Contents
Take Me With You When
You Go
Lindsay Hansard
The Great Conversation: Cultural Change Through YouTube
Zoe Comingore
Amorphous Object &
Papered Wall
Jenna Citrus
Sundays in Hudson
Jamie Brian
Emily
Joseph Theis
Fox and Geese
Deborah Rocheleau
Virtue
Kara Wellman
SAD
Madeleine Richey
Love in Winter
David Albert Solberg
I Have Made My Own Soul Suffer
Hoda Fakhari
Comfort
Marissa Kopco
The Bath
Bridget Hansen
A Notice to My Mailman
Elizabeth Schoppelrei
poem for god
Casandra Robledo
The Woman in Silent Tears
Sony Ton-Amie
Division
Jenna Citrus
Passing Through
Marissa Kopco
Signifying Antipathy
Eric Kubacki
Perejil
Sony Ton-Amie
Macromicro
Abbey Kish
Amish Country
A.J. Weber
everything beautiful bleeds
Casandra Robledo
5 August 2014
Emily Gadzinksi
Indulgences
Marcee Wardell
Et in Arcadio Ego
David Albert Solberg
Stuttgart Triptych
Abbey Kish
Debbie
Katie Cross
Sorry, We're Closed
Marissa Kopco
Older than Our Bodies
A.J. Weber
Perejil
On October 3, 1937, one word killed 25 thousands.
Two lovers were caught in the act;
bayonets pierced her belly
while he came in blood and fear.
Bodies floated in the river like crumpled leaves,
the fall matched their contrast perfectly.
The babies thrown into empty spaces giggled for
a second, before they met the end of a spear.
In San Juan, the fish cried blood,
their comrades weaving between corpses.
The frogs leapt at the shores of the river—
they could not stomach the eyes of the dead.
Cleanse the borders, Trujillo said.
Paint it in blood, the people chanted.
And Haitians saturated the fertilizer
for the sugarcanes they planted that morning.
Under the complicit eyes of FDR,
Trujillo and Stenio shook hands and set the price.
21 dollars per person on paper. Done deal.
From Dajabon to Moca, no black men stand.
Those left were piled in trucks and dumped in the sea.
Their numbers we will never know—
they were not part of the deal.
They were wasted money.
About the Author
Sony Ton-Aime graduated from Kent State University last December with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He plans to pursue a career of writing both novels and poems and study corporate law to satiate his love of knowledge. Sony has an avid interest in photography, and he enjoys spending time in his home country of Haiti.