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NUMBER ONE: Because oranges. Because a single slice held to the light is magic and sometimes the scene in the window of its ...
Michael Kleber-Diggs is a poet, essayist, literary critic, and arts educator. He is the author of the poetry collection ...
Orion: Keane, I understand that this work was inspired by an NPR story about the extreme decline in animal species populations caused by the climate crisis. Could you tell us more about the genesis ...
THE SHAPE GOT ME FIRST. Gnarled and hooded, the gatekeeper to the underworld rising up out of a frozen wetland. Then the color. Blood-red, with some green and purple-brown mottling, an uneasy union of ...
Ape: v. To imitate, to mimic (pretentiously, irrationally, or absurdly). To mimic the reality. (See also parrot.) Bat: v. To hit away, to strike or hit a ball with a bat. There is also the US ...
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THE CHICKEN WAS UNWELL. She no longer ran to the summons of the leftovers pail to scratch at the compost heap with the other hens. Morning found her in a corner of the henhouse facing the wall, with ...
APRIL IS NATIONAL POETRY MONTH, and we want to celebrate it with you! What follows is a list of, and a few lines from, twelve poems that we’ve published over the years and can’t stop thinking about.
“We need a communal shift in vision, a community of imaginers, of imaginal ecologists.” Though some suggest that the imaginal world is a bridge that connects ordinary and non-ordinary reality, I ...
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