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Spy Reprints “Orange” by Andie Davis

August 31, 2022 By The Editorial Team

AndieDavis

Author’s Note: “I spent the first six months of the pandemic with my parents, helping to care for my dementia-afflicted mother. In therapy they encourage you to personify your anxiety, and so I came to see death as an obnoxious pest with whom I squabble constantly, while holding fast to love and beauty. Writing this story was therapeutic for me – but the character of Brett is pure fiction!”

Orange

DEATH IS NOT A GRIM REAPER. You know because you are watching it now across the table. It is an orange sponge, and it floats to the right of your mother, leaching small things at first. Phone number recall. Range of motion in the fourth finger. An aversion to oversalting. These absences occur on the margins. But over time, greater things go missing. Bearings. Empathy. Nouns. The sponge swells. Sometimes it teases you by releasing a damp spot, a trickle. Death winks at you through your confusion. Death says, You didn’t know I could breathe? ... [Continue Story]

Orange-AndieDavis-Spy

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Short Story, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “The Lesser Snow Goose” by Kelly R. Samuels

August 31, 2022 By The Editorial Team

Kelly_R_Samuels

Author’s Note: “The Lesser Snow Goose was written shortly before my mother died. She is the ‘you’ in the poem—very ill, sitting beside me in the waiting area before a doctor’s visit. It felt fitting ... [Continue Story]

Snow Goose

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “At the Edge” by Richard Tillinghast

August 13, 2022 By The Editorial Team

RichardTillinghast

Author’s Note: “The history of the human race sadly seems also to be the history of warfare. In this poem I imagine what it would be like to be living on the edge of a war zone as fighting starts to break out, as is happening right now in Ukraine. The character in my poem is someone who lives, as I do, a secluded life in the country. He is perhaps Japanese; he is a sort of hermit.”... [Continue Story]

DelRev-Edge-Tillinghast-Spy

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints ” Things My Father Told Me” by E. Ethelbert Miller

January 31, 2022 By The Editorial Team

EthelbertMiller

Author’s Note: “I was one of the first students to graduate from Howard University with an undergraduate degree in African American Studies. I learned a lot about the history of the Black family from reading books and attending conferences. This experience however didn’t explain the quiet dignity of my father. His love for his family was not an abstraction but a difficult and fragile thing I came to honor. I was grateful for my father who worked hard everyday to provide a roof over my head. Today I still struggle to understand the mystery of his strength and the power he found not to leave or close a door.”... [Continue Story]

Ethelbert

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “In the Distance” by Diane Thiel

January 23, 2022 By The Editorial Team

DianeThiel-4poems

Author’s Note: “‘In the Distance’ speaks to the idea that we might travel in order to get distance from something, perhaps a past in need of healing, but that the story will follow close behind. The unnamed “unrelenting story” in the poem might pursue us full circle, even circumnavigate the globe. But on a hopeful note, the expansive nature of travel does allow one to experience the world differently and perhaps see things with new eyes, toward a different end.”... [Continue Story]

diane

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “Morning Ritual” by Alfred Fournier

January 23, 2022 By The Editorial Team

AlfredFournier

Author’s Note:  “When a childhood friend told me about his devastating work injury, my mind flashed back to a time when we were sure we were immortal and invulnerable. I wrote this piece as a tribute to our friendship in those younger years, and out of a desire to understand what drove our acts of daring.” ... [Continue Story]

alfred

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Creative Nonfiction, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints”The Wicked Witch of the West” by Jona Colson

January 23, 2022 By The Editorial Team

JonaColson

Author’s Note: “The Wizard of Oz was probably one of the first movies I ever watched, and I loved the Wicked Witch. Often, villains are my favorite part of narratives, and she terrified me—her laugh, ... [Continue Story]

Oz

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints”Winner Takes All” by Holly Karapetkova

January 23, 2022 By The Editorial Team

HollyKarapetkova

Author’s Note: “This poem explores the ways we attempt to justify our privileges to ourselves. While I wrote it thinking primarily of my own white middle class American culture, it asks questions more ... [Continue Story]

Winner

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Poetry, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “Her Gestures, Her Rules” by Susan Land

December 28, 2021 By The Editorial Team

Susan_Land

Author’s note: “I once had a friend who did yoga and wrote down her dreams and earnestly informed me that she could hitchhike alone and be safe because she was special. She seemed to truly believe that nothing could hurt her. In “Her Gestures, Her Rules,” I imagined that she had a daughter who would, like most daughters, go from acolyte to critic to something in between.”

Her Gestures, Her Rules

BY THE EARLY ’80s, when the new age was still new, my mother, a local legend, operated the most popular yoga studio in Ulster County. Valley Yin Yang catered to aging hippies, rich and poor. I, conceived in 1969 at an ashram in Goa, was a significant line in her biography: an illegitimate half-Indian daughter. Her students were fascinated by me, as they were by every aspect of my mother’s life—her clothes, her diet, her true beliefs, her original religion. And, of course, her long legs and her thick hair, so dark my hair could have come from her, not from a never-named Indian father... [Continue Story]

short story

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Short Story, Spy, Talbot Spy

Spy Reprints “Welcome Day” by Ronan J. Keenan

December 26, 2021 By The Editorial Team

RonanKeenan

Author’s Note: “Welcome Day is about a parent’s angst of how a combination of flawed genetics and a murky past will impact her child. The central character, Maria, is a single parent trying to distance her young son from her history of involvement in Irish paramilitary activity. In the story Maria watches her son begin life in a new school and worries how the ‘nature versus nurture’ dynamic will impact his development.”

Welcome Day

YOU’D SWEAR THERE’S A PIPE BOMB INSIDE, the way Maria holds the envelope at arm’s length. “The strain of fear’s gotten into ya,” Jimmy would say if he could see her now, panicked about opening a letter. This is the same Maria who’d hardly break stride when planting loaded packages near the Belfast barracks, years ago. Back then, she could create thick barriers in her mind, making it easy to categorize the soldiers as a faceless enemy from across the water rather than young lads barely out of school, homesick and frightened in strange borderlands. These days, Maria’s barriers are low and permeable, allowing fear to seep through whenever it wants. Today, it has come through her letterbox.

Sure enough, this envelope contains what she dreaded…(story continued in Spy)

Fiction

Filed Under: Feature, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Fiction, Spy, Talbot Spy

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