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…

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  • Ghinwa Jawhari on her debut chapbook: BINT  Interviewed by Sara Elkamel

    Ghinwa Jawhari on her debut chapbook: BINT Interviewed by Sara Elkamel

    Ghinwa Jawhari named her debut chapbook, selected by poet Aria Aber for publication by Radix Media, BINT, Arabic for girl. In Arab cultures, the word is also used to describe a virgin woman, of any age. In this series of poems, compact in form yet unbridled in lyricism, Jawhari explores the passage (particularly of those…

  • CONVERSATION WITH Adrian Matejka and Conor Bracken

    CONVERSATION WITH Adrian Matejka and Conor Bracken

    Adrian, thanks for agreeing to talk about your latest book, Somebody Else Sold the World, with me. I’m really excited to talk about it, and the ways that it is contiguous with your larger poetic project, and how it also subverts or cuts new facets into it. One of the things that has always exhilarated me…

  • INTERVIEW WITH K-Ming Chang

    INTERVIEW WITH K-Ming Chang

    I first read K-Ming Chang’s writing in 2018, back when I was Fiction Editor of Nashville Review. Her story, “Meals for Mourners/兄弟”, captured my attention with its embodied, elemental language and stirring portrait of family life. Since that time, Chang has written a novel, a chapbook, and a story collection, among other projects. Currently, she…

POETRY

  • TWO POEMS by Corinna Rosendahl

    TWO POEMS by Corinna Rosendahl

    from Scenes from the Seconds    It was written   for an exhibition that at the end of her life Louise Bourgeois circled back to her birth1   When I did as asked   like long hair I pulled my fire back   1Unknown   ***     Henceforth and forever I am my own…

  • PARIS by Elly Bookman

    PARIS by Elly Bookman

      At seventeen I gazed a good ten minutes at Saint Catherine Labouré’s incorruptible palms around a rosary. Soon  I’d learn to drive a manual transmission,  the backward N of the ascending gears.  The still-war had been on for more than a year,  and there was something so similarly earned  in her un-atrophied grip. I…

  • FLEVATO by Richard Siken

    FLEVATO by Richard Siken

    We are going to poison the rats, announced the Transit Authority. They had posted fliers but no one was reading them. The subway was crowded. I was late and trying to think diagonally, up and around the corners. I wasn’t used to it. I grew up in a flat land where there was no descending.…

FICTION

  • BLINDKEY POINT by Norris Eppes

      Most Blindkey Point locals thought the help-line stickers were enough. Tilda disagreed.             Without answers to the strange phenomenon, they built the Here For You Center. It was a building full of skylights. There were four round tables, varnished wood. The backs of the white chairs were curved like…

  • HEARTWOOD by Rose Skelton

    HEARTWOOD by Rose Skelton

                    On the day after Hazel died – it was a Tuesday afternoon in early March – George stood at his woodworking bench, whittling a bowl. He pressed the piece of yew down, and used a bowl gouge to scoop a smooth sliver of the pinkish-white wood so that it curled upwards and away, falling…

  • COLLAPSED by Michael Holladay

    When I was at Andy’s house he looked at me and said, “I want to stone that place to the ground.” We were getting high on the basement couch, and he was behind a thin mist of smoke. He was talking about the tobacco warehouse his dad inherited, now dilapidated. Or, his dad called it…

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