We believe students and readers everywhere deserve a great and free modern library, inside of which they can get deliriously, entertainingly, profoundly lost. And found.

Stories

Story of the Week
Her anger was white and cold. It sent seams of ice through my heart.
Six-Word Stories
Kay Whitaker
Poem of the Week
My new car cost more than my dad’s first house; I Googled it.
Story of the Week
She was here. She could not go on. It was the end—the end of the world.
Classics
Her knees seemed about to give way, and he quickly grabbed her elbow.
Poem of the Week
Hard to know what a prisoner believes, what the guard presumes.
Poem of the Week
Another disposable medical mask drying in the June sun after all the ceremonies are done Looks for a second like a lip snarling in that flirting way you see the tattooed girls snarl
First & Second Looks
The air, forced through her throat’s reed, broke with a play of notes.
Poetry
They rise in waves, while a lone hawk remains unperturbed.
Poetry
There was a ladder planted dead center in a field of high, thin grass.
Fiction
Our grandmothers were bakers and nurses, spies and traitors.
Story of the Week
The night before my mother’s double mastectomy, we went skinny-dipping.
Poetry
You are home in your bed like a soft animal with really intense feelers.
Poem of the Week
I wonder why I feel bound to the gray-dry skin of you, the barrenness of feet.
Readers' Narratives
I will fear no evil, for I’m the meanest son of a bitch in the valley.
Nonfiction
Walking on Canal Street, I slipped on the curb and fell on my face.
Story of the Week
All of those feelings—you do not have them, they have you.
Fiction
A scene from the night before comes rushing forward like a dream.
Poetry
you cut through brush with the iron edge you push before you
Spring Contest Winners
He loathed them most, despising their desire to get on with things.
Six-Word Stories
Fiction
Brod stopped her before she could fling the latte in Marcella’s face.
Fiction
Colonel Hammer glares, willing us to attention. A few pilots sit up.
Poetry
Oh, won’t you lie here darling whistlepigs, here, curled at my side?
Story of the Week
The day was beyond the reach of words like tragic and hilarious.
Poem of the Week
A family becomes fossilized—a darker crosshatch etched in hard sand.
Poetry
Picture the thing you want most. True love? A new car? Let it go.