“Petrified” by Gerri Brightwell
“Petrified” by Gerri Brightwell

“Beyond the windows the sun was buckling off paving stones, off shutters and white-painted walls, and even in here where the air was antiseptic and cool we talked slowly, moved slowly, cleaned wounds and took blood slowly. It had been long enough since the door had opened that we paused at the squeal of its hinges, noticed the parched breath of the desert sweep in.”

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McKenzie Watson-Fore’s Review of Woman Pissing by Elizabeth Cooperman
McKenzie Watson-Fore’s Review of Woman Pissing by Elizabeth Cooperman

“Woman Pissing takes Picasso’s bravado-soaked declaratives and subjects those claims to a bloodletting. Cooperman’s narrator invokes Julian Barnes’ assertion that Picasso dramatically simplified art. One page later Cooperman demonstrates thus: Because Bonnard kept watching the sky, it became a dozen different colors. / How hilarious that Bonnard cannot paint a sky blue! thought Picasso.”

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Amy Mevorach’s Review of Miss Chloe by A.J. Verdelle
Amy Mevorach’s Review of Miss Chloe by A.J. Verdelle

“When you open the door to Toni Morrison, the book begins, you look genius in the face. The multiple facets of the phrase open the door are characteristic of the linguistic dexterity Verdelle and Morrison enjoyed. Over two-and-a-half decades, Verdelle literally opened the door to Toni Morrison many times, a surprising development in Verdelle’s life as a young novelist, and her memoir figuratively opens the door on Morrison as a writer, mentor, and friend.”

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“Dispatch from the Unwritten” by Megan Gannon
“Dispatch from the Unwritten” by Megan Gannon

Forgive me if the books I might have written linger like a miscarriage.
That word—as in miscarriage of justice—and what is justice now

that the surprise quickening of my youngest might have felt
less blessing than sentence. I had a choice, and still somedays

I lament the sentence I’ve been given and not given.

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“motherAnxiety” by Katherine Gaffney
“motherAnxiety” by Katherine Gaffney

“A friend texts to ask for ways to keep
     her four-month-old occupied
during “tummy time”—a sweet name for the exercise
     that will prevent her child from wearing
a helmet while the now-doughy skull forms:
     an assortment of dry beans in a plastic bag”

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“Playing for Prokofiev” by Mir Seidel
“Playing for Prokofiev” by Mir Seidel

“For her to have achieved more renown, I wonder if Gus would have had to be more pushy, more self-centered, more sure of herself. Or maybe she just needed to have been born a hundred years later. But she was herself, in her own time. My mother, who was a writer, had to make similar choices in her life. And I have too, trying, not always gracefully, to balance being married, having a child, and making a living with the commitment to a creative life.”

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“Soma, Turkey” by Zuleyha Ozturk Lasky
“Soma, Turkey” by Zuleyha Ozturk Lasky

“prayer beads and a well and cow dung and smoke and coal and flag plastered on a hill and olive trees and olive trees choiring and an olive seed smacked onto a plate by my grandmother and sheepish eye and a rug in the bedroom from Bulgaria and yogurt fermenting and ashtray with a stomach full of ash and cevşen read thrice and halo of television and plastic covered couches and kahvehane and kahve and Müslüm Baba hunkering hangimiz sevmedik? on taxi radio and Atatürk street and my uncle looping a rope around the awning as a swing for me and kittens and chickpeas and chickpeas dried and collected in a pile and chickpeas on fire”

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“Dispatch from That Day in Door County” by Megan Gannon
“Dispatch from That Day in Door County” by Megan Gannon

“What
to do on that unexceptional Sunday, our kids already swim-suited

and seat-belted, but go on, go on, and drive to Door County.
The rest of the ride silent except for my sounds, no one sure

if they’re allowed to have fun until they’re finally loosed
to the shadow-sharp air, their calls and accidental laughter

high as the wind-buoyed gulls.”

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“Ode to Women Who Bleed—A Lot” by Irena Praitis
“Ode to Women Who Bleed—A Lot” by Irena Praitis

“The time I’d planned to hike the rim to rim to rim of the Grand Canyon with three athletic friends—all non-menstruating fellows—only to wake at four AM and find myself bleeding and no protection (it was way too early, but you know it kind of shows up when it wants anyway), and one of their girlfriends, who wasn’t hiking with us, when I whispered to her, only had a slender regular. A. Slender. Regular. Right. Which I took, of course.”

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’72 Datsun by Elizabeth Cranford Garcia
’72 Datsun by Elizabeth Cranford Garcia

“Trash-can colored and rusty, it was a car all throat,
all fits and stutters, a guttural language

choked at every breakneck shift of gears,
a devil’s-in-hell kind of loud, so buzz-saw loud

you could feel the fuel catch fire inside it, its inner life burning
with something I was too small to name.”

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Feminine Absurdities by Carly Brown
Feminine Absurdities by Carly Brown

“It wasn’t until my fourth or fifth sip of tea this morning that I noticed Miss Nancy Carson was missing her eyebrows. I promptly set the cup down and stared at her across the breakfast table. I wanted to make certain she had not simply hidden her brows under too much white pomade. The girl is at an age where she has begun to prepare her toilette, and painting takes practice to master. But her brows were not covered up. They were gone.”

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Colliding by Julie O. Petrini
Colliding by Julie O. Petrini

“I knew who Tim Davis was in high school, but I didn’t introduce myself to him until my mom ran him over with her car. And this is not some kind of “meet-cute” story, where her tires caught his foot as she slowly backed out at the grocery store or something. Rushing home on a drizzly November evening, from a place she should not have been, my mother mowed Tim down as he rode his bicycle to work, paralyzing him below the waist.”

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Clarinet Lessons by Stephanie Early Green
Clarinet Lessons by Stephanie Early Green

“Dad and Mom got divorced two years ago. Mom says they split up because Dad is selfish and wants to sow his wild oats, two decades too late, and doesn’t want to be burdened by the demands of a family. Dad says they split up because of Sarah. Dad says that the death of a child strips the skin off a marriage, and if the bones underneath aren’t strong, everything falls apart.”

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What They Wore by Shutta Crum
What They Wore by Shutta Crum

“the women turn pages slowly, so slowly
unsure if that is the vest Katya knitted for uncle
before he went for milk, never came back

each numbered photograph a too-bright gasp of light
the book, a first step with each mass grave
do you recognize this apron? this belt? these boots?”

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Be Here, Softly by Claire Atkinson
Be Here, Softly by Claire Atkinson

“I looked myself over, the version of me across the table. I was a year younger then, but I was in rough shape. January was obviously only shaving once every few days. His face was covered in that awful black stubble. His hair was a mess. His eyes were tired and vacant behind the glasses. He slouched in the chair, thinking me over. He tapped his fingers on the table, the gears turning, trying to figure out what to say.
‘This doesn’t make sense,’ he said. ‘It’s not possible that we’re trans. It shouldn’t be possible.’
I nodded sympathetically. ‘I get what you’re saying. I understand. Yet here we are.'”

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Sit-In by Arleta Little
Sit-In by Arleta Little

“Two women in hijabs and abayas approach us. One of the women asks, ‘How long will this be going on?’ ‘It’s the community that’s doing this,’ Zenzele answers. ‘So, I guess, as long as the community keeps coming. This is all different people. There’s no one group organizing it.’ The draped women speak to one another in a language that sounds like the wind over the surface of water before they smile at us, nod, and walk on.”

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My American Dream by Farha Mukri
My American Dream by Farha Mukri

“There are many versions of the American Dream, I want to tell my parents. The one involving a large house with a picket fence and two-car garage is just one of them. Just as there are many versions of your daughter. There’s a version that prays four times a day and recites the Quran. There is a version that enjoys hanging out with friends, including men, on Saturday nights with cans of beer and board games. There is a version that fasts during the month of Ramadan. There is a version that gets pepperoni on her pizza during the rest of the year.”

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Mending by Anna Stacy
Mending by Anna Stacy

“’Two weeks,’ Tamara echoes, like she’s mulling it over. Her legs are dangling over the arm of the chair. ‘Why don’t you just break up with him the normal way?’
‘Because that would require confrontation,’ I explain.
‘And knitting an entire sweater is easier than confrontation.’
‘Yes.’
Tamara turns to Lark for support, but he’s nodding solemnly. ‘Yeah, that holds up,’ he says.”

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Evelin by Ann Bauleke
Evelin by Ann Bauleke

“I imagine Evelin, her flour-sack print dress, brandishing stick dolls with her younger cousin, whose rash and persistent fever earlier that month no one mentioned. I imagine Evelin waking near dawn, whimpering, coughing, hot to the touch. Grandma takes her into their bed, Grandpa having left to cart fuel to farmers. The child sleeps fitfully, radiating heat.”

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Lake Macbride by Kathleen Maris Paltrineri
Lake Macbride by Kathleen Maris Paltrineri

“In quietude I feel I am everywhere at once—my own body rehearsing its wintering act, too. I look up from the table to the far side of the lake to see a buck limping, his hind legs sixteenth-notes in the dry leaves. From far off, a shot sounds like an encyclopedia falling to a wooden floor and like the echo of its striking.”

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Passage by thandiwe Dee Watts-Jones
Passage by thandiwe Dee Watts-Jones

“It’s official: dementia and medication. Not unexpected. But getting the ICD code is like being pinned. Mom does not protest.
The transitions before me are not unique, I know. Yet the fact that they’re universal and part of life matters as much to me as cocktail party chitchat.
What I treasure are tiny pearls that appear in mundane surroundings, a particular moment between particular people.”

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toward the south, past st ives by Livia Meneghin
toward the south, past st ives by Livia Meneghin

“past weatherworn bluffs and farther than any bird known, the swift sleeps on the wing, leaving grief behind“ Enjoy this audio recording of “toward the south, past st ives” by Livia Meneghin from Vol. 32:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Livia Meneghin is a current MFA candidate and writing instructor at Emerson College. She

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La Femme by Nicole Miyashiro
La Femme by Nicole Miyashiro

“They tried to scratch off the paint. A portrait. They tried to scratch. A woman. The paint. A woman with a long face.” This audio recording of “La Femme” by Nicole Miyashiro from Vol. 32:1 of CALYX Journal was inspired by Diane Samuels’ art piece, “Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas/Testimony Against Gertrude Stein”, 2011 (ink

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Soapstone by Courtney Huse-Wika
Soapstone by Courtney Huse-Wika

“We didn’t hear what she couldn’t say because the prairie stitches women’s mouths shut.” Enjoy this audio recording of “Soapstone” by Courtney Huse-Wika from Vol. 31:3 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Courtney Huse-Wika teaches writing in the Black Hills of South Dakota. She believes in the art of collection: overheard quotes, bird facts, forgotten stories,

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Decisions by Livia Meneghin
Decisions by Livia Meneghin

“consider the (curious)(strained) way she admires the hummingbirds (hovering)(swirling) above her head, and the air now saturated with (teargas)(sun)(clementines)“ Enjoy this audio recording of “Decisions” by Livia Meneghin from Vol. 32:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Livia Meneghin is a current MFA candidate and writing instructor at Emerson College. She is the author of

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Absentee Ballot by Willa Schneberg
Absentee Ballot by Willa Schneberg

“You are tired of pretending to be the authority on democracy when you believe all governments stink, some just smell more rank than others. As you sing the praises of the secret ballot, you pray that no one will step on newly laid land mines walking to the polling site.“ Enjoy this audio recording of

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Rings of Pink, Enheduanna by Nicole Miyashiro
Rings of Pink, Enheduanna by Nicole Miyashiro

“revolve this landscape encased by pulverized petals the stories round the wood in areola waves” This audio recording of “Rings of Pink, Enheduanna” by Nicole Miyashiro from Vol. 32:1 of CALYX Journal was inspired by Diane Samuels’ art piece, “Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas/Testimony Against Gertrude Stein”, 2011 (ink on handmade paper, coated in pulverized

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Aubade with Hot Cross Buns by Siobhan Mulligan
Aubade with Hot Cross Buns by Siobhan Mulligan

“Unasked, she doesn’t think to pray. Half a bun is gone before she makes time, not for a holy act, but an attentive one, attuned to the soft chew of raisins on molars” Enjoy this audio recording of “Aubade with Hot Cross Buns” by Siobhan Mulligan from Vol. 32:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here.

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Just Nerves by Caroline M. Grant
Just Nerves by Caroline M. Grant

“The dentist reassures me that my tongue looks fine, that the sensation I feel of its edge fraying against my teeth is “just nerves.” He assures me that it won’t choke off my breathing. Mostly he has answered “I don’t know” to my questions, but I trust this (I don’t have much choice.) The pain

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The Why Nots and The Whys by Marcie Roman
The Why Nots and The Whys by Marcie Roman

Enjoy this audio recording of “The Why Nots and The Whys” by Marcie Roman from Vol. 31:3 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Marcie Roman lives in Evanston, IL. Her stories have been published in Split Lip Magazine, Black Fox, The Gravity of the Thing, and Blotterature. Her collection, Residential Units, was a finalist in the 2019 Autumn House Press fiction

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Facedown by Sherri Levine
Facedown by Sherri Levine

Enjoy this audio recording of “Facedown” by Sherri Levine from Vol. 31:3 of CALYX Journal! “Facedown” was the winner of the 2019 Lois Cranston Memorial Poetry Prize. Read the full poem here and buy the issue here. Sherri Levine is a poet and teacher. She lives in Portland, OR, where she teaches English to immigrants

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Sausage by Ilene Rudman
Sausage by Ilene Rudman

Enjoy this audio recording of “Sausage” by Ilene Rudman from Vol. 31:3 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Ilene Rudman is a psychotherapist and career counselor living in Maynard, MA. Her work and poems focus on remembering, nourishing silence, and naming the unnamable. For fifteen years she has been in a weekly poetry master class

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The Rape of the Sabine Women by Judith Sanders
The Rape of the Sabine Women by Judith Sanders

Enjoy this audio recording of “The Rape of the Sabine Women” by Judith Sanders from Vol. 31:3 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Judith Sanders’ work has been published in journals such as The American Scholar and on the website Full Grown People. She won the Hart Crane Poetry Prize and Wergle Flomp Humor Poetry Prize. Her manuscript, The Universe

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Isako Isako Review by Katharine Coldiron
Isako Isako Review by Katharine Coldiron

Enjoy this audio recording of a review of Mia Ayumi Malhotra’s book, Isako Isako, by Katharine Coldiron from Vol. 31:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Buy a copy of Isako Isako here. Katharine Coldiron’s work has been published in Ms., the Times Literary Supplement, BUST, the Rumpus, and elsewhere. She lives in

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The Multiverse by Emma Bolden
The Multiverse by Emma Bolden

Enjoy this audio recording of “The Multiverse” by Emma Bolden from Vol. 31:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Emma Bolden is the author of House Is an Enigma (Southeast Missouri State UP), medi(t)ations (Noctuary Press), and Maleficae (GenPop Books). The recipient of a 2017 NEA Fellowship in Poetry, her work has been published in

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Language Acquisition by Jung Hae Chae
Language Acquisition by Jung Hae Chae

Enjoy this audio recording of “Language Acquisition” by Jung Hae Chae from issue 27:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Jung’s poetry and prose have appeared in the CALYX Journal, Crab Orchard Review, Georgetown Review, MiPoesias, Third Coast and elsewhere. She teaches writing and lives in northern New Jersey.

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Her Voice by Iris Dunkle
Her Voice by Iris Dunkle

Enjoy this audio recording of “Her Voice” by Iris Dunkle from issue 27:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Iris Jamahl Dunkle was the 2017-2018 Poet Laureate of Sonoma County, CA. Her poetry collections include Interrupted Geographies (Trio House Press, 2017) Gold Passage (Trio House Press, 2013) and There’s a Ghost in this Machine of Air (Word Tech,

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Reasons For & Against Dating Tyrannosaurus Rex by Emari DiGiorgio
Reasons For & Against Dating Tyrannosaurus Rex by Emari DiGiorgio

Enjoy this audio recording of “Reasons for & Against Dating Tyrannosaurus Rex” by Emari DiGiorgio from issue 27:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Emari DiGiorgio is the author of Girl Torpedo (Agape, 2018), the winner of the 2017  Numinous  Orison, Luminous Origin Literary Award, and The Things a Body Might Become (Five Oaks Press, 2017). She’s

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Family Fest by Lynn Casteel Harper
Family Fest by Lynn Casteel Harper

Enjoy this audio recording of “Family Fest” by Lynn Casteel Harper from issue 27:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Lynn Casteel Harper is a writer, minister, and chaplain.  She is the author of On Vanishing (Catapult, April 2020), a nonfiction book that explores the dimensions of spirituality, social justice, and dementia. Lynn received a Barbara Deming Fund grant

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Halfway In by Judy Halebsky
Halfway In by Judy Halebsky

Enjoy this audio recording of “Halfway In” by Judy Halebsky from issue 27:2 of CALYX Journal! Buy the full issue here. Judy Halebsky is the author of the poetry collections Sky=Empty, Tree Line and the chapbook Space/Gap/Interval/Distance. Fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, the Millay Colony, and the Vermont Studio Center have supported her work. Her passions include the Moth-style storytelling

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Saturday by Emily Tuszynska
Saturday by Emily Tuszynska

Enjoy this audio recording of “Saturday” by Emily Tuszynska, the runner-up in the 2018 Lois Cranston Poetry Prize contest. Read the poem here. Emily Tuszynska’s poetry can be found in many journals, recently including Poetry Northwest, Salamander, The Southern Review, and Water-Stone Review. She lives in Virginia, just outside Washington, D.C.

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