Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

Brothers, by Margaret DeAngelis

Gene could hear the phone ringing inside the trailer as he fumbled with the lock he kept meaning to fix. It was probably one of the stepmothers changing something. He wasn’t in the mood to talk to any of them. Let the machine take it.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

High Grass, by Carmelinda Blagg

I’m chasing after my older sister, Shelly – I’m the sheriff, she’s the gold thief – when all of a sudden she stops cold in her tracks and I can tell by the stiff, near vertical tilt of her body that something is wrong.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

The Last One, by Victoria Clayton

The town in which I grew up in didn’t have many stories of national importance associated with it. But it did have one. It was that of the five Sullivan brothers. Long before Tom Hanks starred in Saving Private Ryan (partially inspired by the Sullivan brothers), I knew the story of the guys from Iowa who were all killed in war. The entire family wiped out.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

My I, by Abriana Jette

I think because I am the youngest child I was always most aware. I was to my brother, sister, father, and mother an unwanted confidante, soaking up the idiosyncratic irks they held against one another and others, attempting to empathize with most of their reasoning, like the proverbial overused sponge.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

“I want out of this family:” Jeanie Bueller’s Lament, by Ann Lightcap Bruno

In 1986, in the salty darkness of the Westmoreland Mall cinema, I fell under the spell of Ferris Bueller’s devil-may-care bad boy, fake sick baby talking, “Twist and Shout” lip synching, excellent adventures in Chicagoland. Jeanie, his bitch-on-wheels (more on the wheels to follow) sister didn’t tug at my sympathies in the slightest.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

Out of Who-ville, by Amber Sparks

The phone rings and the woman swirls her glass, watches wine the color of ruby coat the sides of the crystal. Wine is the only red she allows in her apartment; everything else is black: carpets, sofa, even the tall sculptures she makes, stark and granite-colored. Red, of course, and green, and even white – these are the soft, bright colors of Christmas. The colors of her charmed childhood in Who-ville.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

White Elephant, by Matt Perez

He won every time, which was part of the game. Because John McClane does not lose. Nor would we want him to. In the end, Uncle John always found my egg timer bomb in time to deactivate it by turning the dial counterclockwise until it went ding.

Read More
Online Issues Rebecca Barnard Online Issues Rebecca Barnard

Weirdsmobile, by Leslie Perry

The fight had left Betty with a cut on her hand and a speck of metal oxidizing in her cornea. It all started when Bob was rehearsing for a Christmas special on NBC. He was supposed to kiss an elf. She wasn’t a real elf, of course, or even an actress – just some buxom crumpet from Minnesota with wax-tip ears and oogly, doped-up eyes.

Read More