A Family Matter
Each year, California’s child protective services agencies remove thousands of kids from their homes. The story of how some parents decided to fight back.
Each year, California’s child protective services agencies remove thousands of kids from their homes. The story of how some parents decided to fight back.
In the 1960s, a white subdivision prepares for the arrival of a black family.
Brit Bennett The Cut Jun 2020 10min Permalink
A father's death, the nature of stories.
Amy Purcell Triquarterly Jul 2018 20min Permalink
An adopted woman's brushes with fortunes and family ties.
Belinda Hermawan Split Lip Magazine Jul 2018 15min Permalink
The stark realities of nature and nuture.
Allison Kubu Longleaf Review Jun 2018 15min Permalink
A life in objects.
Lee Krecklow Necessary Fiction May 2018 Permalink
Southern crimes and nightmares; an excerpt from Ward's latest novel.
Jesmyn Ward Buzzfeed Aug 2017 Permalink
A cast of characters move in and out of a shrimpmonger's house; an excerpt from a 1951 novella by a writer dubbed 'The Turkish Chekov.'
Sait Faik Abasıyanık, translated by Brad Fox Guernica Magazine Jun 2017 15min Permalink
A lake house; complex family mysteries and horrors.
"From the backseat, I pull the hammer. I’m prepared to use it. I considered a hatchet, but it’s my brother."
Christopher DiCicco Wyvern Lit Feb 2015 Permalink
A woman bonds with her terminally ill sister over food, memories, and shaky lives.
"When Ava won the middle school election, there was peach cobbler with a filling so warm it burnt my tongue. When I failed chemistry, she silently let me lock myself in my room, but I came down for dinner to lasagna with short ribs that fell apart at the slightest nudge. Mom would only speak to us seriously once our mouths were full; with blueberry-banana pancakes the morning of the SATs, chicken-stuffed bell peppers after soccer games, and over spaghetti carbonara for high school heartaches. We came to interpret her innermost thoughts in meticulous meals culled from Julia Child and the Rombauers. It was like she needed something to distract us when she was fully there."
Kyle Lucia Wu Joyland Nov 2014 30min Permalink
Colliding Michigan demographics; the novelty of AOL chat rooms.
"So me and Little Tom were sitting on the couch watching television, not so much in the mood to do anything else having been witness to the worst kind of execution.'Wish you had a computer,' I said finally. 'AOL is so great. You know about it?' Pause. 'You have AOL down there?'"
A brother visits his sister in a mental institution after an unspoken incident.
"His sister talks about how they are staring at her. How she thinks the fat man in the purple shirt is going to rape her, though she won’t tell Greg if he works there or if he’s a fellow patient. She talks about starving and dying and figuring out how she can get out and sue the place into the ground. He tries to listen, he tries to ask questions, but after fifteen minutes he smiles and nods at her and tries to ignore listening to anything she’s saying. He looks out of the doorway when she looks away from him, and he wonders how many of the people who walk past are just as confused as she is. He imagines that everyone in the common area is just as lost, all of them imagining everyone else is trying something."
Matthew Kabik Pithead Chapel Apr 2014 10min Permalink
A father’s undiagnosed dementia reveals a family’s vulnerability.
Anne Rieman The Morning News Mar 2014 Permalink
A young woman is hired to hand out pamphlets at a seedy racetrack.
"When the supply of flyers was gone, I walked over to the snack bar to get more from Al. The crowd was thinning now. People either looked me over or tried not to look. Without the stack of paper in hand, I felt self-conscious again. The pumps hurt my feet."
Jo-Anne Rosen Pithead Chapel Feb 2014 10min Permalink
A survivor’s frightening account.
Paige Williams Atlanta Magazine Jan 2000 20min Permalink