Brass & Blue Plexiglass

by Gregory Crosby On Seeing the Donald Judd Show at MoMA During the Pandemic No one ever thinks outside the box, unless it’s an oblong box, or a sculpture designed in one mind but fabricated by others. So much is fabricated by others. Is America a good idea poorly executed, or a bad idea brought

Crazy

by Susana H. Case Boy crazy, the doctor tsked— the phrase lodged in my mother’s throat, as she made sure she heard, repeating it correctly. She was easily fooled by the right diplomas. He prescribed black and aqua pills. I lost time in there; days ballooned away from me. Life is a candy stand with

Talking to Strangers

by Peter Neil Carroll I like talking to strangers when I travel though limit my curiosity to chit-chat, so yesterday on the plane to New York I noticed a light-haired flight attendant whose Irish face reminded me of Caroline Kennedy. I asked in a friendly way if she was leaving home or heading home. She

Attachment Theory

by Kara Arguello We were over before the first plane hit. I just hadn’t told him yet. There would be no wedding party in mountain air, no wine-soaked dancing in the lodge. Life was a marathon of laughs turning to quarrels in bars, cigarettes, smashed dashboards, hangover mornings in a narrow bed. I wanted to

#YesAllWomen

by Kara Arguello Ease up Calm down Soften up Back down Hush up Simmer down Tighten up Slim down Wake up Quiet down Toughen up Lie down Shape up Settle down Wise up Tied down Fucked up Not beaten down Kara ArguelloKara Arguello was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and now lives, works, cooks,

A Constellation of Poets

by Jordi Alonso Rumi and Khayyam sang of god––or wine; Fitzgerald and Millay both liked their gin with or without a twist of Persian lime Dorothy Parker played bridge to drink and win, and Oscar Wilde was fond of chilled champagne. Poor Dylan Thomas had a glass of rye too many and though he did