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
  • INTERVIEW with AE HEE LEE

    INTERVIEW with AE HEE LEE

    Ae Hee Lee is a Wisconsin-based poet whose debut collection, Asterism (Tupelo Press, 2024), was selected as the winner of the Dorset Prize by John Murillo. In Lee’s poems, heritage and belonging are examined rather than embraced. Visiting her father’s old home in Chungju, Korea, she asks the flowers growing there to “remember [her] from…

  • INTERVIEW with ROBIN LAMER RAHIJA

    INTERVIEW with ROBIN LAMER RAHIJA

    Robin LaMer Rahija‘s first full length collection, Inside Out Egg, was released in April.  Ada Limón writes that “each poem contains the whole unbound strangeness of the human experience–the offhand remark, the blur of being in a body– all of this is written with a humility and understated wit that both growls and sings….” We were…

  • INTRODUCTION TO KORA RUMIKO & WAGO RYOICHI by Judy Halebsky

    INTRODUCTION TO KORA RUMIKO & WAGO RYOICHI by Judy Halebsky

    FIVE POEMSby Ryoichi Wago, trans. Judy Halebsky & Ayako Takahashi THREE POEMSby Rumiko Kora, trans. Judy Halebsky & Ayako Takahashi This folio shares recent translations from two Japanese poets, Kora Rumiko (1932-2021) and Wago Ryoichi (1968-). Kora’s poems are from the second half and 20th century, and Wago’s were written following the 2011 earthquake, tsunami,…

POETRY

  • THE BABIES by Dara Yen Elerath

    THE BABIES by Dara Yen Elerath

    I am watching the babies. The gray one in sticky pants who keeps picking his nose. The pale one with headlice, scabies and fleas. I am watching the babies. This one choking on a plastic bottle. This one talking to itself in the dark. I am hauling the babies to the park, to the library,…

  • YESTERDAY AUSTIN TOLD ME TWO SWANS by Arro Mandell

    YESTERDAY AUSTIN TOLD ME TWO SWANS by Arro Mandell

      drowned a local man for coming too close and   Thomas and I laughed but  I still think if I don’t count my teeth   they’ll be taken, can’t be careful enough out here.   Last night I stepped onto a stage heaped with dead   fish. I was looking for the right earrings…

  • PASSTHROUGH by Haley Lee

    PASSTHROUGH by Haley Lee

    After the play we talk while we wait for the C with our shoes  touching on the platform. Say,  when the magician unrolled  the sea, an old tunnel in us  burst open. Lights off, all  air – with you I believe  in water wrung from paper.  They didn’t need to use names  to make us…

FICTION

  • THE LEAST AMERICAN FACE by M. Y. Li

    THE LEAST AMERICAN FACE by M. Y. Li

    The event is in thirty minutes. You don’t really know what it is. The leader of your Erasmus group said something in Spanish about a trip to a traditional Moroccan venue. But did he say the place is a restaurant or a themed bar? Your Spanish isn’t great, but it’s good enough to make out…

  • MEMORY FIELDS by Liz Howey

    MEMORY FIELDS by Liz Howey

    The orchard is beautiful. Meets the postcard standard of picturesque, as promised. Lines of foliage haloed by the rising sun, shades of green and brown and golden red, and for a second Maggie slips, imagines her and Brendon and a child that won’t exist. A little girl—no, a boy, a little arrogant boy, a mini-Brendon.…

  • VERDIGRIS by Mariana Sabino

    VERDIGRIS by Mariana Sabino

    Four years had passed since I returned to this building, the old city, and the old job. At work digitizing the poster of another Czech New Wave film—this one depicting algae sprouting from a woman’s head, dark eyes sparkling with silver pin lights that reminded me of plankton—my heart started racing so fast I handed…

Join our mailing list

Receive new issues and featured work in your inbox.