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Showing results for 2023

April 16, 2023 | fucked up modern love essays

People Can Be Criminals: Tupperware Thief

Sarah Swinwood

He stole my Tupperware, the largest one in a glass Pyrex set.

April 14, 2023 | Trip Reports

Vibe Check From God

md wheatley

I was telling stories. I was enjoying music. I was proselytizing. I was observing.

April 14, 2023 | Nonfiction

Let’s Take a Selfie

Wild Card

His white face is red. Mom taught me that people turn red like tomatoes when they’re drunk. I look around and see pink and red faces all around me.

 

April 13, 2023 | Poetry

two poems

Margaret McGowan

after Charles Bukowski

April 13, 2023 | Fiction

Hormesis

Peter Lasch

When they first met dirty talk felt like solving timed coding challenges at a job interview.

April 12, 2023 | Poetry

5 Poems

Catherine Spino

Every orgasm I am not having is a poem in process.

April 12, 2023 | Fiction

Quiet, Silent, Beautiful

Autumn Christian

She was the sudden presence that filled the delivery room like a creation spirit pressing his thumb to make a wrinkle in space.

April 11, 2023 | Poetry

Inscriptions from Ghislaine Maxwell's Prison Cell

René Bennett

The body rotates its symbols / like a stereoscope

April 10, 2023 | Fiction

Fun Can Kill You

Ariel Courage

I fall asleep on the First Date. It happens when we're cresting the chain hill of a roller coaster called Sallie Mae.

April 9, 2023 | Rejected Modern Love Essay

The Sex Lives of Parents in the Time of School Shootings

Laura Jean Baker

Sex would remain forever yoked to this school shooting, grief combined with an uncanny moment of clarity: life won’t be the same after this, regardless.

April 7, 2023 | Poetry

Written on the Wall of an Invisible Temple While Brimming with Love

Patrick Kosiewicz

I’m flinging sparks at a desk 
in the cold cell of civilization’s midnight 
 

April 7, 2023 | Trip Reports

The Ogre

Gabriel Hart

When he stands in the living room fully erect, wearing nothing but blue corduroy shorts cut off so high the pockets peek out, he holds a bicycle chain lock above his head victoriously, like a sword from stone; a makeshift weapon, we can see it’s stained with another man’s blood.

April 6, 2023 | Fiction

The Elevator

Ivan Kenneally

When I was ten years old something happened, an event I never understood

April 5, 2023 | Fiction

How I Got my Hair Back

Colene Lee

I've finished packing and am leaving. Ten, nine, eight, seven . . . .

April 4, 2023 | Poetry

Takeout

Laughlin Cole

I'm sick...

April 3, 2023 | Nonfiction

His mind was a country I wanted to be lost in

Jennifer Robin 

PS: My computer is really going nuts. If I can use one of your spare ones, I may need it sooner rather than later.

April 2, 2023 | fucked up modern love essays

The Third

Lizzy Lemieux

Sophie had recently gone through a break up. I don’t remember her ex's name. I do remember the striking legibility of the word VIOLENCE. 

March 31, 2023 | Poetry

Three Poems

Lauren Ireland

I am torn with longing for many unnameable things.

March 30, 2023 | Sports

The First 900

Carson Pytell

I wasn't surprised that he told me he used to skate, everyone did, but it felt like I did take a bump when he told me I must be my father's son.

March 30, 2023 | Poetry

In Praise of Burning Books

Chris R. Morgan

there was nothing special in the Library of Alexandria

March 29, 2023 | Nonfiction

Free Will and Determinism at a School for Disturbed Children

J.J. Marks

One day at the school for disturbed children I attended, a boy lit his pubes on fire.

March 28, 2023 | Fiction

Black Girl Magic

Kyle Kirshbom

There’s something so sexy about a hot girl apologizing for my behavior.

March 27, 2023 | Nonfiction

The Hunter

Laughlin Cole

The first thing I killed was a coyote. Grandpa pointed out that the coyote was a mother. Her belly sagged a few inches above the grass. Her front right leg caught in a wire trap. Grandpa handed me his

March 27, 2023 | Fiction

Toothbrush Horror Story

Greta Rainbow

Toothpaste dripped and stained the rubber grip. The bristles were yellowed, fanned out and frayed, like a spiky cleaning tool that should go nowhere near the mouth. Some of the bristles were actually hairs.

March 26, 2023 | Rejected Modern Love Essay

We Talked to Scientists About Desire

Kathleen Radigan

At night, we lay on unmoored mattresses, pressing hands over our eyes to block out spears of light from the street. We cursed our naked windows.

March 24, 2023 | Fiction

The Secret

Mohammad Rafiq

What the Mother wanted to show us might be different from what we wanted to see.

March 23, 2023 | Fiction

2 Fictions

 Katie Gene Friedman

“My grandma drinks that,” the kid ahead of me at Duane Reade snarks at my six-pack of Ensure bottles.

March 22, 2023 | Poetry

3 Poems

Tom Will

It does not make any noise but it works.

March 21, 2023 | Fiction

Blisters

Molly Weisgrau

Blisters is a game where you sit on the floor on either side of a candle and hold little fingers like a pinky swear above the flame until someone lets go.
 

March 20, 2023 | Fiction

Hand on Thigh

Lexi Anderson

It’s me and Helena. Helena and me.