The Apartment
Analeah Loschiavo12.28.16
“Rudy looming behind the bathroom door. Rudy in the darkened pantry, his small teeth shining.” New short fiction by Analeah Loschiavo.
Walk Me To The You
Judyth Emanuel12.20.16
“Wore mask for a while. Hidden face created distinctive kind of obscureness. Wow. Everyone moved aside.” New short fiction by Judyth Emanuel.
this piñata is only fifty cents and a perfect receptacle for this candy that is also fifty cents
Meredith Maltby12.14.16
“One three-headed demon dog piñata with incisors as sharp as blades!” New very short fiction by Meredith Maltby.
I WAS A NORMAL HUSBAND, ETC.
Sebastian Castillo11.23.16
“The infant’s head wanted to take me to the forest where the teenagers are killing themselves, doing drugs, obsessing by moonlight. It’s right around the corner.” New short fiction by Sebastian Castillo.
WAIT FOR THE MOMENT WHEN MEANING BECOMES HASHTAG
Jon Cone & Rauan Klassnik11.16.16
“You’re going to have to do it yourself. Do it yourself in your sick little binary bullshit world.” A collaborative short play from Jon Cone and Rauan Klassnik.
It Doesn’t Matter
Erica Peplin11.02.16
“I went the park with my friend and she told me she wanted to kill herself. ‘I’m sick of it,’ she said. ‘Nobody calls me back.'” New short fiction by Erica Peplin.
Greta
Julia Dixon Evans10.26.16
“The next time the bed is empty when I wake up, Greta’s outside, splayed out naked on the back porch, trembling in her sleep.” New short fiction by Julia Dixon Evans.
Matches
Rachel Pafe10.12.16
“The landlord had sent over a slow moving, snow-haired man to repaint the walls after her roommate had killed herself two weeks ago.” New short fiction by Rachel Pafe.
Brain Bank
Matthew Vollmer09.28.16
“I read about the discovery of an Earthlike planet orbiting our nearest star, and though the planet is thought to be habitable, astronomers claim that the color of its sky would perpetually resemble our own during twilight in autumn.” New short fiction by Matthew Vollmer.
Bruxism
Grant Maierhofer09.21.16
“The event didn’t seem to matter nearly as much as the vying for narrative, the ritual search for beginning-middle-end.” New fiction by Grant Maierhofer.