Aug 15, 2021 | Special Issue: 2021 New Flash Fiction Prize
My husband is shrinking. He seems to get smaller each day and we both pretend not to notice, for to notice would be to draw attention to the fact that he may grow too small to make love to me, then I will be forced to carry him like a child.
Aug 15, 2021 | Special Issue: 2021 New Flash Fiction Prize
Mama is always inviting the neighbor over from across the street. He’s young, maybe younger than her, we think. But we don’t really know.
Aug 15, 2021 | Special Issue: 2021 New Flash Fiction Prize
Grandma was whole once, not a shrivelled brown skull on a stand doubling up as a paper towel holder.
Aug 15, 2021 | Special Issue: 2021 New Flash Fiction Prize
Five hours ago, we put the car in reverse and rolled gently backward to watch the deer. A doe and two fawns, slender-necked and alert, unfazed when our toddler called, Hi Bambi, hi!
Aug 15, 2021 | Special Issue: 2021 New Flash Fiction Prize
Grace O’Leary of Appalachian air knits a blanket for her wife. The wife, upon its completion, runs her fingers over it, calluses catching on rough wool. “Your grandmother made this,” she says.