The First Kiss

by Diana Raab As a memoir writer, I do a great deal of reminiscing both on the page and in conversations with friends and family. Last year I entered my seventh decade and realized that I’ve created enough memories for a number of lifetimes. At this point in my history and the history of the

Decisions

by Daniel Acosta, Jr. It was during my zero-period class in my senior year (that started at 7:30, rather than the usual 8:30 time for most of the students) with my English teacher, Mrs. Briggs, that I truly accepted my Mexican identity. My zero-period class had several exceptional students; I guess I was one of

Sonny No More

by Marco Etheridge Sonny don’t see much these days, leastwise not looking forward. Tomorrow just blank space, like staring into an empty mirror. Backward, now that’s a different story. Too many yesterdays crowding Sonny’s head like to bust his skull wide open. Ten thousand memories screaming, clawing for revenge, or scalding him with hellfire. Yeah,

Königsberg

by Robert Boucheron The ferry left at dawn and plowed through choppy seas. I stood by the rail on deck, chilled by spray and tense with adventure. Experienced travelers sat on benches in the warm, well-lighted cabin. Sensible people, they read newspapers, sipped from bottles, and ate from wrappers food they had the foresight to

On Sale

by Sergey Bolmat She was shopping online and saw that independence was on sale. It was so cheap she couldn’t believe her eyes. Maybe it was made in China, she thought, and then she thought that she had to check the seller’s location. And the delivery price, of course. The item could be cheap, but

resistance

By Naomi Bindman nestled in branches of rainbow egg laden trees a RESIST sign blooms Naomi BindmanNaomi Bindman has published in Mothering, So to Speak, Friends Journal, Consilience, Import Sky, Honeyguide, Synchroniciti, First Literary Review—East, South Florida Poetry Journal, Lightwood Magazine, El Portal Literary Journal and on Her Own Words podcast. She was a finalist in the DiBiase Poetry Contest, won Dogwood Journal’s Creative