A Son in Shadow by Fred D'Aguiar

I know nothing about how they meet. She is a schoolgirl. He is at work, probably a government clerk in a building near her school. At the hour when school and office are out for lunch their lives intersect at sandwich counters, soft-drink stands, traffic lights, market squares. Their eyes meet or their bodies collide at one of these food queues. He says something suggestive, complimentary. She suppresses a smile or traps one
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—Afaa Michael Weaver, from These Hands I Know

Mark Jarman is interviewed by the Savannah Morning News.

Lia Purpura's Rough Likeness is reviewed in the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

The 2012 Kathryn A. Morton and Mary McCarthy contests are now open for submission! Click here to submit your manuscript electronically.

Kiki_Petrosino_photo

03-01-2012
Fort Red Border

Rope Walk Series University Center at University of Southern Indiana, 8600 University Boulevard Evansville, IN 47712 5:00pm

Nicole Louise Reed
nreid@usi.edu
http://www.usi.edu/ropewalk/readingseries.asp

Something in My Eye
by Michael Jeffrey Lee

Michael Jeffrey Lee's stories are bizarre and smart and stilted, like dystopic fables told by a redneck Samuel Beckett. Outcasts hunker under brid ... [read more]

Rough Likeness
by Lia Purpura

Lia Purpura's essays are full of joy in the act of intense observation; they're also deliciously subversive and alert to the ways language gets l ... [read more]

Small Fires
by Julie Marie Wade

This is a daughter’s story. In Small Fires, Julie Marie Wade recreates the landscape of her childhood with a lacemaker’s care, then t ... [read more]

Mending
by Sallie Bingham

In Mending, Sallie Bingham follows the often brutal course of yearning and its disappointments with an emotional acuity both unflinching a ... [read more]

Hoodwinked
by David Hernandez

When hornets’ nests become dusky skulls half-buried in suburban grass, we try not to believe our eyes. Such inherent untrustworthiness—of recei ... [read more]

This Is Not Your City
by Caitlin Horrocks

Thirteen women confront dramas both every-day and outlandish in Caitlin Horrocks’ This Is Not Your City. In stories as darkly comic as t ... [read more]

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