Timothy Justin Garcia
One Nice Bug Per Day
Xuebing Du

@theartofmadeline
$LAYYYTER

pixel skylines
RMH
NASA

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Kiana Khansmith
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
will byers stan first human second
wallacepolsom
KIROKAZE
Mike Driver
cherry valley forever
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DEAR READER
we're not kids anymore.

oozey mess
occasionally subtle

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@apricitymag
Timothy Justin Garcia
Kenta Murakami
How to be Popular in Heaven
Chris York
If only I had died doing something interesting. Skydiving would have been a great story, “So I was falling from the sky, yeah you heard me the sky, and my parachute wouldn’t open…” I can’t be greedy, though – a gruesome murder would have sufficed. I can imagine the other angels crowding around to hear all the gory details! Hell, I would have taken drowning in a rip tide or attacked by killer bees. But no, I go and die vacuuming. Yes, vacuuming. I probably vacuumed three times in my entire life and I just so happen to kick the bucket while doing it. They don’t tell people this while they are alive, but how one dies is very important in determining how popular a person is in heaven. Any time you go to a party in heaven the first question that people ask is, “How did you die?” I met a girl the other day who died having sex. How am I supposed to compete with a story like that? Who wants to talk to Mr. Vacuum when Ms. Death-by-Orgasm is at the party? And you can’t lie in heaven. If you try then one of those insufferable bleeps that are used on network television comes out instead. On my first weekend I tried to tell a beautiful angel that I died saving orphans from a burning building. Talk about embarrassing. All the other angels turned and laughed at me, the bleeped newbie. God was sure pissed. As punishment he made me spend the week vacuuming the Garden of Eden’s clubhouse; what a cruel sense of humor. So before you die give it some thought. You will be telling your story for an eternity, so make it a good one.
William Gayle
Elizabeth Kozlova
No Rest for the Wicked
Rex Ibanez
Oh, calamitous chamber! I clamber up cushion from the old carpeted floor as a leg stretches and kicks the door shut, clicking the latch lock; I ponder my sonder songs among ghastly ghosts as weightless limbs collapse upon my back and massage bones to distorted soundtracks with phantom fooling-ghoulish hosts -- the most loathsome of invisible gals shrill-shriek-shock electric frigidity while two, three, four-guitar fluidity slams oversouled overdrive against walls in gall! And nigh the night draws down as each female figment drops her gown.
Timothy Justin Garcia
Kenta Murakami
The Will
Jeffrey Anderson
I'll give the spiders the corners. I can't reach them and the drained exoskeletons stay neatly in place.
The mice can have their litters of chewings in the abandoned drawers. The noises in the wall
are good company and their passages a fond memory. The flies the window sills, always.
Moths, my bed-side table. But only in their deaths, displayed there in the open.
The Molds can pattern the moist. Climb my shower. Make an earthy smell. Algae green the toilet bowl.
Fungi harvest what's left of the bread. Tunnel and weave. Sprout many heads.
I want the milk to go to the bacteria. May it be chunked sour.
The house centipedes can hunt the ants. Lone rangers against an army and a monarch.
The moss can have the roof to eat the sun and drink the rain. The ants,
sisters, can have the rest. They were always the most orderly and dependable.
Sarah Muse (All clips taken from free database)
Jon Faulconer
Worry
Patrick Regan
When time becomes an issue, when needle must meet thread, when you stay up all night thinking my future lies ahead,
That's when innocence is lost, that's when shit gets real. I don't want to grow up if this is how I'll feel.
Michaela Kane "Armpits"
Nicole Zollos
The Defense for Lying
Rex Ibanez
Freshly meshed hills of marigold-gleem gilded green pour into a cauldron -- sunfire and earthwater fill the world with livingness of trees trunking, trilling new songs from windy breath --
desire drills consented wings to sing to the beat of it all, and warbled tongue spill threads of thought
on an old loom, weaving the world as you see it --
you write poetry to save the mind.
Caroline Hildebrand
In Memoriam
Amanda Abramson
The year is 2008. We're college freshmen; young, talented, out to save the world through our love of music, writing, and our obviously brilliant minds. We're three best friends, stuck together at the hip like some sort of oddly conjoined set of triplets with different parentage and separate ethnicities. It's winter. We're all staying at the house of one friend's grandparents, visiting for the weekend so that we can have time together while we break from ridiculous avalanches of schoolwork, overly demanding professors, and roommates who tell you that you're not allowed to play Guitar Hero because it "disturbs the spirit of the home." I'm on the verge of sneaking into her room late at night to cook her makeup into jello while she sleeps, so the weekend away comes as a safe respite. We're staying in the basement, the three of us. There's a large couch and two squashy armchairs, but Grandfather insists on letting us use their air mattress. It's enormous, one that rises three feet off the ground and could support a bear. We get it set for the evening - it's wide enough for all three of us to lay comfortably - set our pillows at one end, lay a sheet and a blanket down and two of us snuggle up together on the bed while the third lays on the couch just next to us. We giggle and laugh and tell bad jokes ("What did the fish say when it ran into the stone wall? Dam!") and take forever to actually sleep, and when we finally do it's quick and easy. Sometime during the night, it becomes apparent that the air mattress is not quite as sturdy as we originally thought. An extremely light sleeper, somewhere around three AM, I roll out of the sagging mattress which is slowly leaking air and slip into one of the armchairs to sleep sideways. Surprisingly, it's very comfortable, and I soon fall back asleep. It's near morning when I wake again, but I don't move, drowsy and sleep hazed. From my position I can see my friend, still on the air mattress, only now she's right in the middle and down to the ground, while the two sides of the mattress rise up on either side of her. She looks like she's sleeping in a miniature plastic version of the grand canyon, and I stifle a laugh, trying not to show that I'm awake as she rolls around, trying to get comfortable. Finally she moves to one side of the air mattress, the side closest to the couch, but she sinks down nearly to the ground as the other side slopes steeply upwards. She sits up, disgruntled and sleepy. Glancing around, I hastily lower my eyelids, pretending to be asleep as I watch her look for something - what, exactly, I'm not certain, but it soon becomes apparent as she picks up the backpack that holds her clothes and such for the weekend trip. She gets up off of the mattress, smooths it out (I can almost hear the hiss of air now, and the mattress is looking rather pathetic, all lopsided and floppy like gray elephant skin that just hangs down in drapes) and sets the backpack on one side of the bed. Obviously satisfied, she moves around to the other side. I'm not the only one watching - the friend on the couch is also awake, and I catch her eye - we can both see how this is going to end, yet neither one of us says anything, watching and waiting with anticipation... The friend near the bed smiles to herself, gets into position, and lays herself quickly onto the bed. It's clear she expects the backpack to act as a sort of weight to balance out the rapidly depleting mattress so that she can sleep not on the floor - but that's not what happens. The bed, now with a heavier weight on one side, bucks the other side upwards, and the backpack rises into the air in a graceful arc. It's like watching something in slow motion - the friend rolls over, clearly pleased with herself for coming up with such an idea - but the expression quickly turns from happy to shocked as she watches the backpack soar upwards and promptly land with a little, innocent thud on top of her and in turn, cause her to roll sideways, off of the mattress, and onto the floor in a tangle of blankets, pillows, and the backpack amidst gales of laughter from her two slightly less mature counterparts. Later on, as we stuff a tampon into the hole we find in the air mattress in a pathetic attempt at keeping the air from leaking out (an attempt that doesn't work, but gets us some very odd looks and a raised eyebrow from Grandfather as he walks by), she insists she knew what she was doing all along. But we know better.