Archive for the 'bookmaggot' Category

red carpets and other banana skins, by rupert everett

They said he had tuberculosis, but it was a mysterious death—one of the first I heard of—that fluttered the nerve endings of our collective subconscious. Someone was walking on our graves.

meeting new people, by daniel lavery

If you take a vacation with a close friend and it’s not the best goddamn time either of you has ever had in years, it was a flop, and marks the end of the good times between the two of you forever.

whidbey, by t kira madden

“You can feel it on that one, like a tingle. You ever feel something like that? Like you can just feel the ghosts of the raped around a certain kind of man?” “I know what you mean,” Trace says. She does. She has felt this, often.

what we are seeking, by cameron reid

I don’t want to divide the world up into categories anymore, I want to understand.

the wayward writer, by ariel gore

My writing utopia supports both introversion and community. It’s urban, but also oceanic. We heal our shameful histories with honesty and reparations. Everyone has a guaranteed minimum income. In my writing utopia, we center creativity and joy. We don’t bend to the needs of capitalism.  We know that imperialistic story structures will never destroy the empire.

hell’s heart, by alexis hall

I get that sometimes, the strange sense of waking up and being shocked to realize that I am me and not some other person.

beautyland, by marie-helene bertino

Language is pitiable when weighed against experience.

crazy brave, by joy harjo

As I approached the doorway to Earth, I was hesitant to enter. I kept looking over my shoulder. I heard the crisp voice of the releaser of souls urge me forward. “Don’t look back!” And I remembered how Earth is a heavy teacher yet is so much loved by the creator of planetary beings.

zealot, by reza aslan

The Kingdom of God is a call to revolution

to ride a rising storm, by moniquill blackgoose

I don’t think there’s virtue in labor for the sake of labor, in endlessly harvesting beyond one’s needs.

the hidden kingdom of fungi, by keith seifert and dr rob dunn

The land we stand on feels solid, but the continents float on molten magma like dumplings on a simmering stew.

a/s/l, by jeanne thornton

Abraxa loves them both, wishes them only good. They’ll leave me, she tells herself, and then the thought rearranges itself like a warm wax lamp: they’ll let me go.

daddy, we hardly knew you, by germaine greer

Native trees like native people do not understand or care for the profit motive.

woodworking, by emily st james

I keep trying to make everything fit in my head, and the best I can figure is: We’re all we’ve got. You know? We have to take care of each other.

year of the tiger, by alice wong

Relationship building. > Empire building.

the wayward writer, by ariel gore

Cancel all uncreative, uninspiring time-sucks.

small joys, by elvin james mensah

I was convinced that I’d never have any friends, so I had this idea of being one to myself. I could be honest and loyal and supportive. I could listen to myself and make myself laugh.

the tusks of extinction, by ray nayler

I know what it is like to be from an extraction zone. What it is like to grow up in the place where the taking begins.

ceremony, by leslie marmion silko

Their evil is mighty but it can’t stand up to our stories.

catching the big fish, by david lynch

…we live in this hellhole, and we think it’s got to be this way. But what if we’re wrong?