fall 2015
Table of Contents
Return to Home PageQED A Moth In Rain Christopher Patton
Fault Vodka / Blame Juice Jamie Sharpe
Twenty-Five Weeks Rob Taylor
(Ouverture) Garry Thomas Morse
A Monday The Devil Valentina Cano
Can't Stomach Mitchell Grabois
Girl I Girl II Carolyn Supinka
Brains Lost to the Earth Melissa Nelson
Yellow Flowers The World Dream Ann Filemyr
a rose is a rose is a rose manhattan Nikki Reimer
The Day Everyone Realized Ron Riekki
The Stale Cold Smell of Morning Angela Rebrec
Alcohol Fast-slow Continuum Peycho Kanev
In the Cyberspace Icicle Changming Yuan
The Story of Chitin Giri Zoe Dagneault
the neighbors knew i divined water Hell is hot Allison DeLauer
A Fire Hydrant on Camino de la Amapola Good to See You Eleanor Kedney
revenge/reincarnation annie ross
The Insidious Susurration A Conversation Marie-Andree Auclair
Darkening Over Still Water Richard King Perkins II
Why, And for What Purpose Is There Something Ace Bogess
Saturday Night Charles Springer
what do you talk about desire derives pleasure aren't we missing every thing gary lundy
Word on the Street Henry Rappaport
Twenty-Five Weeks
Today a new poll: Vancouver is the least happy city in Canada!
In The Book I learn to “Crack the Crying Code” until I am late
for my Kitsilano dinner date with your mother. The steeple
at 8th and Maple is lined with long thin spears
so the seagull has nowhere to stand but atop the cross.
“I’m hungry” is low and weak. “I’m sick” is sudden, panicked
and long. At 6th, the stretch where CP Rail tore up community gardens
to survey, a few tulips climbing up around the tracks nonetheless.
“I’m bored” starts as coos then turns to fussing. At 4th, the Mexican
place filled with families overpaying for the early meal. At 2nd, a tiny
apartment we once balked at and a woman in a tube dress hanging
her bird feeder. Vancouver in the spring sun is a downhill walk.
Some nights, with the newly reopened window, I wake
to the sound of a woman’s heels against sidewalk four stories
below and am not sure if the sound is coming from inside me
until it has grown loud and then faded back out of range.
At York, rhododendrons. At Creelman, lilies and a man in a yellow shirt smoking.
Seismologists say 13,000 will die in the earthquake they’re certain will break
in your lifetime. At Whyte, the remnants of a garage sale in a cardboard box marked “Free”.
At Ogden, the ninth straight telephone pole stapled with ads for a comedy show.
There’s a whole section in the back of The Book about injuries.
If we sever your arm I’m to control the bleeding, clean the wound
and apply pressure. I’m to loosen your clothing in case you’re in shock.
I’m to wrap the arm in a cloth and pack it in ice.
“I’m uncomfortable” is whiny, nasal and continuous. “I’m in pain”
is loud, panicked and long—until the baby is breathless.
I apologise, your mother forgives and hands me a sandwich.
I sit on the blanket she packed before leaving for work.
We strategize, then sleep with our heads on each other’s knees,
you between us in the sand, until we wake to the cool of the sun
dipping into the ocean and the clicks of tourists’ cameras, seemingly
everywhere. For some people, you see, the sun goes other places.