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
  • MONTHLY with Alexander Duringer

    MONTHLY with Alexander Duringer

    Alexander Duringer is from Buffalo, NY and earned his MFA in Poetry from North Carolina State University. He is a winner of the American Academy of Poets Prize as well as the Bruce & Marjorie Petesch Award. In 2022 he was a finalist for The Sewanee Review’s annual poetry contest. His poems have appeared or…

  • INTERVIEW WITH Alexander Duringer

    INTERVIEW WITH Alexander Duringer

    Alexander Duringer is from Buffalo, NY and earned his MFA in Poetry from North Carolina State University. He is a winner of the American Academy of Poets Prize as well as the Bruce & Marjorie Petesch Award. In 2022 he was a finalist for The Sewanee Review’s annual poetry contest. His poems have appeared or…

  • INTERVIEW WITH Jared Harél by Urvashi Bahuguna

    INTERVIEW WITH Jared Harél by Urvashi Bahuguna

    Jared Harel’s poems are quiet records of the layers inside the ordinary days of our lives, exposing the restless forces and memories that power and threaten our most mundane actions. In “Behind The Painted Railguard,” the poet is standing in an amusement park with his mother, watching his young son on a ride. He uses…

POETRY

  • GOLD by Kunjana Parashar

    GOLD by Kunjana Parashar

    Lately, I’ve been yearning for things: car keys, houseplants, dhurries, cubes of ice, petals, but really for something skin-deep. I keep  addressing myself as we; like I am the bull  & I am the matador. I am the prayer and  the devotee. We are prying open our mouths to sing. We are the ear and…

  • BLUE PERIOD by James O’Leary

    BLUE PERIOD by James O’Leary

      It’s 9:31 PM where the end of the city tinges the sea. An empty   spiderweb hangs motionless between the blinds & the closed window leaking   the street’s neon onto the unmade bed. No moon. Not even the comfort of wine,   bottles shaped like the body I want, & will never have.…

  • THE YEAR YOU DIED by Vasvi Kejriwal

    THE YEAR YOU DIED by Vasvi Kejriwal

      05/19:   A tornado flung a fridge into the bones of a tree.   Its bark, gnarled, like the mouth of someone, new to grief.     05/22:   I found your pen at the edge of the dresser. Yet to collect dust, it held your fading  fingermarks.     06/18:   Then, hunger…

FICTION

  • ASHES by Nandita Naik

    ASHES by Nandita Naik

    The river Ganga seethes with ashes. We shove our elbows into each other’s sides, muscle our way in to look. The bodies of our grandmothers and grandfathers burn on the cremation ghats. We watch them become less like bodies and more like a collection of burning fabric and bone marrow and veins turning into ash.…

  • DON’T CALL ME YOUR PRINCESS by Megan Culhane Galbraith

    DON’T CALL ME YOUR PRINCESS by Megan Culhane Galbraith

    Once upon a time, there was a young girl who lost her mother too soon. Cinderella’s grief was bottomless. Every day she visited her mother’s grave. “Where is my great love?” she asked. One day her mother answered.  “Cinder, dear, your great love is inside you. You must be yourself, for it is only then…

  • MONTHLY: Fiction Editors Emeritae

    MONTHLY: Fiction Editors Emeritae

    GIRLS OF LEAST IMPORTANCE by K.K. Fox K.K. Fox lives in Nashville, Tennessee. Her stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Iron Horse, NELLE, Joyland, Kenyon Review Online, and others. She is a fiction editor for Los Angeles Review.   THE LUCKY ONES by Hananah Zaheer Hananah Zaheer’s writing has appeared in Virginia Quarterly Review,…

Join our mailing list

Receive new issues and featured work in your inbox.