Napoleon’s Russia (1812)
Joseph C Ogbonna’s ‘Napoleon’s Russia (1812)’ asks: Is ambition just a eulogy for the dead? Half a million men. One frozen myth. No way home.
Joseph C Ogbonna’s ‘Napoleon’s Russia (1812)’ asks: Is ambition just a eulogy for the dead? Half a million men. One frozen myth. No way home.
Jonathan Ukah’s "Elsewhere" blends vivid imagery of light, gardens, and constellations to explore the ache of unreciprocated love. The poem navigates the tension between beauty and isolation, leaving the reader in a state of quiet wonder.
TJ Rowley’s "The Substance as Mythological Storytelling" explores Robert Louis Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde as a modern myth. The piece examines the tale’s ambiguity, its societal implications, and its influence on contemporary storytelling.
Mary Ann McKasy’s "No Guarantees" is a playful yet profound ode to self-reinvention. Through vivid imagery of scratches, dents, and a renewed shine, the poem celebrates freedom, authenticity, and the joy of embracing life without guarantees.
Love on Wheels Quatrain by Thompson Emate explores the longing and turbulence of love, asking how much care and words it takes to draw someone close, while finding solace in their calming charms.
The Song of the Heroic Dragon by Sarah Das Gupta tells the tale of Hilton Green’s terrorized villagers, living in fear of a lurking monster—until courage rises to reclaim their river and restore their feast.
Ellen Rachlin’s Anthropology unfolds across 10 fragmented vignettes—stone-skinned rituals, limonite-eyed visions, and temple steles—weaving a tapestry of myth, pain, and impermanence. Discover the full prose sequence.
On The Rocks by Sarah Das Gupta is a tense short fiction piece where a car parked near a crumbling cliff edge, a sleeping woman, and the ominous presence of the sea create an atmosphere of quiet suspense on a sultry August evening.
Death Of A Fortune-Telling Machine by John Grey captures the eerie demise of a pizza parlor oracle—where shattered glass reveals tangled wires and prophetic confetti, silencing the gypsy who once sold futures for quarters.
Small by Daniel DeLucie juxtaposes cosmic vastness with earthly fragility—where stars dwarf human existence, while leaves whisper our fleeting place in nature’s cycle. A meditation on scale and belonging.
Our Better Angel Selves We Must Then Find by Thomas Harrison Humphreys exposes humanity’s tragic cycle—rejecting the transformative figure who teaches without dogma, wages peace like war, and dies repeatedly for gifting us thought. A lament for our self-sabotaging enlightenment.