
Short Fiction & Poetry
Photo by Alex Shuper
Browse my portfolio of over 100 pieces of short fiction and poetry, published in various magazines, anthologies, and journals!
Sort Portfolio By:
Story Length / Free to Read
“Bridge of the Bees” in Penumbric
Elsie skipped over the bridge in the yard, the tiny thing constructed for rabbits and mice. She pinwheeled to a stop, then dashed back over it and told her mother about the ‘black fairies’ she’d found.
“The Curse Collector” in Quarter(ly)
Yima acquired peoples’ broken feet, stuttering hearts, and even little things like their split ends and displayed them on her wall. Once collected and dead, they morphed into their true form of a curse, a clawed thing.
“Tally” in Theme of Absence
The tally-marked stop sign waited at the top of the Frankfurt street hill. Six tally marks. Police had tried cleaning them off and had even replaced the stop sign at one point, but the marks always reappeared.
“Importance of Gray” in Disabled Tales
The cicadas sizzled in the summer afternoon, spiraling in an erratic murmuration through the yard, and Fen dropped her sidewalk chalk to cover her ears.
“Care and Keeping of Funnel Clouds” in Intrepidus Ink
The sky rotated into a yellow-green, the kind where the sun strove to shine through. Cindy stayed out in the yard. Her son texted hide in the basement! A siren wailed through the empty street. But Cindy waited.
“Falling Action Cafe” in The Fabulist
For our part, we love being discovered. Frieda matches us with the perfect reader, that one who holds us with interest and turns our pages with excitement. Sometimes, that person comes back to read us again, and again — for, of course, they can’t take us out of the café.
“Feed Them Wonder” in Fleas on the Dog
The butterfairies and the ring-tailed dragons fled first. They buttoned up their fairy coats and looped scarves around their rings and traveled far, far into the North.
“Dropped Into the Sky” in Nonbinary Review
The sidewalk broke off on Filmore street, stopping as if at an invisible boundary. Jemma braked with her rollerblades a little too slow, like a seven-year-old might. She’d reached nine years old yesterday, despite her best efforts wishing on the rock she’d found under the bridge.
“Arm Warmers for the Elder God, Quantity: 66” in Andromeda Spaceways
My mind won’t stop once I lie supine. A thousand reminders prick through from my subconscious—how could I forget the trash full of my shed skin?
“Purr Therapy” in Felis Futura
The purring rumbles throughout the cathedral room. It is loud, but not the horrible, bright kind of loud that bars or doctor’s offices have. This is a cozy loud.
“The Blaring Blue” in Timber Ghost Press
You know how TVs have advanced so far they show details better than real life? A giraffe at the zoo seems unrealistic and vague, like you expect it to have more pixels or something. Well, that’s how the Nebraska sky operates.
“The Time Speaker” in Luna Station Quarterly
Katie had always known the time, down to the second.
“Armor” in Utopia SF
Georgia dumped the 50-pound bag of cockroaches in the hole and flashed a thumbs-up to the camera man. “One of the worst environmental conundrums, f-fixed,” she said to Tommy the reporter. “And it only took us a h-h-hundred fifty years.”
“Craving For Another Summer” in Wyldblood Press
The lemon of the kiss loitered on Seena’s lips so long that she thought of dangerous things. Maybe she could stay a little past the first yellow leaf, before the dew even iced over.
“The Bear in the Restaurant” in Serotonin
Reda hunched in her chair in the bright, cheery restaurant, her mouth dry, clenching her fists. A bear might as well have been lumbering towards her, the way her chest flip-flopped with nerves. She had no excuse.
“Edge of the Universe” in The Colored Lens
Leira owned the Edge of the Universe. The café glimmered in the pocket of downtown between the clothing boutiques and the bowling alleys and none of the customers knew the accuracy of the name, or how close they meandered to the brink.
“Far Off Beauty” in Factor Four
The rose unfolded another petal across the Atlantic. Another wave of heat, killing all in its path. But she felt nothing from so far away. The space station elevator room ran a little chilly.
“The Terror of the Care Center” in Tall Tales TV
“I was a Russian code breaker in ’73,” Merina said. “You think dog is hard to figure out? You’ve been barking for 45 minutes.”
“The Space Between Us” in Flash Fiction Online
Kodi had always known the distance between himself and the nearest pie.
“What a Flower Has Achieved” in Paper Lanterns Literary
Why do people ask, “When will you bloom?”