After the sunburn of the day
handling a pitchfork at a hayrack,
after the eggs and biscuit and coffee,
the pearl-gray haystacks
in the gloaming
are cool prayers
to the harvest hands.
Carl Sandburg (Extract from "Prairie")
All rights reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in
any form or by any means, including, photocopying, recording, or other
electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the
publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews
and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
For permission requests, mail the publisher at: thelinnetswings@gmail.com
Summer 2009
Design @Mari
Art: Pepe Nero
|
Murray and Heavisides
romantic thoughts on Paris by Paul Murray |
real Hollywood outcalls by Paul Murray |
Heavy Sighs (an imitation of Juvenal) by Martin Heavisides |
|
|
Poets: Mannone, Berger, Hiss, Kiernan
The Smell of Bubbles |
Credo
As a psychologist, I have seen 1000/attempts to avoid responsibility for/a troubled child./"It's a chemical imbalance; it's the schools;/it's the medication; it's uncle Harry." |
The Dragon
When you first told me about/the dragon tattoo, I didn't/believe you were preppy 101,/clean cut in your wool sweater/and dockers. I wasnFt sure/I wanted to see your legs,/lean and pale; |
Musings chanced upon in the quiet of Inniscrone |
|
Micro: Walters, Murray, Long, McMann
Don Diego ... at Ojo Caliente |
real Hollywood outcalls |
Kelly's Orchard |
Hardball |
Flash Fiction: Evans by Django Gold & Selkie by Frank O'Connor
|
Evans
He has always enjoyed jigsaw puzzles, and now that he has the time, he spends hours a day at them. The rec room isn't particularly large, and arguments often break out over who gets what tabletop, but since you can't very well move a half-finished puzzle and the other half of the pieces, he gets the same table every day, a long one in the comer with enough room to set up a 1000 piecer. He stalks around the table, searching for this or that flower clump or shingle or shadow, and when he tires, he sits, plotting his next move for when he's got his gas up again. Overhead, a fan waves and games of rummy and backgammon shuffle around.
View Link
|
|
Selkie
The Star of Hope was dangerously low in the water when Joseph felt the tug on the net. He called for Mac to help him haul it. The wind blew capricious while the moon skittered on the breakers regardless. Joseph tasted salt in his mouth as he brought her aboard.
She looked up at him from the deck, with the wide face of a girl. Mac shouted to be heard over the wind. Selkie? He wanted to know if they should throw her back. Joseph shook his head, stood, and turned the boat for home. Later that night, in his cottage near the harbor, she slipped out of her skin, folded it carefully and handed it to him.
View Link
|
|
Short Stories: Svehaug, Wilcox, Joseph, Sheehan
High Water by Eric Svehaug |
Mr. Wyandotte by Phoebe Wilcox |
Photophobia by Niall Joseph |
The River Thief by Tom Sheehan |
|
Short Stories
High Water
Willy was born delighted in the middle of a rainstorm that threatened to flood the root cellar where they were hiding from the lightning. She had wide-open blue eyes. Her tiny expressive face soundlessly oohed and aahed and grimaced and startled with each feeling from the very beginning and, soon, she had a coo of contentment that nurtured her mother and then a three-tone song of a laugh that always made her siblings smile. Thunderstorms and floods threatened them so often but Willy's birth let Mama engage with them easier from then on. View Link
|
|
|
The River Thief
English Wells fought the Pumquich River for forty years, moving his will ever by degrees at it. "By God, Miriam," he often said to his wife, "I'll go at it until I drop, most likely. What you work for, you get. You get what you work for." English, lacking funds or worldly promise, wanted to steal more land from this side of the river, to push his small estate out over the river#s run, to claim energy's due.
View Link
|
|
Micro: Ray, Brown, Patrick, Black, West
Asian Girl Pin |
Chosen |
Kundalini Rising |
Doctoring the Blues |
Sailing the Prairie |
Micro Fiction
Asian Girl Pin by Paula Ray
Grandmother tugged the rope handle attached to the retractable attic-stairs. Pink fiberglass fragments and fluffy gray lint fell out. I gazed up at the rafters, staring at the ventilation fan, which was slowly spinning as heat rose. The eerie scraping of metal against metal made me cringe. It was mid-August, one hundred and two degrees outside. I knew the attic would be at least ten degrees hotter, but up I went, the obedient child. View Link
|
|
Kundalini Rising by J M Patrick
At night, I hear him pacing upstairs in his apartment. I want to open his veins and suck this from his blood. I want to open his hands and trace feather-light lines. I want to break his bones and rebuild them. I want to push his head back and open his mouth; I want to fill him like a wineglass to the brim, drink from him.
View Link
|
|
|
Kiernan, Morrow, Smith, Dyer
Old Man by Peter Kiernan |
Shopping by Christopher Morrow
|
Lizard Love by GC Smith |
*Two mallards* by Neil Dyer |
|
Summer Art and Photography 2009
Editors for the Issue, Summer 2009 -- ISSN 2009-2369
Marie Fitzpatrick, Ramon Collins, Yvette Managan (aka Yvette Wielhouwer Flis) Donia Carey, Nonnie Augustine, Maia Cavelli, Peter Gilkes
Shop for this issue here (Currently Unavailable)