All Stories, General Fiction

Boneyard Blues by John Vander

Chuckata-thuck Chuckata-thuck  Chuckata-thuck Chuckata-thuck …

The rhythm of the boxcar rumbling down the track reminds Billy of a song he wrote a long time ago, back when he was still playing for nickels and dimes outside the lumber yards and cotton mills along the Mississippi River. Although he hasn’t sung the thing in years, he can still remember the words.

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All Stories, General Fiction

The Chicken Cutlet Bra by Lisa Shimotakahara

First off, I’m a bra expert. I came by my bra expertise unwillingly. I was born flat-chested.

I understand that you, reader person, may not find my subject relatable if you personally have not experienced flat-chestedness – You haven’t walked around in my shoes. You haven’t walked around in my bra.

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All Stories, General Fiction

The Ex-Poet by Michael Bloor

By and large, old age doesn’t suit poets. I’m not saying that, once they pick up their pensions, all of them start to regret that they didn’t crash and burn in their twenties, like Keats, Shelley & Co. Or that they start experimenting with monkey gland injections, like poor old Yeats. Nor that there aren’t quite a number of poets, like Seamas Heaney, who could keep the pot stirring through all the transitions of age (indeed, I know a couple of pensioner poets myself).

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All Stories, General Fiction

Barang by Alex Sinclair

Sihanoukville began dressing itself in a fresh coating of sleaze just as the night bruised the evening’s amber face.

Its nocturnal denizens awakened bleary-eyed to crawl out of a thousand tacky rooms and flee the judgement of mirrors, desperate for another drink, another fix, another sordid five-dollar fuck.

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All Stories, General Fiction

The Rule of Unintended Cataquences by Bob Freeman

The two cats spoke as cats do, ears twitching, signaling, plotting, slowly inching forward one muscle at a time. This was no time for meows, purrs, or broken twigs. Something interesting jiggled in the deep grass, and they needed to get closer.

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All Stories, General Fiction

Just Desserts by Andrew Rodgers

There weren’t many restaurants Harold still tolerated. Most were too crowded – like the buffet down the street which clearly had a busing arrangement with the local nursing home. Others were just too damn expensive. Harold also hated theme restaurants, anything cooked with cabbage, and food from countries that bordered the Mediterranean.

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All Stories, General Fiction

Half Moon Above Seoul Central Park by Yejun Chun

Everyone needs to cry. Everyone needs to cry because it is not easy to live by simply breathing in this modern world. Everyone becomes upset by something, usually the smallest things that went wrong. Something that was out of their control, something that was not scheduled. An argument with a lover on the morning breakfast table. A sudden insult from a close friend that went too far and the thoughts following the insult going even further inside the mind. It’s the small things. Usually.

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All Stories, General Fiction

Teeth by Amy Katherine DeBellis

Before my Hinge date I amuse myself by making faces in the mirror. I purse my mouth like an overripe strawberry, beckoning future rot. I slide oil through my hair, expensive oil that’s supposed to be very different from the grease that will seep through the roots after two days without a wash. A few minutes before sunset I slip on my combat boots and trendy trench coat and we’re out the door, me and the fragile home of my body.

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