107.1

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S A N TA CLARA REVIEW

volume 107 / issue 01


ALEXANDRA STROKINA / UNTITLED WATERCOLOR

SANTA

CLARA

REVIEW

SANTA CLARA REVIEW

SANTA CLARA REVIEW


S A N TA C L A R A R E V I E W EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ALLY O’CONNOR ASSOCIATE EDITOR MADDIE SYKES

PRODUCTION EDITOR MADELINE GOLLIVER

POETRY EDITOR ERIKA RASMUSSEN

ART EDITOR RHIANNON JANESCHILD

NONFICTION EDITOR DHANUSH SHETTY WEBMASTER KISH RAI MARKETING DIRECTOR JULIANNE XENAKIS

FICTION EDITOR DANNA D’ESOPO OWL EDITOR ANNIE LOEWEN FACULTY ADVISOR KIRK GLASER

ASSISTANT EDITORS POETRY

MARIA ORLANDI KELLAN WEINBERGER KATIE MCCORMICK ZHI-YING CHUA MOLLY WORFORD JANHVI GIDHA

FICTION

MEGHAN MALONE TARA TEDJARATI KATYA TRUSHCHANKOVA WILL KOLADA

NONFICTION

ANOUSHKA GUPTA ALEX WEISKOPF EMMA KULI SHENIR DENNIS

THE OWL

ALEXA ALFANO ELLIE FENG SARAH LACKEY

MARKETING

THOMAS FORD CHLOE SCHECHTER

EDITORIAL BOARD SAMUEL ANDERSON MARIALISA CARUSO TERESA CONTINO BEN ROOCK MIYA DRISCOLL

WALKER JONES EMMA LIGTENBERG ELENA MADDY TIMOTHY TROGLIA JR


TABLE OF CONTENTS POETRY 07 11 12 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 26 28 29 30 31 34


37 38 39 40 42 43 46 48 49 50 51 52 55 57 59 60

66


67 68 78 80 82 90 103

FICTION 69 92

NONFICTION /

2 32

/ 102

ART 14 /

15

/ RITUAL


16 17 44 45 62 63 /

64

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65 81 /

/

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volume 107 / issue 01


DEAR READER,

It is my honor to share this copy of Volume 107, Issue 1 of the Santa Clara Review with you. Please believe me when I say, there is magic in these pages. For 150 years, the Santa Clara Review and art thanks to the tireless work of enthusiastic Santa Clara University organization would not function as it does. I could not be more grateful for

I was fortunate to discover the Santa Clara Review lessons about the literary world and opened my eyes to my own strengths and I feel so thankful that life helped me to connect with this organization. It has been with me through all of the vicissitudes of my college experience and helped me to grow.

Santa Clara Review is honored to provide a space for the work of those of all backgrounds and strongly believes that the arts are a strong means for connection, emotion, and healing. Moreover, we extend a special thanks to our three featured


In addition to our wonderful contributors, none of this would be possible

supporting me from the day I arrived at the Santa Clara Review and for sharing us for the past decade. Your connection to this magazine is incredible, and the intangible gifts you share with students last a lifetime. For all of those who have supported the Santa Clara Review throughout its letting us share with you. Happy reading,

editor in chief



featured author

First Comes Marriage: My Not-So-Typical American Love Story, a book the Washington Post called “a charming, funny, heartbreaking memoir of faith, family, and the

Love Inshallah: The Secret Love Lives of Muslim American Women, Becoming: What Makes a Woman, and Beyond Belief: The Secret Lives of Women and Extreme Religion. Her other writing has appeared in the Washington Post, the LA Times, Al Jazeera, VIDA Review, the Rumpus, the and elsewhere. She is the recipient of a Cuyahoga County Creative Workforce Fellowship and an First Comes Marriage

Huda currently resides in California with her husband and three children.

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HUDA nonfiction

time inviting me to her parents’ home for dinner. Khala, the dolma leaves when we had parties. I told her that she’d gone to too much trouble. She said, “No, habibti dolma, I could tell this was a signa onions had all the marks of mastery. “Ashedeedkum my parents were not present to carry on the conversation. ies they are from, the neighborhoods they lived in, the people they knew. Born and raised in the United States, I felt the absence of this dialogue keenly, and I tried to compensate with stories about my mother and father, these moments of arrival were a point of connection, I asked, “How did you

I asked about Malaysia and learned that it was clean and beautiful

that evening. She sat at my side, listening to a conversation that had us both riveted. ily endured the Gulf War’s food shortages, power outages, and all night bomb raids by huddling together with family and neighbors, drinking tea

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HUDA and cracking watermelon seeds. Neda and her older sister, Yusra, made memory of the fear that had once gripped their lives. a city nearly two hours away from home. Yusra had been in her last year, Neda in her second. When they came to the United States, they were not able to transfer directly into another medical school. Yusra had been ac since graduated and was working in pharmaceuticals while she applied to biology. It hurt Neda and Yusra to have to repeat so much of their educa tion. I empathized with this, but what stood out most to me was that they’d lived in the dormitories when they were in medical school. I could not re

Scooping from the small mound of rice deposited onto my plate, I said, “My mom barely let me come to Santa Clara and live in the dorms. I

like me and so many of the women in my community. “Now is not the time. I helped myself to another serving of dolma and tried to make families we know here. I grew up being told that a girl doesn’t leave her does any of those things, people will talk about her, and if people talk about

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HUDA “Mashallah, I’m surprised to see you understand so much. I didn’t expect

hair, and wondered if she had not heard the same admonitions growing up, if she’d been allowed freedoms in high school that my parents had for bidden. I added. Neda reached for an extra spoon of qeema

Now it was my turn to laugh. “I think you had more freedom than I

urging me to take more food. I speared another dolma with my fork even though I felt as if my slacks were strangling my waist. My stomach was full, but all of a sudden my head felt so empty.

warned of the volatility of our community’s marriage market, that girls who were not married by thirty were treated as if they’d expired. I wondered what Neda and Yusra would think if they knew that my mother had been preparing me for marriage since puberty and that I was soon to be engaged to the son of our closest family friends, a boy who had a crush on me since we were children and who planned to ask my family for my hand in marriage. ***

father for my hand in marriage earlier that afternoon and that, with my father’s blessing, I had accepted.

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HUDA Neda’s family was congratulatory, as were the rest of our visitors. My engagement was unexpected but not unusual for a girl of my age in our community. I smiled all through the night, still months away from the fear and doubt that would chase me throughout my engagement, still years away from asking myself why I had made such a serious commitment so early on in life. Was it my religion? My culture? Me?

ar and I roomed together for nine months that stitched us together for life.

religion upon coming to the United States, giving up their prayers, their fasts, their abstinence from alcohol, and those who resisted the pull of, a

stopped to consider the stereotypes I, too, held of my own, the ways in which my understanding of my culture and my community lacked nuance or complexity. Growing up, there were so many losses that were obvious to me, our language, religion, food, and culture. However, this was a loss I’d never imagined, the opportunity to see yourself within an entire popula tion rather than a single immigrant community. It was precisely the absence of this wider population that made distance allow us to gather, our parents, spouses, and children in tow, we wore, our hairstyles, our naïve conservatism, how clueless we were to our How lucky we were to have found each other.

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featured poet

at Columbia University. He is the author of someone’s dead already Heaven Is All Goodbyes

demonstrating how, in the right hands, one mode might energize the other—keeping alternative orders of meaning alive in the face of radical

human rights. He has taught at detention centers around the country and University. He lives in San Francisco.

6|

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TONGO poetry

I talk facing away from the dead

You have to know how to cut a throat on the way to cutting a throat

Playing with couch ashes, I realized how weird the universe was. It exists in so many places. So many random things. It interrupts me when I am trying to dream. Like your clay correspondence, Lord I have twenty books next to a bullet Like an old man giving advice at the beginning of a revolution

I have a future It takes place in the diasporic South I have morning possessions Modern militancy I mean windows to the South I will walk on a missile for food

Will I be tied face to face with the country I murder Merge with us, Lord our old metal vs. the new metal our old metal vs. a pool of meandering imperialist faces

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TONGO

Instead of a chest cavity held tight It takes a violent middle man for me to talk to myself Stories that travel through other people’s stories

She killed on behalf of you, Lord I wore a machete all winter and no one asked me what it meant I read one thousand books in front of the world

ruling class art of utility

Wearing ceramic armor Musket progeny fantasizing through the art of the poor Black art hunted down like a dog Hand over my friends, Lord Lord, I think that I am going to die in a war

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TONGO Unelected white people in my small house

Church smells in their pockets No autobiography outside of small personal victories of violence and drug use Made in the image of God’s trinkets Chemical assurances that Black God to white God Black worker to white worker I think about you cautiously, Lord In the same way I think about my childhood, Lord Foxhole Friday nights Most of life is mute

Containing all modes of shallow introduction Introducing an unlisted planter class Speaking about fever and balance sheets

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TONGO

Fantasies about Black art Before I broke him

It’s a simple matter this revolution thing

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TONGO poetry

My money being

Bullet casings in the comb I learned their language immediately

Face to face

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TONGO poetry

With practice, I met every white person in the world

Nightstick, I know no other colors today

Night stick,

Now I am a white man’s son

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featured artist

based on imagery from his paintings, such as Walnut of Eden and Pros and Cons on his style of Salvador Dalí’s surrealist paintings as well as landscapes by on his work has been the 16th century Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch,

Arrival of the Flower Ship and Departure of the Winged Ship. Flowing Breach and Current. Three Graces and African Sonata merge human and

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VLADIMIR oil paint

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VLADIMIR oil paint

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VLADIMIR oil paint

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VLADIMIR oil paint

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ADRIANA poetry

It ends with oranges, as I work my way up, inside, rise to

the places you pry and I leak. and beating so fast, I fall to the foot of the feet of my tree. It starts with oranges.

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ARNO poetry

a man stays in the sun, despite gnats, caterpillars, and code red for the ultraviolet. He seems to fall asleep dead deep

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DAVID poetry

When the starlings convene Pressing their rude agenda, Noisily conferring over Charting precise choreography Not in applause but in a furtive Delight of power, disrupting Crucial committee business However, this year, Savvy to my intentions, Ignores the crack of my palms,

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GABRIEL poetry

I’m merely saving sermons from your shredder So what I was baptized In the north & I’ll die in broad day

Dickies canvas belt your father In the weeping Carport, wherever we were Wired together in our sleep, We understood his He got robbed, Face of feeling body Lighting candles as the mind Is trying on shoes Floodwater loud into arroyo summer we called Chaca & the Bastards from a pay phone It was perfect I didn’t hang up the receiver I let it dangle & I said

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GABRIEL poetry

Your voice No science to debunk

I swung Came riding to the channel you cut In the wash

& when I run my hand under your skirt Do I see skin

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MELA poetry

you were the child who dared the moon to drag your new body to the map of something real. as children now the bones are our souls in a new place, old feast your eyes on our forested hearts. how burdened we are with tradition breathing in and out of the present ideas you aren’t supposed to think are only sixteen once. remember your wild, broken laugh we said goodbye a hundred times before we ever said hello new day same sun new morning dew split the rays of light on the grass fed absence of meaning in the chasm between what we left in our yesterday and the alarm you have come to rely on. clock wings of amber turning the leave of absence you took when all was young and full of promise i held a dust mote in a ray of sun in my hand to fear but my hands are empty now like the bank account you pray to and like a soldier lined up to witness the shocks of a pornographic sadness, i swore i’d never beg but god is a hungry mouth and we are all going to be swallowed whole.

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MADRONNA poetry

It’s all downhill from here along the stairway of light in the trees where the Lady of the Woods twists your years back on themselves— blooming your vision into a kaleidoscope

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If you are called by an unfamiliar name in this shapeshifter’s garden go ahead and answer— allow yourself to be so sweetly in the language of a river or a tree.

DAVID watercolor

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MADRONNA poetry

the desert to that pink blush below her tan— only a few green things remain breathing hard. It is not that Desert Woman she will entertain your

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while her daughters take advice from cactus on defending their tender insides discern from desert thunderstorms how to partner with the rain sure of their every wet word—

DAVID watercolor

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MADRONNA poetry

caramel sweet green wild as the river steeping in the wind in its amphitheater of water

under blue musings of sky so we may love it all at once.

DAVID watercolor

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SYLVIA poetry

After Toi Derricotte & Charles Simic

Derricotte, I see my father after his death in Baltimore covered in soot shopping through the dark, outside a Bronx ale house punching the air behind me citing Simic, the blood-curdling shriek of my mother audible a glance, yet there he is slouched as a french horn sitting on a nocturnal pew giving away golden parachutes, pacing

into a medusa curl, reneging on tomorrow, seeing him feels like naysaying down an engine of hilarious grief all those fat rodents sounding violently like tires, oozing into a rottweiler

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SYLVIA poetry

soft powered, I— half shuttered, half bright midair, feet up walking pink clouds on the water’s edge human tears, refereeing wraths greased logic half shuttered, half bright soft powered, I— alien colored beneath as dead armadillos under goliath sized power grids soft powered, I— half shuttered, half bright in manufactured shade, keen on splendor, live in the decoy shadow of a much larger tree undimmed perennially half shut, half bright soft powered, I— wholly uncool, chase ransom captive evergreens sullen mouth shaped things childish as elbows eating marzipan half shuttered, half bright

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TAYLOR poetry

chalk dust printed on my prints. Loving the card corners played across

between the aisles of a thrift store without dressing rooms, some of them still new enough to stain palms like a pen or the bruise I found lashes before the fraying.

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ERICA nonfiction

RITUAL

I’ve covered my face in a mask, wrapped it white with the smell of some incense. I don’t want anyone to see me, to frighten the woman on the gravel drive stretching both arms overhead, the old dog lying on the worn out rug. I’m sure everything I’m wearing was made in some far factory of

I am performing a ritual, which is to say I fear my life isn’t what it used to be. Last night, the same angry pain in my neck crept up and over my witching hour, I dreamed of two women gripping each other by the collar

howled. I am not sure how she did it, but one of the women triumphed and one of the women died and one of the women bared her white teeth.

top sheet. I held the knot of blankets up to my chin and curled fetal.

knobs, pull at the locks, lock all the windows, close any stray cabinet doors. From the phonograph, I remove the last record I set spinning because a ghost might want to hear it in the night—I do this just in case. I hope so hard that I dream.

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ERICA I dream so hard that I wake.

shade darker than I remember.

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AERIK poetry

// belly/ urging to know/ if it is about me/ it seldom is/ not anymore/ no/ / / / / / character/ / / / / / it’s a gl—itch/ made to lag the Supreme / Court is designed to lag behind/ the economy is designed to lag / is a hardware problem/ perhaps/ you’ve felt this too/ / /laugh ing/ sometimes feels like lagging.net/ / / / / / / / / / / /

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AERIK / / / / / / / / / // FunctioningI’mLagLagging HardwareHardWorn LinkingUnlinked UnsupportedDevicesUnplug PlugInMyVices SoMyBrainCan’t / SwitchSwiftly MissesQuickened MentalLimits FicklePivots PickedWith StickyStingyDigits GivenForUnforgiven

/ / / / /lagg

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AERIK ing/ sometimes feels like laughing.gif/ / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / /

//

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AERIK poetry

i open the window, hurl everything out into the portal void of space. precious gems, early morning stimuli to new news, grief laden blunders all coded binary. i drag bags to trash, walk away from explosive words into rubble & puzzle piece debris. all of my cadavers unearthed am i afraid? undead only threaten to progress a notion dependent

an unannotated fully redacted archive, a utopia never to know, a graveyard visitor vacant.

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ANDRE poetry

I’ve been swimming in Black thoughts lately, Some kind of Black Parody where every melody Sings in sinful Christian undertones. Within honey brown irises that

Your screen blurring the bodies—

Black face covered Black nappy Crowns that have been usurped and stolen from

City now whitewashed in Brush strokes that feel like Whipped backs of the ancestors

Black thoughts can make a Black man not give a fuck

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ANNIE poetry

earthly ambrosia simmering with a pearly mystery Milk I drink to be taller to reach the heavens stronger to protect the earth Calcium ichor melts into my spine throughout my bones and blood I am God, and my roots are laced with Vitamin D

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BONNIE poetry

ONE It’s been mentioned that a young woman, such as myself, Brilliant and bright, should not throw her life away on some Quack is the sound ducks make to let you know they do not give a Fuck is what I would say we should go do instead of sitting around here listening to the Dysfunction of your roommates, contributing and taking can be an asset, but too often friends and family turn living into a Debt can be seen as an obstacle but I have only ever seen it as a road to

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BONNIE Faith it has been mentioned, may be my undoing. But what if it is the catalyst of Now I am no one.

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BONNIE poetry

Why would someone call me a blood sucker when I nibble on berries? expression of being, but children that were meant get lost here. Why do some things work in theory but in practice corruption is something to be counted on? the night you could at least try to share the wealth. Let me enlighten you, you if you are looking for one. Her home will sweat sweet like candy, and the promise of security echoes Yes, it is a cage.

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MATTHEW poetry

YES Is this Matthew Spireng?, the caller asks and I instinctively respond, Yes, because I am, and the caller hangs up and now I am worried a recording of me saying Yes will be used to gain access to my accounts, but what can I do? I don’t know what to do and I think to call a stranger I’ve heard of who might know what to do, so I look up his number and punch it into my phone and when the name of the man I was calling— and he says Yes, but I think better of exposing my stupidity and asking his advice, so I hang up without saying another word.

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STINA acrylic on canvas

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STINA acrylic on canvas

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MELISSA poetry

mater1

mother though we are the melody gray the golden sands slow poison in the tide soon rises the ocean to collect our growing debt

2

mater

mother we starve the forest roots seek seeds for a future cut down the palm trees and siege the seas of green and take away the rest.

1 2

mother weep! i weep

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MELISSA

lugeo3 mater we are the wound

mother and the salve

the persecutor and the victim 4 5

pluck roses and carnations fratres, sorores, strike down the heavens! lay claim to the stars

mourn! i mourn help! 5 help her! 6 brothers, sisters, 3 4

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SHAWN ANTO poetry

slowly

no, not like that, with your hand out, come clinging tenderly no, not like that, stay for real, a reminder thick with sticky sentiment no one can pray hard enough when begging for seconds.

intention, what’s sweet? no, not like that, snarling demons crawling from open chest, practically begging for a taste, but one cannot say enough.

one

can

only

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swarm.


ISAAC poetry

We already murdering each other so what’s the issue Pitiful niggas own pistols and got some power What’s poetry but a device to keep me from all these vices No concern about making my neighborhood safer Niggas gotta carry glocks, dodge opps, and duck cops Whole system set up against me somebody save me Like a gun to my head without the safety, what if I die tonight If tonight’s the night I get in some shit Slick bragging about reaching for the steel Leave a man’s brains on the pavement for a tiny piece of turf Surely I’m in hell cause this can’t be earth I think I’d rather be in the hearse than putting a nigga in the dirt My momma will be hurt but her baby ain’t a killer

So I can write some poetry to tell you about how I’m feeling

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LISA

poetry

itself a dry lake crusted, cracked clean. Sucks up whatever is wrong slate, cold tile land for curing, crystalized. You dangled your foot over the edge of the Grand Canyon, red desert with life asking you to forget, a trip for the boys was all it was. the bugs on the wall, holidays never perfect, never you enough. Whatever it was took your body back from the loud about the lowering pressure inside you drowning

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LISA

poetry

about the man in the cement tunnel under the bridge? He lived with the whoosh of cars and he liked the dark.

into our hair, we shake them, laughing, and snatch the orange poppy litter

whistles in the tunnel, and we think he’s kinda lonely with all that tune and spray paint, though we never see him, I think, he belongs to us, in a way. We dare each other to stare into the dark of the tunnel, do you see him? We start to whistle along, leave shiny blue trash and green pennies, and sometimes sing so the echoes against cement make us

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CHLOE poetry

6 ½. In between bites of Monday pasta.

Mustached papa sitting in the recliner.

You’re high. I’m young Weed with a capital W I don’t know what that means. 10. I shiver as we watch Flashing red and blue lights We watch a man straddle papa Pushing breaths into his chest Breaking sternums like chip bags I don’t cry. Confusion forming in my fettered brows Later in the hospital wrapped in warming blankets I watch you take a small white pill. I pretend not to look.

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CHLOE 13. me Gnarled attitude foams in the back of my mouth You look at me from behind glazed eyes. Like a teenage girl walking to her car I pretend not to cry, you’re drunk. 16. I picture you like her Paying no attention to the classroom instruction. Smoking a blunt in the back of the gymnasium bathroom. Mama made tiramisu for your birthday. 21. Sweat weeping into the pores of a mattress Now meekly covering an adult body. You call. Before it bites me. Isn’t it funny how prematurely you can Die in someone else’s mind?

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CHLOE 27. I begin to wonder if we look alike. I remember you at this age but I picture the wrinkles that had already formed around your eyes How I wanted to be like you Splattering icing on our upper lips Looking back at each other across the table With tiramisu mustaches. Your tiny sister. I like to think, in that memory you were Still my Beautiful Boy

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CHLOE poetry

Papa died smiling, I slept through Christmas. Like London weather that settles Younger than I should be. I pour myself a bowl of Corn Flakes. Watching as the milk splatters Creating small white streaks on the porcelain bowl. Into his favorite speckled grey mug. He doesn’t. We used to wait at the end of the driveway for the bus, digging our heels into the pebbled earth No sweetener I meet someone new. I’m older now and he reminds me of Papa. But I get stuck. Stuck on crown molding, Crystal Chandeliers that hang seductively between coiled railings.

I raise each tie up to the man standing in front of me. He’s wearing a light grey suit. He picks. He waits at the end of the aisle. I stand alone behind closed doors. I manage a smile, Wait for those doors to open Wearing a dress that resembles a cupcake

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CHLOE

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CHLOE poetry

My father died and someone said I think about the idea of belonging to borrowed time a lot. Heavy eyelids, concave chests. When I really mean no.

What if I want to say no? When the British boy you think you’re going to marry tells you I suppose I’m to assume I wasn’t whole to begin with But it turns out I like me whole without his half. I’m 5 when I think it’s unfair My brothers don’t have to wear shirts But I do.

Boys are mean to you when they like you But wonder why we grow Like roots into a ground

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CHLOE

Scream disadvantage Holiday season brings pity Hang christmas lights on our house Like it were her god given gift.

But I must admit I’m not sure what to say if it doesn’t.

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TONY poetry

put a period where a comma should have preceded the promise of.

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SARAH poetry

But it doesn’t When it thinks about what you did. But my body slowed to a crawl after your hands violated it, smothered its’ song.

Stop. What are you doing. adrenaline But it wrongly entrusted your hands to cherish it.

My body can speak in front of a room with ease and a bit of thrill, But my body’s heart rate pounds when it thinks about the years of you My body can run for miles, asthma attacking its lungs, room. My body can be hugged by the one who loves the girl behind it, lays. its skin?

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SARAH How are there parts of my body that still do not feel like my own? B? Your hands could’ve gently entwined with mine. Instead, my hands fought yours, pushing in what they didn’t know I did not want to be explored. Will my body always remember yours?

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ALEXANDRA watercolor

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ALEXANDRA watercolor

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STEVE film photography 1994

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STEVE film photography 1994

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KELCI BAUGHMAN poetry

After Clarice Lispector

my Pretty Pretty Printer Genius and I was the library girl replacing the paper rollers under your tired gaze international cobblestone streets, my hands to paint an intense indigo blue on glass because sometimes, instead of black, the night sky is starry and indigo blue. I left and searched for the time before mirrors, when people did not know their own face. My impression was that I was about to be born emerged

Illuminated and translucid with the same vibrant silence of a mirror, I came back

center I crystalized in the continual act of being born about the most amazing shooting start you’ve ever seen and I’m forgetting to ask if you made a wish.

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SANTA CLARA REVIEW


KELCI BAUGHMAN poetry

After Clarice Lispector

and I am cars driving on the side of other cars, we are both despairing and runny and trying to parallel park on abrupt curves. Dutch people think California is always sunny ask me why I came back to rainy Holland but last December I wished the sunny sky and the white sun wouldn’t force me outdoors, I wished I could continue to macerate in the cool were shuttling ourselves to funerals, trying to pass the holidays by eating pills. Self assurance is wearing a bronze diadem over your hair arriving or departing held but I kept coming and going, kept professing to desire a cloak woven with threads of solar gold.

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KELCI BAUGHMAN poetry

“And there’s the vigor of a robust trunk, of roots buried in the living earth that responds by giving them abundant food.” Stream of Life Clarice Lispector

Couldn’t stop thinking this year will be another year without a summer you said a slow gradual spring gave way to an abrupt fall

would never push out their tips, their bony consciousness I’m in Berlin and we’re strolling Gorlitzer Park and here single sweet May has always been erupting in white and pink and fuchsia, Neokölln has always been vibrating of winter and you will be stuck in spring forever.

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JENNA fiction

stretch, and people relied upon maps to tell them what was where and how So, it was a shame when, one day, a rather prominent mapmaker got something very wrong in his drawings. He had received a new sketch from one of the many explorers for hire, a booming profession at the time. towns with two small mines, hardly anything anyone would pay money inaccuracy that wasn’t worth the explorer fees to verify. He dismissed the entire thing because of that one smudge and catalogued the area as empty space not worth anyone’s time. for Greymoor, a smudge of a village on the outskirts of the kingdom, dis covered ages ago and immediately left behind. It was called Greymoor

night, they walked back home. It wasn’t far, but it wasn’t fun either, what with the ground trying to slurp up their feet every time they set them down. part of the reason why it was still inhabited. a small estate, his house the only one made of stone and iron. With a dif ferent owner, the house might have been considered beautiful. But when asked about it, the people of Greymoor called it impressive out loud and included. No person would ever willingly be a neighbor with Death. Bad enough was life in Greymoor, but adding Death in the mix put a damp er on everything that didn’t need dampening. Why did Death live there?

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JENNA Well, there was a rumor going around, amongst the Greymoor citizens who been the same since time’s beginning so, naturally, he wanted everything Death told you to not move and be happy with the bog and the tax breaks, you listened. Not to discredit the people of Greymoor, but this explanation was hogwash. Yes, Death liked the village of Greymoor. But there was a far Not Destiny who lived high in the cloudy mountains and never invited Death over for tea, but destiny, the serendipitous occurrence of something extraordinary. You see, Death was usually the one to clean up after history had already been made. He picked up the pieces, spared a few here and there, all after the dust had settled and the extraordinary history was on its way back out the door. But sometimes Death himself made his particular night, he chose Cecil Copperpot. was living in Greymoor, and they had always been tinkers. Cecil was a tin ker, his son, Silas, was a tinker, and his grandson, Cecil II, would grow up to be a tinker. What everyone did not know was that the Copperpots had a

was the last inventive thing to come out of the family all the way down to Cecil II, that never stopped a Copperpot from having an inventive brain and a burning desire to do something with it. Greymoor, unfortunately, was not the place to nurture creativity or inspiration. It was a place where everyone moved from one day to the next and spent their brainpower counting how much food they had to last who banged out the dents of copper pots and felt like he was banging in his own skull every time he did so. the most inventive brain of all the Copperpots, barring little Cecil II whose

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cil never once did anything with those ideas because he had a family to to travel far to put his ideas into practice, and Cecil valued his family far life, Cecil got up in the morning and set to work not on what he wanted to do, but on what his family needed him to do, never once complaining. He was content, and Death was proud of his neighbor, right up until the night Cecil died. Cecil something to tinker with in order to strike up a conversation, but that wasn’t really his style. Death had a reputation to uphold, so he usually did

bedroom, a washroom, and the main room. Cecil was asleep on a tiny little bedroom in the home and took the drafty, tiny, and slightly dirty (if Death him. Death approached slowly, not wanting to rush the moment. Cecil’s foot of it was a small chest that no doubt held Cecil’s clothes and meager lump of wax, still stubbornly calling itself a candle, was adhered to the bed post—not a very safe spot, but Death didn’t really take note of such things. microcosm of Cecil’s home—all his daily needs within reach, no need to get up or look out the single window.

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JENNA

then buried his head in his hands and wept.

screamed when they met with him, but he had not expected that reaction from Cecil, who had weathered so much more than mere Death in his life pin down exactly what he looked like, but everyone left with a complete certainty that they had indeed met Death. Looking at Cecil sobbing, Death self. He was more than a little disappointed. ment. Death, though, was slightly stung at the lack of attention, not that he would admit it to anyone.

Cecil cried louder at the painful truth and Death was at a complete loss. He should have known better than to chat with his hero on death day. be done with it, not like this. He didn’t want Cecil’s last and only impres sion of him to be, well, deathly. He wanted Cecil to see how proud Death vision.

sighed. gratulate you on your life. I have been watching you all these years and I my He didn’t, because of that reputation mentioned earlier, but the feeling was

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JENNA there nonetheless. convey nearly a century of desperation in one moment. “My life has been wasted all its years! I could have changed the world! I could have been Here Death tried to interrupt, but Cecil would have none of it.

him the withered old man that he was. Death felt a stirring in his chest, somewhere about the location of a heart. Cecil did not want to die as he was, and suddenly, Death didn’t want to take him. Cecil was no longer in the mood for conversation. He gave a little shrug

of time. Death found it a great help to plan out his days, knowing what was into the mirror and a whole life story would be shown. It was generally weighty revelations with grace and style. Humans didn’t have that kind of composure. However, Death felt that today, Cecil’s death day, he could break this rule if it meant easing Cecil’s soul. Colors and shapes swirled in the mirror hypnotically, causing old Cecil to lift his head out of his sorrow and pay attention. Death held the mirror to him so he could see what it had to show him. Cecil saw a young man who looked remarkably like him. He was a large workroom with every single tool a curiously creative tinker could tables and shelves. It was the kind of workroom Cecil would have dreamed

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JENNA older and stood in the most ornate room that Cecil had ever seen in his

shifted once more. Now the young man was no longer young, but he still wore the same smile. He was back in a shop, only this shop was much grander than the one before, causing Cecil to change his mind and dream of having that taking away some invention or other and thanking the man profusely. Finally, the colors and shapes disappeared and the mirror, once again, was only a mirror. Cecil looked back up at Death, eager for an ex planation. was the earth’s most brilliant inventor. He changed lives for the better and was sought after by kings. He lived comfortably and richly and he was kind

and it again came to life, showing a very young Cecil holding out a shaking young Cecil tinkering in his room and that same young lady passing him by, neither sparing the other a glance.

start inventing after I am married. I married in my youth. I would still Death tapped the mirror. “It will not matter, for during one of your looked away from the mirror at the moment the little house in which his will not kill her. I will do my experimenting away from home and travel so

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JENNA

Cecil watched his wife in the mirror cry out for a husband who was moment Death felt awful for showing him such things. But Death was an expert on stubborn old men, and he knew Cecil would not break, not yet. his voice lacked conviction, and his insides felt cold and dead. “I will take a break from work for the duration of my wife’s pregnancy to assure I will Death gave a dismissive shrug. “If you choose to remain home, incident would have been the moment of inspiration for your greatest in vention and would have sent you to the courts of kings. For your son, you there nothing I can do that is great? Why show me such things I have With that Cecil turned away and buried himself back in his blan Death sighed, feeling pity for the man and shame for himself. But he was not about to give up on Cecil, not when Cecil had never given up for for him to look up again.

and bid him watch. even younger. He was walking through a small cemetery, eyes wandering

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JENNA Cecil Copperpot 7 May 1395—31 December 1492 Husband, Father, Grandfather, Provider

darkness. answered anyway.

hands as though they held the answers. Death stowed away the mirror. He no longer needed it. inventor. He will change lives and be sought after by kings. He will live in comfort and riches. He will be important. “He becomes this way because, throughout his young life, he will be told how his father’s father wanted the very best for his children and his world a better place for his family. He will be inspired and become the best grave as he does every day, he will trip and then he will see, really see, the

Death stood and stepped away from Cecil, waiting for him to look up. When he did, Cecil looked changed. He had tears in his eyes, but that had worn Cecil down were washed away in the steady drip of those tears, and though Cecil looked at Death, he was not seeing him. His gaze

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JENNA was locked onto something private, intimate, within a mortal world and a mortal existence that Death, the immortal, was only privy to in moments like these. wanted to provide for his family, really seeing to believe it or not, you are the most important person in the world at this because it will change your son and your grandson. Death held out his hand and waited. He did not have to wait long. Cecil Copperpot, father to Silas, grandfather to Cecil II, and many times placed his gnarled, wrinkled hand in his. smudge on a map. People traveled from all over the world to visit the place where the great inventor, Cecil Copperpot II, began his work. With every new invention and masterpiece that Cecil II sent out to the world, hun In a smattering of decades, Greymoor, though it would remain remote and paved, and muddy shoes became a thing of the past. Buildings sprang up like weeds, and Death was no longer the only one with a house made of became a prominent spot on almost every map in the land. But some things remained the same. Death still lived in Grey moor in his scarily beautiful house that no one visited. He still watched his neighbors for signs of greatness. But while everyone else visited the museum dedicated to showcasing Cecil II’s life work, Death could be seen roaming the tombstones of the cemetery and stopping to trace the num bers on a certain stone. If anyone had been brave enough to ask why—though no one was— he would have simply replied that he was visiting the most important man in the world.

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JOHN SIBLEY

poetry

damaged church. Naught, as in the lungs can’t hold it all in anymore. Breath, as in a fawn scraping her dry tongue raw another’s hunger pushes deep who tries to inhale the world away, porchside, pluming like the smoke stacks dad afterthought of horizon. is what I mean, at owning one’s face. tell me everything you need to ruin to make a body livable again. lately, after its ruin (steeple

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JOHN SIBLEY deer skin stretched over the mantle, all one’s violences

draw their arrows back. Fire. Fire.

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JOHN SIBLEY poetry

no horses have trampled, devoured, prayed with their whole bodies to in more years But there are stories older than down overalls two sizes larger than anyone could wear without falling, without a faceful of earth. their delicate hands. Yours are calloused over & want your body is more than vessel, less than what passes for love now. What passes for love now hurts

In this story it’s okay for a strange boy to enter you ungently & unasked for, for something inside to grow from it. It’s a holy thing, the stories say. You, lying there motionless under a full weight of sky. you dream there.

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NICHOLE collage

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NEFERTITI ASANTI poetry

in no particular order

when you a baby everything belongs to you & it is ok at the air or pound the ground & you get to have it all —a small red ball, a dirty dress sock men’s size 11, SHIRLE Y printed near the rim. her name grandma’s name too. it’s yours. //

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NEFERTITI ASANTI your room the hottest room in the house, built right on top of the boiler. when it’s not too hot, you teach your too hot, this room is where you sleep & [cannot take this body with you] heavy dream. in this dream you a witch & they hunt you like they hunt witches after [re]capture. the only way you know you a witch is cuz you grow tall enough to pluck sleeping birds from trees. but you aint got enough pluck for survival & wonder. your skin the color of curfew. no one sees you let your height go to run & leap from rooftop to rooftop. your seams collect north stardust. each leap an enduring rhythm hurled against your soles [even in the raw] they refuse tired. you run ‘til you come across a lit up tavern. small as a heartbeat you crawl under a table. writhing in their hands. you forget you a witch. [&] wake up. //

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NEFERTITI ASANTI

me out & i won’t read outta school. comes with a toy. upstairs to get ready for bed. you grab lola bunny & a bedtime story. you hope your old toys are mommy knocks on your door. you left your journal on the couch. you should be more careful about leaving your private things all around the house. you forget the bedtime grandma & monstars in space. //

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NEFERTITI ASANTI

for algernon. maybe mr. dean also your social studies teacher. one day he asks the whole class to push their seats away from their desks, get down wants the class to pretend they slaves so the class could know what it’s like to be cargo on a slave ship during the transatlantic slave trade. you, & kimmie decide y’all don’t need to know what it’s like to be cargo. y’all remain seated in chairs & look toward your class—brown & uniformed under their desks. when the bell rings, you all are free to go. //

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NEFERTITI ASANTI you write poems. the poems do not win school prizes or the heart of a pale puerto rican you never give him a poem to read. you give him a smile & he returns your smile because he is kind & pentecostal. he ½ dates some girl from a class dumber than yours. she is popular & latina & you are not pretty yet. you are not upset because you understand. you ½ date some boy named peter’s cousin because his hair is long like lil’ bow wow’s hair. (you don’t even like

train station so the friend katie stands away from the crowd with you. you & lil’ bow wow’s twin hold hands for this happens again every other day for two weeks but never on weekends then stops. you return to your poems. //

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NEFERTITI ASANTI ms. brown gives you a picture with no words. the picture is full of too many dolls to count & a smiling black woman. you count the dolls anyway cuz you 129. you call this woman sarah & write about sarah & her dolls. all of her dolls are black & all of their eyes are open, smiling at you. none of their eyes are you are allowed to tell a story for other people to hear & not get in trouble for making it up.

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PIOTR poetry

1. plover, brown bordering on gray, averages six inches in length and lays

shark sighting, I take a photo creak with life. 3. and the rock that is not there keeping things whole. It’s time for the fog to go. 5. placing a stone on my chest and pounding against it everything that makes me stronger. 6. frolicking to the sound of Chariots of Fire whistled by their parents.

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PIOTR 7. beach grass I leave my shoes on stay back, too.

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IRA ROSENSTEIN poetry

You twisted on your bed though still at sea in dreams— So charging bulls and yaks with moaning skulls and rams Pull back then charge!— and elks with antlers scratching at

Is pounding— but it seems— your hand— that tries— to rub— come

You lift your other palm and let it slide on horn. Is going on? Stay calm. You know you need some eggs. You have two horns— and need to eat. Last night you felt With who? With walls. So feed your glorious god’s needs. Your angel opens doors for you, all by its wings. You sip this morning’s dew. You kiss the dove. It moans Goodbye. You bang again! Bang it If I have horns, in fact, if I have shame, or pain,

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IRA ROSENSTEIN If I’m awake, and this— my sleep— God never wakes—

My rage is boiling now, I feel such rage. Yes, you! Food in the cart— you better look. “I cannot see Unseen? I have a set of horns and two pulled from

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KYLA fiction

bustles with people and they’re all dressed in white. Lydia glances down at cloth pants, and white shoes. She shrugs, guessing she chose all white this

has absolutely no features. It looks like someone took a black Sharpie and

to its stomach, shaking a bit. She assumes it’s laughing.

It brings up its hand and pulls it toward its stomach again, so Lydia laughs with it once more.

grows and wriggles its way out the side of its wrist.

her head, and reaches into the pocket of her white pants to pull out a

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KYLA

hands in her pockets and rocks back and forth on her heels and toes. Suddenly, two heavy hands slam onto Lydia’s shoulders and push her down into a chair. She yelps as her bottom hits the hard seat. Looking hands then release her shoulders and buckle her into the seat. and yank on the seat belt to tighten it.

now the size of her hand, still stretched out in front of her. Now it’s gone, and she’s whipped around in this chair by the gloved white hands.

handle. hands clutch the handles of the seat.

She gasps and the skin on her face freezes over from the top of her forehead, crackling and crystalizing, down to the tip of her chin. How did the white gloved hands know her name? Her lips are frozen shut so she they’re not frozen, repeatedly smashes the ice on her face.

glove clamped around her right wrist.

Lydia uses her left hand to pull the rusty handle down and kicks the door open with her feet.

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KYLA

their white clothes but they’re sitting at tables in this room now, drinking out of white Styrofoam cups or playing chess or writing under the heading,

with shiny gold buttons down the center of his shirt. His bulging eyes at Lydia impatiently. “Lydia, forget about the panini—please. Let’s take you to a table,

hand moves forward to hold hers. Lydia looks up to see the pools of gray

He groans and rolls his eyes, clearing the black. “Lyd, come on! behind her. She’s rolled toward a white table where an older man and a teenage girl are playing cards. When she stops at the table, the older man’s head slowly turns up from his card hand to look at her.

shaking faster.

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KYLA face.

dead leaves. slams her hands on the table, stands, and breathes out through her nose.

Lydia, holding a white Styrofoam cup and a pack of pale soda crackers. Lydia hesitantly reaches for them with both hands and then snatches them from the gloves. Lydia, thank you so much for punching the cards out of my goddamn

Lydia watches the cards on the ground swim over and around spades and the diamonds with the clubs.

He looks at her blankly.

grow toward the ceiling.

him. her hair and screams.

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KYLA

hallway. Lydia looks back at the rusty handle door and spots the scribbled glass. handle door.

Lydia. His white glove grips a card that he holds against the sensor next hallway. Doors line the white walls on each side of her. Something snarls at the end of the hall.

Lydia trembles in her chair as she’s pushed closer and closer toward the snarling.

some other man. He has a very round face and is wearing green plaid. He “Lydia, this is your room. You’re sleeping here tonight. No one’s gonna attack you. You’re safe here, and someone in the morning will be new man.

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Lydia nods and he gets up to walk out.

He’s right. She feels safe. She can get the panini tomorrow. She likes this man in plaid.

***

blue couches and has that familiar yet nauseating smell of disinfectant. He shudders and walks up to the receptionist.

He looks at his watch and lets out an awkward laugh. “Sure was,

her.

He looks down at his collared shirt, tie, and slacks. He had to dress up for Mom’s birthday. He waves to say thanks and opens the door to the in. She’s sitting at the edge of her bed against the wall, gazing out the mother turns her head to look at him and her eyes light up.

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KYLA

“Yes, oh, what was the place we used to go often for dinner,

release his frustration. He then raises his head with a false grin spread across his face.

It’s true. “I’ll be back. I’ll get you something to eat. You must be starving.

around and the sun makes her glow. She’s almost sparkling.

yesterday and drapes it over her shoulders.

She walks out of the door and leaves him in the room as usual.

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KYLA the glass. She is already facing the white wall she always stands in front of, listening to and laughing at nothing. She laughs over and over. He sighs.

events and shudders. He focuses back on Social and sees she’s playing

***

that morning. He breathes in the disinfectant smell, but somehow it’s a bit more bearable at night. Patty greets him with a smile. He returns the smile His mother is sitting in her chair facing away from him, trembling as usual with her hands knotted close to her chest. He rotates her to face him. She studies his face in confusion. He looks at her intently. “Lydia, this is your room. You’re sleeping here tonight. No one’s

He stares at her with a blank face and then turns to walk out.

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RIVULETS CATHERINE oil paint

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CATHERINE oil paint

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HARRISON nonfiction

When I was younger, I watched a woman’s car stall on the tracks seat, waving her arms in some desperate attempt to stop the train, then run, waiting for the inevitable orchestra of sparks, wreckage, and screeching

glancing at the woman still gasping for breath on the sidewalk as I sped by.

your meaning through nuance, not everything has a point. Most of my an want from them? When I lived in Portland for two years for college, I met a guy study

guy’s name was Milo and he listened to Songs About Jane and thought I I decided I was in love with him while he was smoking pot through an

his masculinity. I got my answer a semester later in the upstairs room of some house party, when he grabbed me and kissed me tasting like Green Love, Simon next weekend, he was kicked out of school for drugs and running from the police.

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ZEBULON poetry

to our piss poor attempt to surpass anything goes philosophy of leisure, kicks in the Beatles, they start to sing along, dog smiling in the rushing wind, Black cat basks in the sun lamp of the back window—tail swishing. Some owners walk them out a ways across the hard sand and rock, leash tied to a tree out of sight, others abandoned in cages to broil in the Death Valley oven cries poured toward tire’s hum until the whimpers cease.

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HARRISON

as if a wheel was spun with random names and verbs, and I must roll with with the lens of a fever dream and seasonal depression. It turned out my friends and I developed a reputation of being indestructible on that small celebrate Wine Wednesday with a religious fervor and still make the Dean’s think Portland is weird, I don’t think they’ve ever seen someone that can While in Portland, I worked for the Student Senate and watched tian girl’s back. People get a taste of fake power and forget how to behave.

a phone call about a candidate that had to be hospitalized after having a the son of an unnamed Italian dictator succumbing to fascism, and also

My conception of the social prerogative collapsed in on itself like a ist and interact felt as if they were thrown into a blender to make a discard ed societal smoothie. Sensationalism and absurdism became the preferred available on campus—a call to the med center resulted in advice on herbal

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HARRISON

par dining hall fries. tics were so strange that my friends and I still debate whether he was real or not. He was a rich kid from Marin who loved Xanax and not going to class—I don’t think I ever saw him not drunk or hungover. He desensitized

were indestructible, remember?

Before Portland, I used to grasp for meaning like the claw of some time two nurses and a doctor all told me I had high blood pressure only to Edward Scissorhands suburb tricked me into believing there was an order to things. My anecdotes have taught me to stop expect ing organization. gle tells me stories about two soccer players she lived with her freshman

through a 90210 of the show from her lofted bed and then fall back asleep around midnight both girls asked my Google friend if it was possible to give themselves an

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HARRISON

transferred to be in a sorority at another school and the other married rich and lives in Seattle. It all works out, unless a bullet gets in the way. It seems my anecdotes are not meaningless because they’ve warped my worldview. I don’t believe events happen for a reason, but I know the to a god I don’t bother believing in. My humor is like chucking oranges at me yet. It irritates me when experiences are too symbolic. I feel as if the could be aired on a network show. It reminds me of a night I was chased

ligation to appear believable. that even my wild stories seem commonplace. I have deescalated situa

I have perfected the perfect gin and tonic and two drinks later, I become the deliverer of poignant truths. Gossip Girl ex year was packed with house parties, casual sex, and cheating couples. We were bad kids, but bad kids make the best content. Monogamy fell out of fashion that year for whatever reason, and people slept with one another as revenge tactics and as a way to pass the time. I slept with college boys at campuses nearby because I thought I was cool, and met pornstars while person it mentions. I’m currently seeking publication.

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HARRISON

*** I have given up on trying to sound smart, I let the wave of collo when people my age try to be philosophic—it usually means they smoke too in an attempt to drain the alphabet soup in our heads. I toss my words into the air and hope they land. I throw my oranges and hope they stick. I look for meaning in the actions and reactions and determine its

your meaning elsewhere.

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volume 107 / issue 01

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Huda Al-Marashi First Comes Marriage: My Not-So-Typical American Love Story, a book the Washington Post called

also been anthologized in Love Inshallah: The Secret Love Lives of Muslim American Women, Becoming: What Makes a Woman, and Beyond Belief: The Secret Lives of Women and Extreme Religion. Her other writing has appeared in the Washington Post, the LA Times, al Jazeera, VIDA Review, the Rumpus, the and elsewhere. She is the recipient of a Cuyahoga County Fellowship. First Comes Marriage Huda currently resides in California with her husband and three children. Shawn Anto His writing has been featured or are forthcoming in Reed Magazine, O:JA&L, Mojave Heart Review, and elsewhere. Stina Arstorp

daily life. Nefertiti Asanti is a poet and cultural worker from the Bronx. Nefertiti is gerine Fellow and is currently working on a chapbook entitled the present is a small child. Nefertiti’s work can be found at Winter Tangerine, AfroPunk, Foglifter, and elsewhere. Melissa Ballete rate them into her writing. Her only other published poem, “a lesson on how of corgis and milk tea. Kelci Baughman McDowell

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Mela Blust is a Pushcart and Best of the Net nominated poet, and has appeared in Magazine, Yes Poetry, and many more. She is Head Publicist and Social Media Barren Magazine, and a poetry reader for The Rise Up Review. She can be followed at twitter.com/melablust. Arno Bohlmeijer

You may visit his website at

.

Steve Briscoe looking for assemblage components for sculptural artwork. He started photographing the artless arrangements on the ground as a way of presenting blankets, he found the collision of the kitsch and the mundane intriguing, like Lisa Compo Maryland where she studies creative writing and is currently chief editor for Natural Bridge, SLAB, The Shore Poetry, and Gabriel Palacios Contra Viento, West Branch, The Volta, Territory, Spoon River Poetry Review, Typo Magazine, Bayou Magazine, Tongo Eisen-Martin Columbia University. He is the author of someone’s dead already (Bootstrap Heaven Is All Goodbyes

and dreamlike association, demonstrating how, in the right hands, one mode might energize the other—keeping alternative orders of meaning alive in the face

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He has taught at detention centers around the country and at the Institute for Francisco. Piotr Florczyk is a translingual poet, essayist, and translator of Polish po etry. His most recent books are poetry volumes and East & West, and several volumes of translations, including Building the Barricade by can Poets. Aerik Francis is a Queer Black Latinx poet and educator based in Denver, SpitPoet Zine, TSPJ, and Borderlands: Texas Review. Jenna Glover is an aspiring novelist and native Californian. She received

has appeared in multiple cycles of F(r)iction’s Dually Noted contests. Tony Gruenewald is the author of The Secret History of New Jersey (North The New York Times, Tiferet, English Journal, Edison Literary Review, and many other publications. He works as com. In addition to her collaborations with David Wolfersberger, folklorist Madronna Holden’s poems have appeared in the anthology, Dona Nobis Pacem, as well as in American Writing, The Christian Science Monitor, Equinox Prose and Poetry, Windfall, the Clackamas Literary Review, and many others. Zebulon Huset is a teacher, writer and photographer living in San Diego. His writing has recently appeared in The Southern Review, Louisville Review, Fence, Rosebud, Meridian, North American Review, Cortland Review, Portland Review, Maine Review, Texas Review and Fjords Review among others. He publishes a writing prompt blog Notebooking Daily with its print compan Coastal Shelf. Sarah James has dreamt of being a writer for as long as she can remember.

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and loves a smooth cappuccino and a walk in the morning. Sylvia Jones

Vladimir Kush on canvas or board, with many of the original paintings also sold as limited and usually based on imagery from his paintings, such as Walnut of Eden and Pros and Cons his style of Salvador Dalí’s surrealist paintings as well as landscapes by the work has been the 16th century Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch, known for

Arrival of the Flower Ship and Departure of the Winged Ship. Flowing water is another recurrent Breach and Current Three Graces and African Sonata Annie Ma chief of her school’s literary magazine, HELM. She also dabbles in photogra phy, and has a gallery at www.anniema.co. Harrison Pyros University of Portland’s Writers magazine. He sincerely believes he will never leave California. His debut novel is currently being considered for publication and his short work can be found at harrisonpyros.com. Ira Rosenstein has recently been published in California Quarterly and Plainsongs. He is a radio producer in New York City. “Nobody Sees My Horns— Love And Death, pages. David Sapp, writer, artist and professor, lives along the southern shore of include chapbooks Close to Home and Two Buddha and a novel, Flying Over Erie.

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Taylor Schaefer their literary magazine The Scarab. She is a lover of poetry, and tries to make work that either pulls and pulls at something deep inside or hands out black eyes like candy. Her previous works have also appeared in Poetry South, Stonecoast Review, The Shore and Polaris Literary Magazine. John Sibley Williams is the author of As One Fire Consumes Another Skin Memory (Backwaters Prize, University of Ne Disinheritance, and Controlled Hallucinations He serves as editor of

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Chloe Scheuch is a senior at Santa Clara University from Long Island, New ative Writing. Chloe won the McCann Short Story prize for a collection she to date. Catherine Skinner’s Accumulations is a series of exploration. My mind stays open to experimentation and listening to early morning dreams. Stacking, accumulations. Vertical stacking relates to our heart rhythms and the earth’s seismic movements recorded on monitor printouts. Delicate tracery to heavy I see out of the corner of my eye, beneath my footsteps to distant views. Bonnie Smith is nursing student at Illinois Wesleyan University. When she is not in a hospital or a lab, she is either reading or writing poetry. Drawing is fundamental to Nicole Spencer’s work. She tries to retain the Matthew J. Spireng’s book What Focus Is Communications. His book Out of Body and was published by Bluestem Press. He won

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nominee. Adriana Stimola Santa Clara Review, High Shelf Press and Tiny Seed Literary Journal. She lives in the Hudson Valley of New York. Alexandra Strokina is passionate about traveling, exploring, hiking, | SANTA CLARA REVIEW


with Scandinavian beauty and has been inspired by Norwegian landscape and culture. She paints while travelling, nature being her main inspiration. Some Andre Sykes him to study poetry in college and learn the rules before he shattered them. He currently resides in Detroit, MI, where he is writing his debut book of poetry Erica Trabold is the author of Five Plots Brevity, Literary Hub, The Rumpus, Passages North, The Collagist, Essay Daily Professor at Sweet Briar College in central Virginia. David Wolfersberger and his paintings are summer friends, sometimes seen walking the land as they feel and remember it and want it to be again, before fences, where people live and care for the earth and each other. His art work has appeared or is forthcoming in Cold Mountain Review, About Place, Leaping Clear, the Slippery Elm Literary Review, and Puerto del Sol, among others. Kyla Yamashita is an alumna of Santa Clara University with a Bachelor of Science degree in both Biology and Public Health Science as well as a minor in piano. She’s grateful she has the opportunity to share her creative work after college! Isaac Yelder

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