In this issue, Robert Fanning attempts to translate distance into love in three poems beginning with “Snow and Roses.”
Patricia Foster considers what it means to start a conversation with strangers in “The Boys.”
And, in Casey Pycior’s expertly crafted story “O’er the Ramparts,” we’re introduced to a man, Kent, who struggles with everything: job, marriage, parenting. And compounding this struggle are a new neighbor, a video game, and the launching of fireworks.
This issue features turn-of-the-century hypnotism posters from The Donaldson Lithographing Co. based in Newport, Kentucky.

Featured art: Donaldson Lithographing Company

Turn-of-the-century hypnotism posters. There is not much information available about these images, only that they were the product of The Donaldson Lithographing Co. based in Newport, Kentucky and seem to be from around 1900. From Public Domain Review.

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