  Children loosed in the park to traumatize one another on the monkey bars and cargo nets were the first to see it, eyes glazing down the long hill as they kicked high on the swings whose rubber seats burned the undersides of their thighs.  They stared and pointed, then screeched for their harried caregivers, who allowed themselves to be yanked down the path that drizzled into the valley marking the middle of the park, where a pair of tattered and abused baseball fields sprouted weeds along the baselines.  The dugouts were home to tetanus, used condoms, empty beer cans.

     When the first mother saw what her son was gawking at, yanking her arm so hard she thought her shoulder would pop out of its socket, she felt the blood leave her head, the perspiration caked at her hairline evaporating like a fine mist. …

...continue reading

Crew Cut

By Sandra Kolankiewicz

Posted on

You’ve told me more about Saturday nights
            than I want to know.  Fridays were big at
                        our house: paycheck, bar, pan to the crown when
            he came home swinging.  The morning after
was like church a day early: guilt.  Always

a headache in cast iron, no buses
            but two cars in the driveway, a stack of
                        bills paid for during the week.  By the fifth
            day, he wanted to be a child again,
swagger like a teen inside a middle

aged paunch, expectations for life thwarted
            by time and poor decisions, a father, 
                        lost and overboard in a leaky
            life boat, briefly sharing provisions while
eyeing the life preservers and the oars.

– Sandra Kolankiewicz

...continue reading

Two Dreamers in a Well

By Keith Raymond

Posted on

The cat crouched in the corner of the tent hissing, drawing in its scent if it could. She stared fixedly at Abdullah while he painted the final card. He lifted it up and waved it in the air to dry.

Nardil nearly snatched the card from Abdullah’s hand, while gathering up the rest of the set. The boy raced toward the flap, clutching them tightly in his fist. He turned once to look at the artist and was gone.

Nardil ran through the coming dust storm toward the Mamluk General’s luxurious tent. He was proud to have the task of presenting the tarot to the great man. He high-stepped even though his scrawny legs were getting caught up in his tattered clothes.

Safiya, his younger sister, crouched outside the artist’s tent, waiting for him.…

...continue reading

Brooks Range is Where I Thought I Might Die

By Preston Eagan

Posted on

Sitting still, waiting to descend 
just a layer of fogged glass 
keeping me from you.

Trees growing on your cheeks,
chin in your palm.
You’re frightened, I know.

Yet the sun splays on the dashboard and
you see the moose, as I do, swimming 
in the pond—black berries along its shore.

Soon, the plane kisses the ground.
Something has left you.

– Preston Eagan

...continue reading

Using Literacy and Education to Cope with Anxiety

By Skyler Metviner

Posted on

The Troll on the Bridge

I have been singing the same song in my head for twenty minutes now. It’s not that it’s my favorite song or that I don’t know lyrics to any others. I don’t know why I feel so compelled to sing it, but I do know that it was three minutes and seven seconds long and that its title was five words long. I also knew that if I picked up a rock to examine it, I would have to start the chorus over again because I would be too perplexed on which way the rock should sit to think about the words. North, south, left, or right, either way it wasn’t how it should be situated and….shit. It’s the troll again.     …

...continue reading

Cardinal

By Jennifer Brown

Posted on

I remember which way to go if I can face north
& close my eyes: at home, the Tillmans’ house

was north & stood in for the small dipper, somewhere
below the treeline. East was the city, too small

to light the sky orange or at all, the searchlights
from the airport probing nervously a clouded night,

saying please come home, so good to see you. West
was the back yard, over which my father launched

crude bottle rockets on summer nights, the best ones
making it to the cornfield past the property-line,

& we imagined them arcing over the barn, too,
burying their spent heads in the woods beyond.…

...continue reading