by Nathan Reid | Feb 21, 2019 | Magazine Article
My brother’s buying some late night drive-thru tacosfinds an empty parking lottakes two bites and starts to choke on his tearsthrows the meat and shells onto cracked concrete. He cries, confined in his self-made solitudebecause he’s lost and fat and feels too old at...
by Nathan Pyles | Feb 21, 2019 | Magazine Article
We dig our father’s grave with a post hole digger.My younger brother jabs the double blade into the dark soil.Across the creek, coyotes yowl to the dusk.We’re not used to hearing them.They weren’t around when we grew up near here. My brother rests against the...
by Gillian Nevers | Feb 21, 2019 | Magazine Article
Joe takes the dog to the service station;feeds him donuts. Sometimes chocolate frosted.Can’t poison this dog—he’s a Lab.They hang out for awhile,listening to the regulars hold forth from theirregular spots on oil-stained folding chairsset at the edge of the bay. It’s...
by Chuck Stebelton, Cathy Cunningham | Feb 13, 2019 | Magazine Article
Leap. It’s a word that artist and amateur naturalist Gaylord Schanilec uses frequently. In fact, Schanilec lives by the leap, often choosing artistic projects that require him to leap, both technically and conceptually. This drive to explore something unknown to him,...
by Jon Lee, Keefe Keeley | Feb 13, 2019 | Magazine Article
People often recount the floods in living memory. As a child, I heard about the Kickapoo River flood of 1978, after which Soldiers Grove—the town just north of where I grew up—moved to higher ground; homes, businesses, and about 600 people were relocated off of the...