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
  • FEBRUARY INTERVIEW with ASA DRAKE

    FEBRUARY INTERVIEW with ASA DRAKE

    Perhaps it’s no surprise that the first of Asa Drake’s two debuts, Maybe the Body from Tin House, is flush with the fruits and flora of a flamboyant garden, given that she lives in rural Florida. Nor perhaps is it a surprise that the book is fecund with cleanly honed commentary of what it’s like to be…

  • OCTOBER INTERVIEW with EDWARD SALEM

    OCTOBER INTERVIEW with EDWARD SALEM

    Edward Salem is a poet who hasn’t lost his sense of humor. “Palestinians,” he shares in our interview, “are insanely funny.” It’s this sense of humor that jumps off the page of Salem’s debut poetry collection, Monk Fruit, surprising readers, even as he’s tackling topics like the occupation of Palestine, American imperialism, torture, and genocide.…

  • SEPTEMBER INTERVIEW with LIZA HUDOCK

    SEPTEMBER INTERVIEW with LIZA HUDOCK

    Addiction, death, and loss are everywhere in Liza Hudock’s debut collection, Reveille (released by Flood Editions in August), but they are not its actual subject. Instead, the poems wrestle—as near as it can be stated—with the world the speaker inhabits. Whether she turns her attention to a moth, the comparison between a pumpkin and a…

POETRY

  • SYRINX by Alison Mandaville

    SYRINX by Alison Mandaville

      After five years it’s a vague harassment, your name in a stranger’s mouth, my ear, a soft punch up from the gurney. Still— slight birds wake me with such repetitions: the branch point adjustment of throat valves, labia in tension, not warm, not cold-blooded. A liquid resonation, two resonations, a final exhalation of atmosphere.…

  • 90% DARK by Dina Folgia

    90% DARK by Dina Folgia

      The earth did not take me when I was nine, and I hated the earth for it. Each time I came to the place where the lake met the park and pressed my back into the soggy grooves at the boat launch, I flattened and flattened. When I couldn’t sink any lower into the…

  • DAY 559 by Kim Jensen

    DAY 559 by Kim Jensen

    If you hit the snooze you’ll have a little longer to live in the body of a wolf to gnaw at a bone in the woods parading the entrails back to the den you’ll have more time to be a nobody an unwanted wallflower wearing not even half a dress a few more minutes to…

FICTION

  • SPLIT UNIT by Ryan Bender-Murphy

    SPLIT UNIT by Ryan Bender-Murphy

    For so long, the first thing I’d see in the morning was Gabby, her head against the pillow, and it was enough to complete the day. I didn’t need to look at anyone else or go anywhere else; I could simply go back to sleep. But whenever I woke and saw her, I thought I…

  • ONCE, THERE WAS HOME, by Karla Hirsch

    ONCE, THERE WAS HOME, by Karla Hirsch

    once, there was time, there were moments that made up your life, there were hours and minutes, a morning’s routine, the bitter coffee you brewed in the copper pot you had longer than you could remember, mixed the hot liquid with sugar and spices, let it fill you awake to prepare you to journey to…

  • THE GATEWAY by Laura Wolf Benziker

    THE GATEWAY by Laura Wolf Benziker

    Mina, in the passenger seat, was lulled by the vibration of the car. Her skull knocked against the tempered glass in a not-unpleasant way. Her eyelids sank and darkened, then flicked open every few minutes. She saw exotic colors: swaths of glowing terra cotta, deep violet shadows, a sky so blue she only half recognized…

Join our mailing list

Receive new issues and featured work in your inbox.