Poetry
Issue No. 5 FLASHBACK: Post & Present "Burn Fat Faster" by Lizi Gilad

Issue No. 5 FLASHBACK: Post & Present “Burn Fat Faster” by Lizi Gilad

Lizi Gilad is a first-generation American of Mexican and Israeli descent. She holds and MFA from UC Riverside's low residency program and resides in Southern California. Her prose can be found at The Rumpus and The Volta blog. Follow her on Twitter @lizinka
"The Last Place You'd Look" by Holly Day

“The Last Place You’d Look” by Holly Day

Holly Day was born in Hereford, Texas, “The Town Without a Toothache.” She and her family currently live in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where she teaches writing classes at the Loft Literary Center. Her published books include the nonfiction books Music Theory for Dummies, Music Composition for Dummies, and Guitar All-in-One for Dummies, and the poetry...
"To Dogs" and "O' Nauseous Summer" by Trevor L. Sensor

“To Dogs” and “O’ Nauseous Summer” by Trevor L. Sensor

Trevor L. Sensor is a writer from Illinois. His first ebook, "Ex-Poems", was released by Peanut Gallery Press in 2014. His work has been featured on Atticus Review, HTMLGiant, Be About It, and Alt Lit Press. Read his ebook here.
"The Infidelity" by Jeffrey Zable

“The Infidelity” by Jeffrey Zable

Jeffrey Zable was publishing poetry and prose in magazines and anthologies while you were still in diapers and throwing pabulum onto the floor. He's published five chapbooks including "Zable's Fables" with an introduction by the late great Beat poet Harold Norse. Check out more of his work here.
DIILAETD--Tributes to Aram Saroyan, by Daniel Austin Warren

DIILAETD–Tributes to Aram Saroyan, by Daniel Austin Warren

This series of tributes come to you in advance of Aram Saroyan's "Complete Minimal Poems" reading at Alias Books this Sunday, May 25.
"Spring" by Mitchell Grabois

“Spring” by Mitchell Grabois

and the Earth is a child who’s forgotten all the poems he’s been forced to learn and made to recite before a contemptuous rabble
RELOCATION by Alex Moore

RELOCATION by Alex Moore

We want people we will never meet, something unknown, once the known becomes a suit of normalcy.