FOUR WAY REVIEW

An Electronic Literary Journal

  • ISSUE 34

    ISSUE 34

    POETRY TWO POEMS by Caitlyn Klum TWO POEMS by Rajiv Mohabir TWO POEMS by Sebastian Paramo SELF-PORTRAIT AS THE LAST LINGERING PETAL ON A CHERRY BLOSSOM by Anthony Thomas Lombardi…

    Read more…: ISSUE 34

POETRY

  • WHEN BILLIE HOLIDAY SANG by Grace Kwan

    WHEN BILLIE HOLIDAY SANG by Grace Kwan

    I’m gonna love you like nobody’s loved you with the rain flickering against my parted windowand the sheets pooled around my hips was when I felt the first note at the bottom of my stomachthat suggested it wasn’t the bottom and there was more mystery to fall throughthan I could imagine perhaps less the bottom of my stomach than the precipice of my stomachand my first…

  • ELEPHANT by Julien Strong

    ELEPHANT by Julien Strong

    Something so heavy with meaning all we can do     is drag our hands across the surface itching to define to fixas a compass point                               navigating what I thought I understood because I lived within its skin and yet      …

  • TWO POEMS by Tana Jean Welch

    TWO POEMS by Tana Jean Welch

    SLEEPING WITH JANE Again I mutate as we move throughthe old park, ready to launch past the spectral-fired flowers, past the Japanese elm sighingalongside the swarm of Jizo statues,bald little monks tall as wine bottles,each transmitting a silent symphony of grief—Jizo, protector of unborn babies. Jizo, an army of stone guardians stalwart in cardinal colored capsand bibs—I rise above the…

FICTION

  • DEAN, ETC. by Laurie Stone

    Dean The first time with Dean, I was on a couch and he knelt beside me on the floor. He parted my lips with two fingers and slid them into my mouth. Something moved inside, a snake in a basket. He ran his fingers along the edges of my teeth and pushed them open. His…

  • RED MEAT AND BOOZE by Joseph D. Haske

    With every mile Johnny drives, Lester Cronin is closer to dead. Nobody knows this yet but me. Nobody ever talks about what happened to Grandpa Eddie anymore, like the whole family just forgot all about it. But I never will. The last four years, my whole time in the Army, I’ve been planning and working…

  • WHAT KEISHA DID by David Haynes

    That Janet Williams hadn’t liked children all that much she blamed on the boy’s mother. Children annoyed her, frankly—all that incessant energy, the enthusiasm for obnoxious music and inedible food, their general and relentless neediness. When pressed, however, she would admit there was something special about this one, this Danny, her five-year-old grandson. On that…

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