FOUR WAY REVIEW

An Electronic Literary Journal

  • ISSUE 35

    ISSUE 35

    POETRY Sorrow by Megan Pinto Theodor Adorno in Los Angeles, 1941 by Grace Alvino Brusque Recital by Christopher Brean Murray I am the grass of the wind alley by Sarah…

    Read more…: ISSUE 35
  • QUEER NATURE ROUNDTABLE

    QUEER NATURE ROUNDTABLE

    In 2021, Four Way Review partnered with several other journals and presses to establish the Bootleg Reading Series. It was a partnership we hoped would continue to grow beyond the reading series and lift up the projects of each partner. We’re excited to share this conversation with some of the poets of the new Queer…

  • INTERVIEW WITH Raegen Pietrucha

    INTERVIEW WITH Raegen Pietrucha

    FWR: To start, I was hoping you might speak about the pull of Greek mythology, both in its use as a framing device for some of the poems and a source of imagery in others. RP: When I drafted my first poem about Medusa way back in 2007, it was about a different subject entirely.…

  • INTERVIEW WITH Matthew Olzmann

    INTERVIEW WITH Matthew Olzmann

    Matthew Olzmann’s latest collection, Constellation Route, is out now from Alice James. He has published two previous collections, Contradictions in the Design and Mezzanines, and he has received fellowships from Kundiman, the Kresge Arts Foundation and the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. FWR: Can you speak on the genesis and organization of Constellation Route?   MO:…

POETRY

  • BLUE PERIOD by James O’Leary

    BLUE PERIOD by James O’Leary

      It’s 9:31 PM where the end of the city tinges the sea. An empty   spiderweb hangs motionless between the blinds & the closed window leaking   the street’s neon onto the unmade bed. No moon. Not even the comfort of wine,   bottles shaped like the body I want, & will never have.…

  • THE YEAR YOU DIED by Vasvi Kejriwal

    THE YEAR YOU DIED by Vasvi Kejriwal

      05/19:   A tornado flung a fridge into the bones of a tree.   Its bark, gnarled, like the mouth of someone, new to grief.     05/22:   I found your pen at the edge of the dresser. Yet to collect dust, it held your fading  fingermarks.     06/18:   Then, hunger…

  • TWO POEMS by Caroline Richards

    TWO POEMS by Caroline Richards

    Recovery poem with jargon   After reading Auden, I water my moth orchid with ice cubes and watch a girl with green hair draw a benzene ring in white erase. I pay attention to time. I arrange my table of books into heiroglyphs  and try to say something before the sun sets. In Midsummer Night’s…

FICTION

  • SILVER LINE by Christian Kiefer

    SILVER LINE by Christian Kiefer

                 I had been afraid of the cold silent body I held to my belly but when we at last reached the engine and clambered up the frozen metal ladder and into the relative warmth of the interior, the child jerked awake and began to wail, a thin, gasping sound that bit directly into my heart.…

  • LITTLE LEGS by C.H. Hooks

    LITTLE LEGS by C.H. Hooks

                If the TV is on, it’s morning. I might have never noticed if I didn’t think it had spoken my name.              Good god good morning. It did not speak my name. No one did. I hear rustling in the bathroom and there is light coming from under the door. Warm yellow light that tints the…

  • DUCK, DUCK, HORSE by Jeff Frawley

    DUCK, DUCK, HORSE by Jeff Frawley

    The lumber, I tell Patricia, will soon be a fence. I’ve hired a crew. We’re at the window. She’s pinching the mole on my neck. She asks, But Katrin, what about the cost? The fence will consume what remains of my settlement money, that sum secured by lawyers after I fled from the Fix. But…

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