Sibling Circus & Hooked by Meg Pokrass
Sibling Circus My brother was addicted to dog biscuits and this might have been how our act started. When our mother arrived, he’d pop one in his mouth, throw one to the real dog and then toss one to…
Sibling Circus My brother was addicted to dog biscuits and this might have been how our act started. When our mother arrived, he’d pop one in his mouth, throw one to the real dog and then toss one to…
I think it matters that her husband was older. He owned his own house when they met. He also owned a coffee shop on Lattimore. And Mrs. Haverhill, then—to distinguish herself from the other long-necked, loose-sweatered girls in the…
After three gin martinis, my mother-in-law spits out her teeth. “You’re a cannonball with a credit card,” she hisses. Her dentures glisten like pearls in her palm. Never, she likes to remind me, did she foresee her sweet son…
CRAFT is delighted to share a triptych of humorous microfictions by Grant Faulkner, previously included in Best Microfiction 2022. The following pieces take on the subject matter of craft and critical essays from the perspectives of three fictional individuals,…
My father, after slipping backward on a stretch of rooted Alaskan ice and hitting his head, miraculously walks the three miles to get back home—heavily concussed and alone—with our two unleashed labs directing him in the winter dark. He…
People will say Ry must have planned the robbery for weeks. They’ll want purpose and emotion and strategy. They’ll say she had a gun tucked into a pocket. They’ll say she must have been desperate: four kids at home…
Sunday. None of the puzzles here have all their pieces. The coloring sheets say HAPPY EASTER or HE IS RISEN—it’s January—in that swoopy bubble font usually exclusive to Sunday school worksheets. The staff never remembers to set out new…
Essay by Sam Dilling • Cara Blue Adams’s debut short story collection, You Never Get It Back, is a nuanced portrait of love, loss, and longing. The stories follow the life of Kate Bishop, the central character, from childhood,…
Essay by Michelle Ross • Since the first time I read a Sara Lippmann story, I’ve been smitten. Among the inventory of qualities I admire is her wit, her raw honesty, her faith in her readers’ ability to keep…
The Pythagorean Theorem In a photo of her when she was eight months pregnant with me, my mother looks up at the camera. High sun. Her sweaty hair clinging to her jawline. A powder blue top swinging in the…
All three of these microessays were crafted at different times in Kathy Fish’s Fast Flash Workshops in the first year of the pandemic. I live with Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and not only had I lost the majority of my coping methods with the world shutting down, but I also got separated, sold a house, and moved five hundred miles from the only home I’ve ever known. I needed prompts because my brain was in a constant state of fight or flight, which leads to a lot of physical symptoms, difficulty concentrating, and often, dissociation. Kathy’s workshops have been a godsend for me as she is able to get me to let go of the anxious, overthinking side of my brain and let the subconscious take over and tackle subjects I’ve never had the guts to tackle.
“The Pythagorean Theorem” was my response to the instruction to write the story of a photo that haunts you. I have held back from writing about my mother over the years. It’s complicated. Beyond complicated, because I barely know her. I wanted to capture this image of her pregnant with me, the sadness and desperation in her body language and in my elder sibling’s as well. They were living in an abusive situation I was about to be born into, and though I have deep anger at my mother’s conservative—now bizarre QAnon—worldview, I still have empathy and compassion for all she went through, what she got us out of, and the complexity of navigating it all; hence, the triangles as a metaphor for my internal conflict.
Like my short fiction, my creative nonfiction is always in conversation. Think Faulkner: every piece is connected. Just before writing “Every Mass Attracts Every Other Mass in the Universe,” I had been listening to a lot of astronomy podcasts, so I was thinking about the nature of time, how I find the laws of physics comforting and often just flat-out weird. I look for synchronicity, for patterns, and leading up to the release of my second book, I could not help but reflect on my first book, which was published two weeks before my beloved grandmother’s death. There is more dissociation here, but there is also reaching for connection as I always am, and seldom feel.
And finally, with the series “There Is News Along the Ohio River, I-III,” which is likely to be a book (IV-VIII have been published in Five South), I am simply trying to cling to this world, to be present despite my shattered heart, to acknowledge that beauty still exists. Since my move to Louisville, I’ve spent the majority of my time alone and my only solace has been walking the Big Four Bridge, which connects Louisville, Kentucky, to Jeffersonville, Indiana. I believe these walks have saved my life. Each piece starts with the same line like Terrance Hayes’s brilliant American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin. I hope the repetition mimics the movement, the volatile and steadfast nature, the coexistence of calm and wild in this place. Writing this series is my attempt to illustrate and share all I’ve witnessed on the river and how it has affected my mental health.
BETH GILSTRAP is the author of Deadheading & Other Stories, winner of the 2019 Red Hen Press Women’s Prose Prize and finalist for the 2021 Foreword Reviews Awards in Short Fiction. She is also the author of I Am Barbarella: Stories (2015) from Twelve Winters Press and No Man’s Wild Laura (2016) from Hyacinth Girl Press. She lives with C-PTSD and is quite vocal about ending the stigma surrounding mental illness. Find Beth on Twitter @BettySueBlue.