fall 2020
Table of Contents
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What We Do When We Run Out of Elephants
Shareen K. Murayama
Bracketed
A Post-Apocalyptic Nightmare
Danielle Badra
Okapi Wood Bison Kristi Maxwell
verses upon the burning of our house
Amanda Merpaw
Neurons, Metal, Seed
Reading Rocks and Mountains
Susan Landgraf
Bingo Card for the End Times
Milla van der Have
Netsuke
When We Wake Together in a Lost City
Iris Jamahl Dunkle
One exists
The embroidering light
you learn
J.I. Kleinberg
Fragments of a World
Dayna Patterson
In a Dark Field
Jesse Sensibar
The Northern Flicker
Identic
Andrew Lafleche
Pattern Recognition
Tolu Oloruntoba
from Vanishing Twin Syndrome: VII
James Cagney
My Father's House
A.N. Higgins
The Narrow Road to Deep Marriage
John Wall Barger
Routes on the Red Subarctic Archipelago Tongue Heather Simeney MacLeod
Horses Innocence, Experience
Ryan Eavis
Netsuke
Roots of birch attach river to river
bank: a taut fist.
How to hold that branching—
Last time I lay on the grass
in the itch, the full scent of mint and risk
and looked at the sky I was another—
The river that gray tumult has wooled me out
or into my self, what revolution
against life’s blight think of the ghost of elms—
Here, sap sings sticky, air veins birdsong,
river rends ears open against— through glass—
How to compress, miniaturize—
freckled granite, flowing water, peeling birch
into solid form: a charm-stone built
to ward off the catastrophe of the daily—
Tie its carved weight against me. Ballast.