All Stories, Fantasy, General Fiction

The Enormous Pacifier by Alice Kinerk

You’ve probably heard about this already, but one day some kids dug up an enormous pacifier, and in doing so pretty much brought chaos into the world. Apparently the kids were playing in the strip of woods by Route 42, just poking sticks in the embankment there, no thoughts of upsetting nesting bees, preventing future mudslides, or their moms having to pretreat their laundry stains afterward. Because where the dirt fell away, they uncovered something that shouldn’t have been there. A large, old, manmade hoop.

Continue reading “The Enormous Pacifier by Alice Kinerk”
All Stories, General Fiction

Confessions 1:07 by Kendra Yvette

This is my confessional right here. Instead of an old wooden box full of stale air, I sit on a rickety old concrete porch at a rusty metal table with a stained-glass top. I always stay in room 107. The seashell wallpaper makes me want to die, and the air stings with the putrid stench of vomit, but this room has a perfect view of Main Street. This motel is the only part of this hick town that’s worth a damn. I fill my glass ashtray, stained yellow with wear, with cigarette butts as I spill my sins and people watch.

Continue reading “Confessions 1:07 by Kendra Yvette”
All Stories, sunday whatever

Sunday Whatever – Leila and the Mimeo Revolution  by Dale Williams Barrigar

I’m standing in Euclid Square Park as I write this with an orange pen on repurposed paper (probably an angry, unpaid bill). (Later it will be typed).

I’m standing next to a small tree.

Tied to the tree are three dogs who I helped rescue, and who rescued me: Bandit, Boo and Colonel.

Continue reading “Sunday Whatever – Leila and the Mimeo Revolution  by Dale Williams Barrigar”
All Stories, General Fiction

Have Your Say by Scott Taylor

There were precious few ways of getting your point across in life and so Vern liked to shout at people.  He shouted at them in restaurants, he shouted at them in supermarkets, he screamed in their faces out on the street.  He would go in to get a sandwich and the woman would apply too little mayonnaise.

Continue reading “Have Your Say by Scott Taylor”
All Stories, Fantasy

The Master of Masters by Harrison Kim

Jimmy the Wizard and I stand in front of a large apartment complex.  Jimmy says that somewhere behind this wood and stucco facade my guardian angel shimmers.  It waits to be released. Jimmy takes two steps back.

“Examine the walls,” he says.

Continue reading “The Master of Masters by Harrison Kim”
All Stories, General Fiction

Killing Time by Michael Loyd Gray

I once shared a cell with a con from Detroit named Marty Ballantine. He had a blazing shock of red hair and was tall and looked more like an ex-basketball player than the head of accounting until his firm realized he was skimming. He had a young girlfriend on the side, an expensive marriage and mortgage, and combined with greed, he got caught. Big surprise. I couldn’t really picture him in a blue suit and red tie, slaving away at debits and credits. But his orange jumpsuit went well with his red hair.

Continue reading “Killing Time by Michael Loyd Gray”
All Stories, General Fiction

Dirty Screen by Christopher Ananias 

The ice cream the night before was so hard I couldn’t scoop it. Today it was a cloudy tub of sweet milk. The Budweiser, I swore off, was piss warm. Even so—with all my new promises made to Denny—that was disappointing. I clicked my dry mouth. Denny watched me like how the sparrow watches the hawk circling in the sky. She looked down at her bandaged hands. 

Continue reading “Dirty Screen by Christopher Ananias “
All Stories, Writers Reading

Writers Read by Michael Bloor

Re-Reading John Steinbeck’s The Acts of King Arthur and His Noble Knights

In my generation, every child in Britain grew up knowing at least three stories – the Christ story, that of Robin Hood, and that of King Arthur and his knights. The Arthurian Legend has been told and re-told by many different tellers for around one and a half thousand years.

Continue reading “Writers Read by Michael Bloor”
All Stories, Editor Picks, General Fiction, Short Fiction

Week 526- Humourisk

Of all things considered entertainment, comedy is the hardest to explain. Whether you spell it humor or humour (being based in the UK we will go with the latter), to my satisfaction no one has ever defined what makes something funny in one sentence.

Continue reading “Week 526- Humourisk”