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The Endling

In a remote Australian mountain forest there is a black orchid. It is the last of its species: an endling. As Keely Jobe’s debut novel The Endling begins, the orchid decides that “for the sake of its kind, it will hold on a little longer. It won’t flounder. It will remember the way the orchids…

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Recent posts

  • Ghost in the Rain

    An Essay wherein an Author of a Chapbook of Very Smol Stories muses on the 12 micros and flash fictions in the Collection to see if any “Research” took place.


  • Zeus Himself Could Not Undo the Web

    Zeus was three years younger than Mother. Zeus could touch the basketball net without jumping.


  • Nice Places

    At the start of Nice Places, Vincent Chu’s debut novel, twenty-something Georgie loses his job at a soulless corporation. Instead of coming clean about his lack of future plans, and despite having never gone anywhere on his own, Georgie tells his colleagues he is quitting to travel the world—and promptly starts an Instagram account to…


  • Swung

    For weeks, you’d been slipping. Collecting speeding tickets, lottery tickets, yelling at the neighbor’s boy, overfeeding the fish.


  • A conversation with Danilo John Thomas

    Danilo John Thomas’s story collection, Ore Vein, (Veliz Press) reminds me of a lenticular—one of those weird grooved pictures that shifts images—and I’m a kid jumping from one side of the room to another, watching the flowers bloom then wilt, or the skeleton grow flesh.


  • A Parish Chronicle

    Winner of the 1955 Nobel Prize, Halldór Laxness wrote novels, essays, plays, and translations, and was a champion of Iceland, its history, and its people. In this novel, published in Icelandic in 1970, Laxness takes readers on a stroll through Icelandic history, a history with few documents and populated by invisible men and women.


  • An excerpt from Chen Tàitai’s Big Business

    Chen Shu Ang often said that in her next life she wanted three things—to be reborn tall, to be a man (so no one could tell her what to do!) and to never leave her homeland. It went unsaid that she would once again be born in her beloved Taiwan.


  • Two Debuts: Hasan Dudar with Pardeep Toor

    The shared terrain, in place and theme, gave Toor and I a lot to talk about in a recent conversation that took place online, including the idea of representation in fiction, coming-of-age narratives, and more.


  • The Orange Notebooks

    Susanna Crossman’s novel, The Orange Notebooks, is a compelling study of grief’s many colors.


  • The Village Thief

    Only this writer sees what’s happening in Ginny and David’s backyard. They are back there burying Tim’s dog. They’re sliding its tiny carcass into an almost equally tiny hole without any difficulty. Tim doesn’t even know his dog’s dead.