Issue 68
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Gregory Wolfe takes on the modern saying, “I’m spiritual but not religious,” flipping it on its head; Robert Clark writes lovingly of director Terence Davies; and Rod Pattenden explores how the art of Emmanuel Garibay is “an artist for our time, when art, politics, religion, and power collide.” With poems by Scott Cairns, Kate Daniels, and Steven Haven; a conversation with poet and playwright Jeanne Murray Walker; fiction by Charles Turner; essays by Judith Rock and Deborah Joy Corey; and more.
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Description
Editorial Statement
Gregory Wolfe, Religious but Not Spiritual
Fiction
Charles Turner, Ends of the Earth
Jessica Murphy Moo, The Kind that Heals
Poetry
Scott Cairns, Three Poems
Kate Daniels, Sheet: A Psychology of Hatred
Dana Littlepage Smith, Two Poems
John Poch, Two Poems
Steve Kronen, Two Poems
Roxane Beth Johnson, Three Poems
Stephen Haven, Two Poems
Robert Grunst, Two Poems
Bruce Beasley, Sunrise Insomnia Service
K.A. Hays, Of the Body Taken In
Film
Robert Clark, Nothing Happens: Everything Happens
Visual Arts
Rod Pattenden, Recognizing the Stranger: The Art of Emmanuel Garibay
Interview
A Conversation with Jeanne Murray Walker
Essays
Judith Rock, Inherited but Never Inhabited: Story and the Garden
Deborah Joy Corey, Conversion
Confessions
Priscilla Gilman, Wine for Those Who Faint
Additional information
Weight | .75 lbs |
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Dimensions | 10 × 7 × .5 in |