In this issue, Lori Brack writes through the crowded memories of her family farm and the hard work of being alive in “A Blur in the Field.”
Nathan Alling Long explores an old, familiar secret that any good lover knows in “Leave.”
And Daniel Romo questions the sequels and plot twists of our lives in two poems beginning with “Faster and Noticeably More Furious.”
This issue features illustrations by French artist, astronomer, and amateur entomologist Étienne Léopold Trouvelot. He created 7,000 or so illustrations based on his astronomical observations, the quality of which reached their zenith in the 15 exquisite pastel works that were published as The Trouvelot Astronomical Drawingsin 1882.

Featured art: Étienne Léopold Trouvelot

The French artist, astronomer and amateur entomologist Étienne Léopold Trouvelot is noted for two major contributions in his lifetime. The first is the 7000 or so illustrations he created from his astronomical observations, the quality of which reached their zenith in the 15 exquisite pastel works which were published as The Trouvelot Astronomical Drawings in 1882. Trouvelot was invited onto the staff of the Harvard College Observatory when the then director Joseph Winlock saw the quality of his illustrations, and in 1875 he was invited to use the U. S. Naval Observatory’s 26-inch refractor for a year. As well as his illustrations, Trouvelot also published some 50 scientific papers, and was credited with discovering “veiled spots” on the Sun in 1875.
The second and rather more unfortunate legacy Trouvelot left the world was the accidental widespread introduction of the highly destructive European Gyspy moth onto North American soil. From Public Domain Review.

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