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
  • INTERVIEW with Kyle Dargan

    Kyle Dargan is the author of five collections of poetry: Anagnorisis (TriQuarterly/Northwestern UP, 2018). Honest Engine (University of Georgia Press, 2015), Logorrhea Dementia (University of Georgia Press, 2010), Bouquet of Hungers (University of Georgia Press, 2007) and The Listening (University of Georgia Press, 2003). He is the recipient of the Cave Canem Poetry Prize, and…

  • QUARTO: An Interview with Melissa Cundieff

    QUARTO: An Interview with Melissa Cundieff

      Darling Nova, Melissa Cundieff’s full-length debut, won the 2017 Autumn House poetry prize. She earned her MFA in poetry from Vanderbilt University, where she received an Academy of American Poets Prize. Her poem Hurt Music was published in Issue 10.    FWR: Your poems seem to be interested in the limits and constraints of language,…

  • INTERVIEW WITH Tommye Blount

    INTERVIEW WITH Tommye Blount

    Born and raised in Detroit, Tommye Blount now calls Novi home. A graduate from Warren Wilson College’s MFA Program for Writers, he has been the recipient of fellowships and scholarships from Cave Canem and the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference. His work can be found in various journals and anthologies. His full-length collection is forthcoming from…

POETRY

  • TWO POEMS by Kuhu Joshi

    TWO POEMS by Kuhu Joshi

    Saraswati on a Sunday morning All this living alone. This mug With my initials on it, scrubbed And put to dry On the kitchen slab. It waits for me. Looks happiest when filled up. I’m a bit sick of Maria – my Areca palm There by the bookshelf. She Dances. When it gets like this I Don’t know what to do with myself. Fridge then…

  • SELF-PORTRAIT AS THE CORNFIELDS by Carolina Hotchandani

    SELF-PORTRAIT AS THE CORNFIELDS by Carolina Hotchandani

    I am a citizen of a former British colony that rebelled from England with a great tea party, declaring itself its motherland one day. America. Was it orphaned? Did it kill its own mother? Poor England. Where are you from? the other Americans ask me. My mother is Brazilian; my father is Indian. I was…

  • TWO POEMS by Daniele Pantano

    TWO POEMS by Daniele Pantano

    CORRUPTED (WASTEWATER) We ask to be made too . . . short and bleeding to be . . . strangled with candy floss . . . to taste what it takes . . . to reach another to be absolutely  . . . nothing but spoken about  . . . to spell innocence or renewal…

FICTION

  • Singing Backup by Jason Kapcala

    “Drinks,” Muzzie says. “You, me, and Chen—a celebration in Dizzy’s memory. Not a drinking party.” He won’t go that far with it—but Kev knows that though he never went to college, never set foot in a frat house, Muzzie holds a pretty clear definition of what a drinking party entails: keg stands and beer pong…

  • Maps by Patrick Lawler

    Maps by Patrick Lawler

    “Who was it who decided on where Tallahassee should be?” Toby asks questions, and we laugh a lot. Stupid things really. But it makes you think, and it helps to pass the time. He takes the money when people pump their gas, and I do most of the other things, like brake jobs, tires, and…

  • KIRTI by Shruti Swamy

    When I pick Kirti up from the bus station, I don’t want to look at her all at once. It’s been years since I’ve seen her last and I want to take her in piece by piece. I look at her brown arms that hug her dirty yellow backpack to her chest, a pose too…

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