Dial Tones, by Lauren Saxon
My dad’s dad never told him that he loved him. Never out loud. God, that’s so fucked up / I know. My brother and I are debriefing after dinner, in the hotel room that we share. Not even when he was dying? / I guess not. That image makes me so sad.
Fake Baby, by Juliet Gelfman-Randazzo
I just wanted to get better housing and instead I got a baby. Well, two babies. Two fake babies, to be precise.
Corpse Mom Discovers the 10-Step Korean Skincare Routine, by Hema Nataraju
Corpse Mom has discovered the best thing in life after her death. With her new evening ritual-- the 10-step Korean skincare routine, she’s entered a delightful new universe. How lovely it is to be dead, she thinks, to not have to worry about school nights, prepping lunchboxes, answering work emails, or having ‘married-for-donkey’s-years’ sex with her husband.
Six Notes on Red & a Red Note on Six, by J.C. Rodriguez
Red’s whole thing is that life is fleeting & so is he. He lasts as long as Big Red gum, goes down like a shot of Fireball, & if you’re not paying attention – steals all your Altoids. He just wants to know how many mints he can bite before everything starts to burn.
Non-Playable Characters in Grand Theft Auto V, by Aleksia Silverman
I wear thigh-high boots and a skirt that doesn't cover my ass. You wear huge pants and a backward hat. Our faces are all angles—all cheekbone and chin. We are smooth and poreless, just like the ocean, like the road, like the bark of the palm trees. Our world is not one of textures.
The Greatest Sacrifice—August 31, 2021, by Anita Vijayakumar
Two seven-year-old girls—one Afghan, one American—entwine fingers at the crumbling runway in Kabul, the only city in their memories. The American’s passport—a navy book embossed with a gold eagle and sunflower crown—is tucked in her father’s suit beside his foreign diplomat papers.
Beauty Pageant of Earth Orientation Packet, by Sage Tyrtle
Dear Newborn Baby Girl #3,979,258,451:
Congratulations! You are officially registered for the Beauty Pageant of Earth!
This is an exciting time for you, as you learn how to breathe air and intake nutrients, and guess what? You’ve also already been ranked. *\(^o^)/* Only one billion girls are ranked above you, and you’re only a few minutes old!
Tropicana Women, by Salonee Verma
The story of your birth is a Persaud family fable. The Persauds are storytellers and cooks, so everyone tells it differently. Mumma adds salt, Nani twists the words dry, Bua clips feathers to the letters and tries to set them free.
American Mall, Abandoned, by Senna Xiang
Suppose we are 17 again and we are chasing our childhood. We spend twenty minutes illegally cramming five of us into one car while our reckless friend helms our journey towards jean jackets and the greasy booths of the mall food court. The first time we did this, we stayed silent so our friend wouldn’t crash on the highway. The last time we do this, we are silent because there is nothing left for us to talk about.
All That We Lost, by Joshua Jones Lofflin
It started with nothing. A whiff of ozone, a burnt electric smell. But there were no fires; the sky stayed cloudless; the reports of planes plummeting to earth didn’t happen, though we all looked upward like we did years before when there was an eclipse. Then, each of us snuck glances toward the darkening sky. Now, we tilted our heads back, scanned the emptiness, and laughed.