Category: Writing (Page 36 of 50)
Spain in the Spring
by Evan L. Klein
Excerpts from “The Years,” a collection of interrelated flash fictions
by Michael Prihoda
The Year of Problems
Our parents have problems.
Dadaism Revisited
Gobs of various colors have burned themselves into my retinas. So that red blinks white and white blinks black. I stood so long and stared the way children stare at light bulbs. Bespeckled everything I saw for hours afterward. Jackson Pollock, an egoist with an unnatural ability to paint feeling. The way colors feel. Like taking a beautiful natural rainbow, unraveling, mangling, cutting it into bits and throwing it into a blender. It’s the art that we are sure we had created in some fit of rage in kindergarten. When all you needed was a grey crayon for your elephant.
Angry at the injustice of it all, you scribbled frantically in every other color, especially red. Maybe you even went over to the other tables and scribbled on the other classmates drawings, no one could stop you. Or when you were painting the walls around the ceiling and the phone rang; a startled splatter of paint that made it beyond the masking tape barrier, you stared at it for a split second, you contemplated signing just under it: “Jackson Pollock was here” and the date but instead go out to buy a gallon of ceiling white. Continue reading
An Afternoon in Brooklyn
by Joseph Giordano
Sylvia’s Birthday Party
By Irving A. Greenfield
Sparklers and Snakes
by Jack Helbig
The fault of sages
Love was there
spreading hope like jam over my taste buds.
Then the first skipping rope broke,
got snared on a fence and frayed.
I stole away on a subway train where
hundreds have gone walking into a warzone.
Amen to the end and the predator’s
happy-go-lucky disposition. One claw,
one tentacle, in flowing precise motion.
Another lifetime and it may be different,
tender as lovers beneath their first full moon,
or worse, like cartilage deteriorating.
Sister Holly
by Alex Haber
The Rest
Karen Corinne Herceg
My parents rest in drawers of steel,
within shiny, cushioned boxes
behind walls of stone.
Slid in like bakers’ trays,
but they will not rise,
will not resurrect, Continue reading
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