elimae – July/August 2012
July/August 2012
Bimonthly
Kirsten McIlvenna
elimae‘s individual stories and poems may be small, but they all have a zing. Leia Penina Wilson asks about loneliness as the character bottles up her own loneliness and muses, “what do you do with a city that’s all a secret she wonders do we even / exist?”
elimae‘s individual stories and poems may be small, but they all have a zing. Leia Penina Wilson asks about loneliness as the character bottles up her own loneliness and muses, “what do you do with a city that’s all a secret she wonders do we even / exist?” Brandi Wells takes us into the surreal in “A use for her stomach” as the narrator takes the stomach out of a woman, cleans it off, and buries it. Shane Jones, in “Tape Recorder 1988,” expresses the pain a parent can have for a child with a disorder: “I hear the night-clicks of the recorder from Tommy’s bedroom, and imagine this poor boy, my son, trying to capture his always changing name, depending on mood, on a black tape recorder. You should see the way he sits, lost-looking and headache-spiraled with the recorder on his lap, speaking as quickly as he possible can into the machine before the words inside blow apart to new letters, unknown names.” More great work comes from Sean Lovelace (“University of W”), J.M. Gamble (“a game show network”), Philippe Shils (“a little poem”), Mark Walters (“Meat Piano”), and many more authors.
[www.elimae.com]