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By Alex Carrigan In her debut poetry chapbook Where Was I Again, Olivia Muenz presents two long poems to discuss matters such as loss, disability, alienation, and more. The chapbook consists of just a preface and the two poems, but does an incredible job making the reader find themselves in the mind of a neurodivergent speaker. The pieces were written while Muenz was bedridden from illness for several months, and shows what can emerge as one tries to keep themselves together in such a state.
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By Eleni Stephanides The year was 2013, and Montevideo— Uruguay’s capital city of 1.3 million—had been my home for the past seven months now.
In the time I’d lived in Uruguay, I’d been the Goldilocks of living situations—residing first with a young British expat, then with a divorced Uruguayan woman who worked from home. I would now be moving to a communal space that a friend had found on Mercadolibre (Uruguay's version of Craigslist). The Breadcrumbs widget will appear here on the published site.
By Bharti Bansal I am going to be 25 this year.
It sounds like a good number only when you remember that you are at an age when your mother got married. It seems a good deal to me when I realize that at my age, my mother had two kids already. But this isn’t the hard part. The Breadcrumbs widget will appear here on the published site.
By Owen Patterson I don't have a favorite childhood vacation memory. Although, one vacation does stand out.
In the mid '70s... I was 9 or 10 years old. We vacationed in Orlando, Florida. The Breadcrumbs widget will appear here on the published site.
By George Leipold It was an unseasonably warm day in April.
“I can’t go on another walk. We won’t find him.” I said with defeat and exhaustion in my voice. “I know,” said my roommate, “I’ll go.” The Breadcrumbs widget will appear here on the published site.
By Alex Carrigan Last year, I reviewed Howls from Hell, an anthology of horror literature from the online horror literature group HOWL Society. A group on Discord dedicated to all things horror, the previous anthology was a mission statement for the group and the kind of work that could emerge from their collective. One year later, the group is taking more risks when it comes to publishing horror literature with a new themed anthology.
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