Category: Issue Eight

  • Avoidance in Five Parts.

    Avoidance in Five Parts.

    by Kate Harland. Sitting on a Bench in the Afternoon They sat side by side on a park bench. In front of them a playground, behind them a white building with columns and cornices. Behind it were hills so far in the distance they appeared only as varying shades of purple. High pitched laughter of children imitated machinery sounds…

  • Lovers

    Lovers

    By Laura Wild I’m lying in bed scrolling through my Facebook feed, listening to him potter around the apartment and getting ready to join me. We’re going to bed late, again. Every morning we feel like hell and promise ‘Tonight, I’m going to bed early’ and every night we stay up for one last drink,…

  • White Sand, Black Sea

    White Sand, Black Sea

    by Carly Rawson The worst of the cyclone had spared them but it still gave the town a good licking. The power was out, the roads full of water and downed trees. Sylvie, stiff from packing, felt sore too. They had lived by that beach for seven years. A drowning beach, big rips and big…

  • Love and Other Vices

    Love and Other Vices

    By Daniela Abriola I wasn’t opposed to the idea of going out for drinks. Especially since I hadn’t left my room in three days. But who’s counting. Except I felt rather comfortable staying in the cacoon of blankets I had made for myself over the past three days. I had an abundance of Glee episodes…

  • Parallax by Robin Morgan

    Parallax by Robin Morgan

    Reviewed by Frances Bigger. I do love a story within a story, and Robin Morgan’s Parallax is just that, a group of stories within a story in a world where stories are relics no one is looking for. The Yarner tells The Stranger story after story, tales from a world that is both nothing like…

  • Book Review: Angela Savage’s Mother of Pearl.

    Book Review: Angela Savage’s Mother of Pearl.

    Reviewed by Angela Wauchop “Meg blinked back tears of frustration. This was not a conversation she wanted to have. She grasped her skirt in tight fists and took a deep breath. […] Meg’s lower lip quivered with suppressed anger. ‘I’ve never given up, Anna. All I’ve done is tame the grief. I’ve never, ever given…

  • The woods are dark.

    The woods are dark.

    by Laura Wild The woods are dark. They crawl with evil beasts that slither and stalk after prey through the bristling walls of pines and lonely valleys that sink between the mountains. Bones lie blanketed beneath moss and sticky pitch, drawn apart by roots and teeth. The forest is a crypt, and each night its…

  • Foreplay

    Foreplay

    by Tina Tsironis Flirting that functions as foreplay is my downfall. I can’t get enough of the shoving, the ribbing, the close lean into one another, just enough that I inhale their momentarily pacifying lavender perfume. What really gets me, though, is the verbal back and forth. When flirting becomes a dialogue-driven duel of words designed…

  • Apple Orchard

    Apple Orchard

    by Kate Harland There’s a somewhat delicate and complicated thing. A precious and knowing thing that         I have kept with me. A thing that’s forgotten ’cept for when it’s remembered and whole bunch of light bulbs go off all in a row. Little bits all lit up like sugary breadcrumbs in the moonlight making a…

  • Old Fish

    Old Fish

    By Miles Boyle-Bryant ‘You smell like old fish.’ ‘Yeah? Well you smell like dog farts, Leo.’ I’m Leo. My dad is old fish. ‘Yeah, but you look like a dog’s bum.’ ‘And your mother says you’re my spitting image.’ ‘Rack off old man. Grow some hair, your head looks like a big angry pimple.’ ‘That’ll…

  • Memories [Real or Imagined]

    Memories [Real or Imagined]

    by Jessica Murdoch The One with the Cake Cake isn’t about cake. It’s about comfort or celebration or nostalgia. Cravings for cake cannot be easily satiated by substitutions. Cake means birthdays. Elaborate creations from the Women’s Weekly Children’s Birthday Cake book. A pool. A piano. A princess. Planning. Weeks – possibly months – go into…

  • Julienne van Loon’s The Thinking Woman

    Julienne van Loon’s The Thinking Woman

    Reviewed by Eugen Bacon. An insightful foreword by Anne Summers gives you hint of this philosophical book that celebrates being a woman.  It is a compelling piece of art, autobiography and scholarship full of enchantment with play. It offers in its meditative approach to the everyday a journey that is also an inspiration, a sharing…

  • Depart.

    Depart.

    by Anne Walsh   I.   Your death is a soft, green wing. Velvet spun by sun. A parrot’s wing.  Just one more thing, one more shade of impossible for grief to jump into like a souped up car. Electric lime. Vegas neon of a Lorikeet. Your death dresses old school big time. Ridiculous feather,…

  • Julie Keys Interview

    Julie Keys Interview

    by Samuel Elliott Julie Keys lives in the Illawarra region on the NSW south coast. Her short stories have been published across a range of Australian journals. Julie has worked as a tutor, a registered nurse, a youth worker and as a clinical trials coordinator. She is now studying a PhD in creative arts at…

  • A Mind Like Lightning

    A Mind Like Lightning

    by Hélène Cardona   Stars scribble in our eyes the frosty sagas, the glowing cantos of unvanquished space.      —Hart Crane Without gravity I fly into a thousand pieces, add sparkle to various reflections — fallen stars, colliding lights — transform particles, waves, and dark matter. I become ocean, mercury, silver shimmers, fairy tales, fascinated.…

  • Wrecked on Rakia

    Wrecked on Rakia

    By Ian C. Smith,   I didn’t yet know what the obscure legacy of becoming a mature-age undergraduate would mean.  For a first-year history assignment I chose to research immigrants’ difficulties with assimilation in Australia.  Familiar with hard-slog picking in a drained swamp where magnificent vegetables grew in thick mud like black treacle known as…

  • Swimming the Horse

    Swimming the Horse

    by Anthony Lawrence,   For Eleanor Hooker.   It’s not just hoof prints on sand that leave proof of a visitation of mane, flare & muscled hide as the daytime moon apportions light to mushrooms taken & broken down by word of mouth to be eaten between sets of breakers & a tidal surge of…

  • Women’s Rights

    Women’s Rights

    By Amirah Al Wassif, don’t try to introduce my skin to your skin cause such introduction doesn’t let the light to get in don’t try to prove me as your servant while starting to talk about equality between women and men! don’t try to teach me the art of life now and then cause my…

  • Obi Wan

    Obi Wan

    by Anne Walsh.   I want to go like Obi Wan Kenobi with a smile that says I knew all of this would happen, I wanted it to. I wanted to lose you, my light, my sabre. I wanted the cut of you to deflate me, make me air and a pile of my old…

  • Poem thingo

    Poem thingo

    By Nicki Bacon.   Stare at me from a distance, A tale of boredom now known. Stare at me from a closeness, My life, a dullness sewn.   This flash of light is but a journey, Some hundred-year sorrow. So far from a fairy tale, Oh, how I dread the morrow.   Told of such…