Blak Power
By NoViolet BulawayoMay 2013
They are just everywhere, walking, rushing, running, toyi-toying, fists and machetes and knives and sticks and all sorts of weapons and the flags of the country in the air, Budapest quivering with the sound of their blazing voices: Kill the Boer, the farmer, the khiwa.

The Hunger Bride
A novel excerpt by Julie RiesMay 2013
“Go home and pray to be forgiven,” she cried. “If you don’t pray now, you know what waits for you.”

Savage Coast
By Muriel Rukeyser, from her previously unpublished novelMay 2013
Europe, the thought of Europe swelled over the horizon, like a giant dirigible, strung with lights in a dream of suspended power, but filled, in the dream, with a gas about to burst into flame.

Departures
By Patrick DaceyMay 2013
My uncle never did a bad thing to anybody, but one day while he was on his front porch eating an ice cream cone, two men came upon him, pushed him inside, tied his hands and feet, robbed his house, and shot him in the head

The Worst Thing That Happened
By A. Igoni BarrettApril 2013
“Don’t worry, it will be okay, these things happen for a reason,” Ma Bille said. “As I always say: the worst thing to happen to you is for the best—”

Bees
By Patricio Pron, translated from the Spanish by Kathleen HeilApril 2013
Not much ever happened in Blaustein, but, even if it did, I would still remember the words she said, because it was the first time I’d heard them used, and their meaning, the parentheses they opened in my German existence every time someone used them, shocked me and made me feel like an intruder.
Give Hostages to Fortune
By Mehdi Tavana OkasiApril 2013
I thought about her son in Tehran and if he were still alive, what he would do to Sheila. Lying in bed, I replayed the scene from earlier that day and wished that I’d answered Sheila’s blows with punches of my own, wished that I’d defended Mrs. Azam.

Psychiatrists and Mountain Dew
By Scott McClanahanApril 2013
I don’t want to have to get on any medicines, because as far as I’m concerned all shrinks are good for is getting you high.

Anthropogenesis, or: How to Make a Family
By Laura van den BergMarch 2013
Soon it was all they could do to keep these children from singeing the draperies or shattering the glass windowpanes with a single touch.

The Expo
By Sybil BakerMarch 2013
They arrived when the sea was swelling, threatening to sweep the old world back with it.

Four American Folktales
By Emily MitchellMarch 2013
In Malibu, there lived a beautiful old woman without a nervous system.

A Dark Tower Opening
By Matt BellMarch 2013
In the face of its stare, I stared back, and the bear slavered in response, shook its thick fur as welcome or warning. . .

Saffron
By Mirza WaheedFebruary 2013
“These infidels cannot insult us like this. If you have the courage, come and face us out in the open. You cannot tie down a speechless animal and think you have beaten us…”

The Lump in Her Throat
By Aba Amissah AsibonFebruary 2013
I don’t like the box they have put Papa in; I would have gotten him the fancy kind with polished wood and golden handles.

My Year Zero
An excerpt from the novel "Mira Corpora" by Jeff JacksonFebruary 2013
They stride through the woods and shout. They practice propping guns on their shoulders and breaking them in half so the empty shells tumble to the ground.

Marrying Up
By Diane CookFebruary 2013
Eventually, I married a man more than twice my size. He terrified me. Making love felt like getting run over

Farewell, Africa
By Manuel GonzalesJanuary 2013
According to Cornish, the pool, an infinity pool, would be able to recreate the event of Africa sinking into the sea.

Have You Heard Anything?
By Anthony TognazziniDecember 2012
During this time the weather changed and the voice on the radio brought uneasy news about barricades, policemen, and tear gas in the city.

Greenland
By Patrick SomervilleDecember 2012
Then again, now he has to go to Greenland. To look at a body.

The Biggest Thing Ever
An excerpt from the novel "Double Feature" by Owen KingDecember 2012
Taken as a whole, no one who read the screenplay for Who We Are denied that it was clever in its composition, original in its pattern, and ruthlessly unsentimental in its conclusions. It was also “a bit portentous,” according to Sam’s father, Booth Dolan, the B-movie mainstay famous for his stentorian, blink-free performances. . .

A Man of the People
By Helon HabilaDecember 2012
He takes her hand, careful to keep his eyes away from her dominant breasts, her full pouty lips, and they begin in the living room.

The Weight of Rose Petals
By Brad Green, guest-edited by Roxane GayNovember 2012
Winona eyed Frank down the long black barrels of the shotgun. She complained again about that whore he’d visited every Wednesday for fourteen years, before he lost his manhood in the accident at the rebar factory.

Café Flesh
By Ruben Quesada, guest-edited by Roxane GayNovember 2012
There was something fascinating about images of unknown semi-naked women; I wondered if there were newspapers filled with images of semi-naked men.

How I Gonna Bare My Neck Outside in the Sweat-Scared Morning
By Delaney Nolan, guest-edited by Roxane GayNovember 2012
Six feet tall and arms like bundled wire. He go strutting the length of the house.

Magic City Relic
A novel excerpt by Jennine Capó Crucet, guest-edited by Roxane GayNovember 2012
. . .I looked down at Omar’s pants to tear off his belt and realized that we were shrouded in such darkness, I couldn’t see the buckle.

Boy, A History
By Saeed Jones, guest-edited by Roxane GayNovember 2012
Notes on names Boy gets called at school: fudge packer, pansy, fairy, pillow biter, cock gobbler.

Broads
By Roxane GayNovember 2012
Jimmy Nolan has a thing for broads—loud, brassy women who sit with their legs open and drink beer straight from the bottle—women who always say exactly what they’re thinking and for better or worse, mean what they say.

Throw Forever to the Fleas
By Ankur ThakkarOctober 2012
This was Clyde’s third Ramadan, but his first alone.

Dear John
By Sarah GerkensmeyerOctober 2012
First, it was his hands. Three days after he announced that he was going to leave me, I watched him drinking his coffee and noticed how his three middle fingers were slipped through the handle, gripping the body of the mug in a confident, almost loving way.

The Last Hour of the Bengal Tiger
By Yoko Ogawa, translated from the Japanese by Stephen SnyderOctober 2012
What was I going to do when I saw her? It was a question I had asked myself a thousand times. Slap her? Scream insults? Demand she give my husband back?

from The Story of My Assassins
A novel excerpt by Tarun J. TejpalSeptember 2012
His first conscious memory, from the time he was three, was the feel of a rat snake slithering through his hands.

Dispatches
By Susan DaitchSeptember 2012
When did the Berlin Zoo stop displaying humans? 1931, I think, but I’m not sure.

Debriefing
By E.C. OsonduSeptember 2012
If you must travel, travel by Amtrak. Trains are safe, buses are not. I mean safe from raids by the INS.

The Anointing
By Jamie QuatroSeptember 2012
Seven months into her husband’s depression, Diane called the church secretary. She wanted the elders to come over and anoint Mitch with oil.

This is a Dad Story
By Elizabeth CraneAugust 2012
This story can’t get it’s tense together or it’s person, now. Has it even got its “its” right?

One Night
By Quim Monzó, translated from the Catalan by Peter BushAugust 2012
But the girl is still asleep. Perhaps, thinks the prince, he kissed her too lightly. He stoops down again and kisses her a second time, this time a touch more vigorously.

Looters
By Alex PerezAugust 2012
They were followed by a group in tropical wear, slipping and sliding, trying to prevent their ill-fitting thong sandals from flying off. A smaller group had chosen winter wear, rolling up the block like juiced up ticks, draped in coats and jackets.

Islands
By Alex VallejoAugust 2012
I stare at the ground imagining I am one of the condemned, what it felt like to have my fingernails torn off. I clench my fists tight and brace myself for the pain, wishing I was off this wretched island, wishing I was home.

High Schools, or How to Be Asian American
By Matthew SalessesJuly 2012
After my parents were divorced I fell in love with the ugliest girl in my white high school. This was what I believed—the love part, I mean; the ugly part was true.

Two Stories
By Autumn Watts, with photography by Kristin GiordanoJuly 2012
In Qatar, the birds have built their own hidden city.

American Nurse
By Kaitlin Solimine — 2012 Dzanc Books/Disquiet International Literary Program Award — selected by Colson Whitehead.July 2012
American Nurse became our possession, the Party headquarters in Beijing told us, for only a week before Deng decided what to do with her

Gone to the Forest
A novel excerpt by Katie KitamuraJune 2012
His father is more than twice her age but her eyes are pinned to his lips as he speaks to her in his fur-lined baritone.

The World Without You
A novel excerpt by Joshua HenkinJune 2012
He’s mopping at his pelvis with a wadded-up tissue, and then he’s mopping her up as well. Already the backs of her thighs are caking up.

Stippling
By Christopher NaroznyMay 2012
Still, I started for the parlor. I’d polished my shoes, put gel in my hair: habits my mother had always wanted me to form and I had always resisted. Walking down the street, I felt conspicuous, as though people were sniggering at my gleaming head and feet.

Expectations
By Peter Stamm, translated from the German by Michael HofmannMay 2012
I imagine what Janneke and Karin would say if they saw us together: Oh, she’s lost it now.

The Red Tricycle
By Lisa LimMay 2012
He liked how her odd mouth conjured surprise like a jack in the box. She liked how he used his bathtub as a closet.

Casino
By Alix OhlinMay 2012
People who look on the bright side all the time are hypocrites at least some of the time. To say that shitty things are shitty is to speak honest truth about the world.

Vanya
By Alex M. PruteanuMay 2012
This bloody fucking century Uncle Miki said . . . began and ended in Yugoslavia.

Lovers
By Daniel Arsand, translated from the French by Howard Curtis.April 2012
Their bodies converse. They forget that very soon one of them will be burned alive on Place de Grève.

Two Stories
By Barbara FriedApril 2012
And then he would knock on the door and my mother would answer and he would say to her, “This is no ordinary child. She understands.”




