We were so high up now that all the other mountains in the distance looked like dirt clods. I suddenly understood the poetification of mountainous places, the romance of scale.
POEM OF THE WEEK
POEM OF THE WEEK
You’d Be Thirty Today
By Lo Naylor
I’ll take you to her said the mortician when I returned to collect you & he gestured toward a pedestal, lit by a spotlight, guarded by a velvet rope. I froze because, the absurdity.
FALL STORY CONTEST
FALL STORY CONTEST
Deadline: Fri., Nov. 21, at 11:59 p.m., PST.
We’re looking for short stories, essays, memoirs, photo essays, graphic stories, and excerpts from long fiction and nonfiction.
Please see the Guidelines.
FICTION
FICTION
Heart Songs
By Annie Proulx
Dangerous heat came from him, the heat of some interior decay smoldering like a lightning-struck tree heart, a smothered misery that might someday flare and burn.
FICTION
CLASSICS
FICTION
FICTION
Tort
By Andre Dubus III
Maybe if Jim had not been so lonely himself, she would not have returned that smile with a kiss and their clothes would not be coming off as if something larger than the two of them was pulling the fabric away from their skin.
CLASSICS
CLASSICS
Dream Children
By Gail Godwin
And as she floated in this silent world, transparent and buoyed upon the dream layers of the mind, she heard a small rattling sound, like pebbles being shaken in a jar.
CLASSICS
Walking Out
By David Quammen
The boy knew he was supposed to feel great shame, but he felt little. His father could no longer hurt him as he once could, because the boy was coming to understand him. His father could not help himself.
CLASSICS
CLASSICS
American Express
By James Salter
They never knew the girl at the reception desk with her nearsightedness and wild, full hair. They knew various others, they knew Julie, they knew Catherine, they knew Ames.
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
A Poetics of Fiction
BY TOM JENKS
Based on forty years of editing and teaching, A Poetics contains a detailed pattern for study of creative writing, including a great deal of practical knowledge not generally available elsewhere.
NONFICTION
NONFICTION
Some Remarks on Humor
By E. B. White
You certainly don’t have to be a humorist to taste the sadness of situation and mood. But there is often a rather fine line between laughing and crying.
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
POETRY
The Brute
By Jaia Hamid Bashir
I bite the lemon—whole—its burning light floods my mouth, like Icarus caught on a rope of sun. I open the gift: a small ocelot, its mouth a cave, pearl teeth waiting.
POETRY
POETRY
First Night of Shiva, 11/6/2024
By Arne Weingart
A year from now we’ll say a prayer for the dead over a candle in a glass so ugly you have to imagine that its only purpose is to convince us forever not to fall in love with death.
GRAPHIC STORIES
CARTOONS
GRAPHIC STORIES
GRAPHIC STORIES
Reasons I Never Tried Smoking as a Teenager
By Ali Solomon
An amusing exploration of a teenager's fears of—and resistance to—smoking.
CARTOONS
CARTOONS
Cartoon Art Volume 2025-08
By Various Artists
Great new toons by Kaamran Hafeez, P. C. Vey, Jon Adams, Mick Stevens, Alex Pearson, and Joseph Dottino.
Support Narrative! Narrative is a hundred percent reader-supported. If you love what you’re reading, please make a one-time or monthly tax-deductible donation. Your gift of $60 or more includes a 1-year Backstage Pass with special features and exclusive previews.