Complaint of a Brain in a Jar
By Poetry Issue 119
It isn’t sight or sound or taste I’ve missed
the most—I’d been deprived of each before—
but routine, trusty touch, which we ignore
promiscuously:
The Lost Ring
By Fiction Issue 119
The signs of where Esme had gone wrong, she thought, must have been there from the beginning—probably in primary colors. She wondered if burning the toast was where she’d gone wrong. Each mistake led to another, she thought, wishing she could be perfect.
Read MoreThe New House
By Poetry Issue 119
First rain in the new house—
walls passed inspection, but
who knows? It’s hard to trust
in bricks. Aren’t they just cut-up
mud, lashed now by spray
from clotted gutters?
The Extra Child
By Fiction Issue 119
Twenty years ago, we brought the first child home. We held him, and the silence before us then was the deep, vast thrum of all we didn’t know. We were here, suddenly parents. The silence weighed down the air like boulders on silk. And then, of course, he cried.
Read MoreWatching Movies with Augustine: On Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon
By Editorial Issue 119
When I go to the movies—well, when I go anywhere—Saint Augustine is always nearby. He lives in my head (and heart) rent free.
Read MoreA Conversation with Denise Levertov
By Interview Issue 18
Denise Levertov was born in England and came to the United States in 1948. She became known as one of the century’s most important poets and writers. Awards for her work included the Lenore Marshall Prize, the Robert Frost Medal, and the Lannan Prize. Her last years were spent in Seattle, Washington, where she won…
Read MoreQuantum Theory
By Poetry Issue 118
I’ve been trying not to live my life / only in response to death.
Read MoreChrist Preaching
By Poetry Issue 118
I forgive the absent boy.
Read MoreOn Turbulence: New Work in Translation by Hussein Barghouthi and Kim Hyesoon
By Culture Issue 118
I had a dream I got what I wanted: a baby, a silver necklace, and worldly success.
Read MoreCrossing Over
By Poetry Issue 118
Beyond, / the Atlantic gapes. Anonymous. / I don’t know how I’ll let you go.
Read More

