by TNSF | Oct 24, 2018 | Stories, Vol. 1, Issue 50
***Read Part 1 ***Read Part 2 ***Read Part 3 Part 4: A Dark Blip When we reemerged from the barn, a man in an unkempt gray beard greeted us. He wore an old sailor’s cap and had a dark blue raincoat that was flailing violently. I looked up to the dark gray sky...
by TNSF | Oct 24, 2018 | Visual Art, Vol. 1, Issue 50
Frothing Ore This ceramic mask is one in a series of pieces titled “Nature Strikes Back.” Each piece shows the human form being taken over by a different aspect of nature. “Frothing Ore” depicts a face that is being consumed by a...
by TNSF | Oct 17, 2018 | Vol. 1, Issue 49, Wherey'at?
Jewish Southerner transforms 60 years of Bible Belt residency into political thriller novel ATLANTA, Ga.— According to author Mickey Dubrow “Many people believe that America either is a Christian nation or should be. To be a true Christian nation, America would have...
by TNSF | Oct 17, 2018 | Nonfiction, Southern Lit Presents, Vol. 1, Issue 49
Poetry Wears an Evening Gown Poetry never needed the delicacies of gentle, metaphorical language often associated with its genre. One poem requires only the amount of words necessary to get the point across—a point often open-ended and left up to the reader’s...
by TNSF | Oct 17, 2018 | Stories, Vol. 1, Issue 49
***Read Part 1 ***Read Part 2 Part 3: Sassafras Fritz spoke not. Conrad rushed to the front, much more hurriedly than I had previously seen him. “Greetings officer,” Conrad said, tipping his hat. “The name’s James Connolly, Reverend James Connolly.” “I...
by TNSF | Oct 17, 2018 | Visual Art, Vol. 1, Issue 49
Alter Ego Collage, embroidery thread, and oil paint on canvas. 16”x20” In my work, I examine the concept of identity as an assemblage of influences, challenging conventions in popular culture from a woman’s perspective. My paintings are portraits and parts of the face...