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Maybe the end of the world wasn’t fire and explosions and lawlessness and bodies in the streets. Maybe the end of the world was some smaller thing.
By Richard Scott LarsonMarch 2023At twenty you’ve managed to erase / our dad’s face from your own, / blacked out his sharp cheekbones / with roses, marked each eyelid / with an upside-down cross to distract / from his glossy brown irises.
By Reese MenefeeMarch 2023My mother didn’t like my going over to the Sambeauxs’. There was something mysterious and menacing about that house: a bloodcurdling scream, a silhouette of a knife in the window, a wolf on its hind legs with a leather tail scuffling along behind the juniper trees.
By Poe BallantineMarch 2023Prank calls, long-distance connections, secret messages
By Our ReadersFebruary 2023A Thousand Words features photography so rich with narrative that it tells a story all on its own.
February 2023Where do those lost socks / go? The ones that vanish / between washer and dryer, / submerge in suds and never / surface again?
By Rebecca BaggettJanuary 2023There were too many trees out back, some so high they were dangerous. If one of those passing storms came, the kind that tore off roofs and stripped shingles, a sky-high pine could definitely rip out its roots and crash down on our home.
By Davon LoebJanuary 2023Angel’s hooves stay planted, but I feel the question in his back, the offer to spin and gallop. I hold firm in my seat, knees forward, signaling to my horse that we should not move. He trusts me and squares his stance.
By JoDean NicoletteDecember 2022he used the Amazonian jujitsu death / grip to choke out the pharmacist / who wouldn’t give him his heart medication / until tomorrow — which, he admits, is when / it’s actually scheduled for pickup.
By Michael MarkDecember 2022When Nonna Venere visited, she arrived by train like in a movie, stepping down from the first-class compartment enveloped by smoke, wearing a cloche with a veil. She had four large suitcases and no gifts.
By Rosanna StaffaDecember 2022Personal, political, provocative writing delivered to your doorstep every month—without a single ad.
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