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Arts Features | Fiction | Nonfiction | Poetry
Philomela – by Orana Loren
… I brought you here so that the deadness of the walls would whiten your tongue. Your tongue was always too fleshy for me, too pink-flashing. I could never look at your lips for long; they were always too full and swollen with honey, and the edges curved when you smiled – curved up, you know? But when I brought you here, your tongue did not stop. Each time you grinned I saw river-pink, a young-blood pink, a new-skinned pink, the thickest water. Pink over pink over pink, in and out went your tongue; then your breath, and your breath, and your tongue. The thickest pink …
The Museum – by Gemma Parker
The ferris wheel is closed. Two little faces peer up at her – they have traipsed all this way. People around them are strolling into a nearby museum, which is painted black and has no windows. She holds their hands tightly and walks up to an attendant. Do you speak English? A nod. Would this be appropriate … okay … for the young children? Would they like it?
The young woman, dressed in a smart navy uniform, glances at her in genuine surprise. Oh yes, she murmurs. She looks reverently down at the children. Yes, okay for children …
The Moths – by Gillian Britton
On the first morning of the moths there was very little rain. Other invaders had seemed formed of the rain, but the moths seeped in as if formed of stone or air. They appeared in the storm cellar, where Kepi was laying down bottles of the juice they had made from seaweed and nettles – surprisingly flavoursome. The moths were suddenly there, flapping ghosts of pale smoke grey that sent Kepi shrieking back up to the surface. When she took Meno down for a look – creeping quietly, peeking down from the top of the stairs – the moths had mostly shredded themselves on the coarse stone walls, leaving soft traces, like chalk markings. Black, wingless bodies covered the stone floor, some still writhing. But they died quickly …
Finger-branches – by Eliza Henry-Jones
A breathtaking new story inspired by a residency at the Australian Institute of Marine Science
… We, the oldest from the reef, remember crown-of-thorns starfish from the sea. We never see them, but we know they’re near. They change things (a whiff a tremor). We have long learnt to buckle down (draw in fight fight fight) at their approach. The whiff tremor of them carries through cold lab air. It makes us so grateful for our tight, clear tank. Louise noises COTS. Crown-of-thorns COTS. They are feasters. We are their sunlight …
The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
When you look at me, you wonder what it is like. To be an artist. I think what you are really asking is what it is like to be a failed artist. Let’s face it, where are the successful ones? Does anyone know? You may know of them, from catalogues sitting unread in your magazine rack, from guest spots on Arts on Sunday, but you do not know them. You do, however, know artists like me who serve you. Who work as your baristas, your cleaners, your children’s entertainers. Who arrive at the door with glitter and metallic paint and large brushes that scream of ruined furniture.
Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
… He lived in the inert dark between night and early morning. Things that had been snug in the afternoon light were cold to him now. The house was a void corralled by clean, white, modern lines. There was furniture; a thin TV. Nooks clung in clusters to the walls, filled with picture frames and souvenirs and little baked-clay monsters. From the kitchen you could see the paddock. From the table you could see the paddock. From the wrong end of the lounge room you could see the paddock …
Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
It is lovely to have Claire back in Island again! Long before 'Animal Life of Penang', Claire's very first published short story, 'Sustenance', appeared in Island issue 109 in 2007.
Penang used to be interesting. Back then, young, you could pay to let a swallow escape from a wicker cage. You could choose a crab from a tank in a laneway. You could wake up on the beach at dawn. The tide could be out, your clothes slightly damp. You would remember nothing. Afterwards, you could live your whole life …
Butter – by Daniel Ray
It’s that time of morning when everything’s clean with cold and I can smell Dad’s aftershave spilling with gold light from the bathroom. My mouth is dry. I’m still shrugging off sleep and dark misshapen dreams. I focus on the yellow cut of light, imagining sheafs of steam, and Dad, face red with razor burn, looming in the mirror, clipping his fingernails while Mum ties back her hair and leans in to spit foaming toothpaste into the sink. For a moment their images converge in the mirror as if they are one person. Then they split apart like anagrams into body parts—ears, hair, noses, eyes—before they resolidify. I know little about them apart from this: their routines, their tiny ministrations. It’s as if they both died when they married …
Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
Our neighbour’s latest pandemic purchase lounges on the front porch, brown fur glistening in the sun and big limbs stretching across the stairs.
‘Babe!’ I holler to my wife, as I stare out our finger-smudged window. ‘Looks like next door’s got a dog.’
In the backyard sit more of our neighbour’s recently acquired bargains: a shiny new barbecue, a blow-up kids’ pool (now deflated) and a crashed drone lolling on the highest branch of a tree.
Brooke comes over and wraps her arms around me, her old woollen jumper scratching at my upper arms. She peers over me, leaning her chin on my head. ‘Looks like a good dog,’ she comments …
Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
R looks at their ball of thread on the floor. They are never sure when they pull the first thread where it is coming from. Is the beginning really blissfully unaware of the end? … R has been marking their movements with thread for years to thwart the loss of time; letting it out, taking it in. R is not sure who recommended this …
Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
Your neighbours all have one. Your work colleagues never talk about anything else. Celebrities, star athletes and even the Pope have gotten in on the action. Yep, it’s official: GetJoy fever is sweeping the globe! But while obtaining your very own GetJoy is just a click away, being a host with the most can be trickier business. So, if you find your jubilation turning to frustration, more despondency than joie de vivre, well we’re here to help with our top tips to get joy from GetJoy …
No Tomorrow – by Catherine Deery
On the day Josephine our sow escapes her pen and trots off across the flat paddocks in search of love, Timmy from town is at ours and me and him are trying to hurdle the creek on our BMXs using empty drench drums and sleepers stolen from Mum’s garden as a ramp. When Mum gets the call from old Mr Taylor on the farm next door about that goddamn pig rooting around in his house garden again, she puts her hand over the receiver and sticks her head out the back door and clocks the sleepers and drums and me and Timmy and the BMXs in one sharp eyeful but doesn’t say anything, just beckons me over and makes the shape JOSEPHINE with her mouth then TAYLOR’S, so I know it’s bad …
The Great Aviary of Love – by Kathryn Goldie
MYTH - We fell in love at the Phoenix, a dingy pub opposite a bus stop. We joked about the graffiti in the toilets. She wanted to know everything about me. She put her hand on my leg.
REALITY - She has my toucan wind chime, the one I bought with my good ex. My good ex haggled it down from $15 to $12.50. Now the toucan perches silently on her balcony, watching me with its wooden eye. It has watched my every move for more than a year. She was supposed to be just minding it …
Moss – by Jane Rawson
… She remembered it cold and damp. She remembered it dark and green. Her first days in a nest beneath the snow, then those brief, bright moments before she stretched new limbs and took cover in a close, green cavern. A life of icy winds, sleet that pricked her skin into life. / Then David’s hands around her his lips on her damp breathing skin and now every day is hot and dry …
Bombera – by Josefina Huq
… Somebody asks her how it felt having her birthday on the day of the fire. What’s it matter? she says. Even starting a fire couldn’t get people to come. They laugh, and she tries to laugh hard enough so as not to feel hurt, thinking about that night. How she was across town and saw the firetrucks zoom down the main road, headed straight towards her wooden spot in the corner. The sirens cutting through the lyrics of Happy Birthday …
One Man’s Trash – by Piri Eddy
… He had taught her everything he knew. How to secure the hook and sinker, what knots to use. How to feel the tension in the line – to work with your catch, not against it. He showed her how to cut the skin, to separate the good from the bad. On the table, he laid out his catch from the lake: a bed spring, two cigarette butts, a crumpled-up bottle. ‘Where’d they come from?’ she asked. ‘From people,’ he said. ‘Back when there was always more.’ …
Geometry of Lament – by Alicia Sometimes
Excavations of Viking sites have uncovered razors, combs and ear cleaners constructed from animal bones and antlers. The Vikings buried the dead with their personal belongings and marked the graves with stones. These hallowed sites hid a trove of clues about how they once lived. Which is why it was so perplexing to see around thirty Barbie doll legs protruding from the ground in front of me like a giant toy memorial …
Interiors – by Zac Picker
Back in the old days, Shad used to look up at night and think about how it all seemed so big. It was a kind of secret psalm, he thought. Layers of learning stacked on top of each other like an upside-down pyramid projected from his head, stretched into the foggy distance of the firmament. Lying on the cool evening grass, he could feel it in the fuzzy spots behind his eyes …
Phantom Menace Hours – by Victoria Manifold
It’s real Phantom Menace hours down at the motel. I’m waiting for Adam. We’re having an affair but haven’t consummated it yet. I’m vaguely worried that if we have sex it’ll be terrible, ‘not because of me,’ I’d told him, ‘I’m really good at it.’ And it’s true. I have a great track record with lots of positive feedback …
Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett
‘Okay,’ he says, knocking a sand-covered knee against hers. ‘You have to tell me why.’
And she gives him that look. The one she knows will burrow under his skin, feasting on any wriggling uncertainty, an emerita in the beach of him.
‘I don’t have to tell you anything.’
He laughs like he gets it, which he doesn’t, because if he did, he wouldn’t have asked in the first place …
Archive
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Arts Features
- 12 Jun 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- 2 Apr 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- 11 Dec 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- 2 Jun 2021 Fury - by Andrew Harper, on Lucienne Rickard’s ‘Extinction Studies’
- 2 Jun 2021 Julie Gough: Tense Past
- 1 Jun 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- 1 Jun 2021 Islands and Ships - by Joshua Santospirito
- 1 Jun 2021 The Intimacy of Daily Life: The News is the Weather - by Rosie Flanagan and Miriam McGarry
- 1 Jun 2021 Fragments of Place - by Andrew Harper
- 1 Jun 2021 Beware of Imposters (the secret life of flowers) - by Selena de Carvalho
- 31 May 2021 Welcome Territory - Selena de Carvalho responds to Tanya Lee’s ‘Landing’
- 27 May 2021 Sisters Akousmatica: Herstory of Radio
- 25 May 2021 Double Yolker - by Mish Meijers
- 23 May 2021 Stepping Back from The Edge: Re-imagining Queenstown - by Cameron Hindrum
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Fiction
- 8 Oct 2024 Chrysalis – by Lachlan Plain
- 11 Sep 2024 The mystery of the lost hours – by Sue Brennan
- 4 Sep 2024 Masters – by Andrei Seleznev
- 7 Aug 2024 Paan – by Josefina Huq
- 18 Jul 2024 A major theft – by Emma Rosetta
- 17 Jul 2024 Devotion – by RT Wenzel
- 10 Jul 2024 He is the candle – by Lucy Norton
- 10 Jul 2024 These are no clear directions – by Lars Rogers
- 3 Jul 2024 Bound – by Liz Evans
- 26 Jun 2024 Prelude to a flight – by Joel Keith
- 30 May 2024 Dear life – by Susan Francis
- 27 May 2024 Refuse – by Hei Gou
- 15 May 2024 bodytruth – by Orlando Silver
- 15 May 2024 Lux – by Linden Hyatt
- 15 May 2024 Gristle and bone – by Jade Doyle
- 18 Apr 2024 Kevin – by Sarah Langfield
- 18 Apr 2024 Start where you are – by Jenny Sinclair
- 9 Apr 2024 Light hazard – by Sophie Overett
- 14 Mar 2024 Magic – by Maria Takolander and David McCooey
- 4 Mar 2024 The Budgie - by Jing Cramb
- 27 Nov 2023 The Interpreter – by Mariam Tokhi
- 13 Nov 2023 This Time Next Week – by Richard Rebel
- 13 Nov 2023 The Cheesewring – by Campbell Andersen
- 27 Oct 2023 Rat – by Anjelica Rush
- 14 Sep 2023 Nursery – by Nicola Redhouse
- 14 Sep 2023 Home of the Pure Heart, House of the Dying – by Rafael SW
- 21 Aug 2023 Sandcastles – by Ruth Armstrong
- 20 Aug 2023 The Mowing – by Ivy Ireland
- 16 Aug 2023 In the Archives – by Keely Jobe
- 11 Aug 2023 A Thin, Brilliant Line – by Lal Perera
- 6 Jul 2023 The River Path – by Tadhg Muller
- 6 Jun 2023 Strokes of White – by Julian Fell
- 23 May 2023 The Blue Fox – by Michael Burrows
- 23 May 2023 How to Kill a Pea – by Lara Keys
- 14 Apr 2023 Dottie and Pin Go Somewhere – by Kate Kruimink
- 29 Mar 2023 The Planet Terrarium - by Philomena van Rijswijk
- 2 Feb 2023 Sloane on the Mountain – by Alexander Bennetts
- 2 Feb 2023 Infrared – by Ryan Delaney
- 2 Feb 2023 The Day the Wave Came – by Paul Mitchell
- 17 Jan 2023 Collateral Damage – by John Tully
- 17 Jan 2023 Philomela – by Orana Loren
- 7 Dec 2022 The Museum – by Gemma Parker
- 7 Dec 2022 The Moths – by Gillian Britton
- 5 Dec 2022 Finger-branches – by Eliza Henry-Jones
- 10 Nov 2022 The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
- 23 Sep 2022 Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
- 25 Aug 2022 Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
- 25 Aug 2022 Butter – by Daniel Ray
- 15 Aug 2022 Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
- 15 Aug 2022 Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
- 1 Aug 2022 Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
- 20 Jun 2022 No Tomorrow – by Catherine Deery
- 20 Jun 2022 The Great Aviary of Love – by Kathryn Goldie
- 26 May 2022 Moss – by Jane Rawson
- 14 Apr 2022 Bombera – by Josefina Huq
- 17 Mar 2022 One Man’s Trash – by Piri Eddy
- 2 Mar 2022 Geometry of Lament – by Alicia Sometimes
- 10 Feb 2022 Interiors – by Zac Picker
- 21 Jan 2022 Phantom Menace Hours – by Victoria Manifold
- 21 Jan 2022 Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett
- 23 Nov 2021 Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry
- 5 Nov 2021 Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson
- 15 Oct 2021 Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
- 1 Oct 2021 An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson
- 16 Sep 2021 Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren
- 2 Sep 2021 Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery
- 26 Aug 2021 Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis
- 17 Aug 2021 An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko
- 10 Aug 2021 The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese
- 28 Jul 2021 A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn
- 13 Jul 2021 Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson
- 2 Jul 2021 Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster
- 24 Jun 2021 Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum
- 7 Jun 2021 King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi
- 6 Jun 2021 Agency - by Tasnim Hossain
- 2 Jun 2021 Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett
- 1 Jun 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- 1 Jun 2021 The Lever, the Pulley and the Screw - by Andrew Roff
- 1 Jun 2021 The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne
- 1 Jun 2021 The Tick Tock Killer - by Alex Cothren
- 1 Jun 2021 Birds - by Anne Casey-Hardy
- 1 Jun 2021 The Wolves - by Josephine Rowe
- 1 Jun 2021 Cod Opening - by Wayne Marshall
- 27 May 2021 Stingrays - by Christine Kearney
- 25 May 2021 Eve - by Laura Elvery
- 23 May 2021 The Teeth and the Curl: A Note to a Cousin - by Robbie Arnott
- 23 May 2021 Extension - by Anthony Lynch
- 23 May 2021 Okay is a Verb - by Erin Hortle
- 23 May 2021 Into the Flames, Down to Our Shoes, Vienna - by John Saul
- 23 May 2021 Just Maybe - by Dominic Amerena
- 23 May 2021 46 - by Ana Duffy
- 23 May 2021 Apple Suite - by Danielle Wood
- 23 May 2021 Foundations - by Michael Blake
- 22 May 2021 Blackbird - by Magdalena Lane
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Nonfiction
- 31 Oct 2024 The ballet school – by Helena Gjone
- 25 Sep 2024 Great flying soar and in command – by Lily Chan
- 19 Sep 2024 Dhanggal Bawagal: Mussel Sisters – by Michelle Vlatkovic
- 29 Aug 2024 The libraries we must enter, the songs we will sing – by Jamil Badi
- 22 Aug 2024 Girl/Monster – by Simmone Howell
- 14 Aug 2024 Words inside words – by Ouyang Yu
- 24 Jul 2024 Snakes in the valleys, in their hair – by Ben Walter
- 17 Jul 2024 Wave and blue – by Beth Kearney
- 26 Jun 2024 Conversation IV: Permission to witness – by Libby King
- 12 Jun 2024 Rain Rain – by Indigo Bailey
- 12 Jun 2024 Clothing the whiteness – by Isabella Wang
- 12 Jun 2024 The other hand – by Carly Stone
- 12 Jun 2024 Collection of collections – by Meredith Jelbart
- 12 Jun 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- 30 May 2024 Thrift – by Catherine Zhou
- 27 May 2024 Bog bodies: Iron Age dreamland – by Lucinda Lagos
- 15 May 2024 Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me – by Xiaole Zhan
- 18 Apr 2024 Laptop death – by David Thomas Henry Wright
- 18 Apr 2024 The goose of granite islands – by Suyanti Winoto-Lewin
- 2 Apr 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- 1 Apr 2024 In Quarantine – by Megan Clement
- 31 Mar 2024 This Moon – by Megan Coupland
- 14 Mar 2024 Ghost streets – by Alexandra Sangster
- 4 Mar 2024 A thousand gifts – by Maki Morita
- 1 Feb 2024 Gifts from a harsh continent – by Tehnuka
- 11 Dec 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- 27 Nov 2023 The Hairy Iceberg – by Kylie Moppert
- 27 Oct 2023 Scarface 1–5 – by Kylie Mirmohamadi
- 27 Oct 2023 The Conversation of Weaving – by RT Wenzel
- 14 Sep 2023 Sharehouse Archaeology – by Ale Prunotto
- 14 Sep 2023 In the River – by Searlait O’Neill
- 16 Aug 2023 Hawksbill – by Grace Heathcote
- 11 Aug 2023 Woonoongoora – by Caroline Gardam
- 22 Jun 2023 Objects of Illness/Recovery – by Anna Jacobson and Katerina Bryant
- 6 Jun 2023 The Dark House – by Emma Yearwood
- 23 May 2023 Lines of Location – by Johanna Ellersdorfer
- 23 May 2023 How to Build a Brother – by Helena Pantsis
- 28 Apr 2023 Selfish Ghosts – by Heather Taylor-Johnson
- 28 Apr 2023 Sudden, Temporary Deaths – by Chris Fleming
- 28 Apr 2023 Wingsets and Snowdrifts: A Subantarctic Year – by Emily Mowat
- 28 Apr 2023 The Long Daylight – by Jo Gardiner
- 28 Apr 2023 Chaste – by Suri Matondkar
- 14 Apr 2023 Landfall – by Megan Coupland
- 2 Feb 2023 Lines of Curiosity – by Margaret Aitken
- 17 Jan 2023 Learning to Be Tame – by Carla Silbert
- 17 Jan 2023 Rubbish – by Liz Betts
- 8 Dec 2022 Pamirs – by Nathan Mifsud
- 7 Dec 2022 Compare and Contrast – by Gillian Bouras
- 6 Dec 2022 Who Owns the Greek Myths? – by Katerina Cosgrove
- 22 Nov 2022 I Go Down to the Shore – by RT Wenzel
- 22 Nov 2022 The Shimmer of Flying Fox Landscape – by Matthew Chrulew
- 22 Nov 2022 Animal Rescue – by Bastian Fox Phelan
- 22 Nov 2022 In the Rain Shadow – by Jessica Carter
- 22 Nov 2022 The Magpie and the Scarecrow – by Helena Pantsis
- 22 Nov 2022 The Right One to Rescue – by Sharon Kent
- 23 Sep 2022 Far Out, Cats – by M.T. O’Byrne
- 1 Aug 2022 Straight From the Horse’s Mouth: Windsor Chairmaking in Tasmania – by Dan Dwyer
- 25 Jul 2022 Living Poets – by Jessica Lim
- 25 Jul 2022 An Open Space – by Luke Johnson
- 14 Jul 2022 A Shadow From Country – by Naomi Parry
- 14 Jul 2022 The Sound of Light – by Verity Borthwick
- 14 Jul 2022 If You Join the Circle, You Must Dance – by Katerina Cosgrove
- 14 Jul 2022 Hospitality – by Nicole Melanson
- 8 Jun 2022 The Ocean Sounds Like a Motorway – by Melissa Fagan
- 8 Jun 2022 The Backyard Project: Notes from Stolen Land – by Lia Hills
- 8 Jun 2022 Schrödinger’s Butterflies – by Dave Witty
- 8 Jun 2022 Feel the Quiet – by Zohra Aly
- 8 Jun 2022 And a Moth Flew Out – by Helena Kadmos
- 8 Jun 2022 A New Garden – by Erica Nathan
- 26 May 2022 The Third Angel of Chernobyl – by Carmel Bird
- 13 Apr 2022 A Year Without Mirrors – by Sarah Klenbort
- 17 Mar 2022 The Turkeys – by Saraid Taylor
- 2 Mar 2022 Spectral Coordinates – by Brigid Magner
- 10 Feb 2022 Falling Asleep Under the Love Umbrella – by Clare Millar
- 6 Dec 2021 A Waving Forest – by Zowie Douglas-Kinghorn
- 6 Dec 2021 Changing Spots – by Sharon Kent
- 6 Dec 2021 A Questionable Survey of Suburban Eucalypts – by Uthpala Gunethilake
- 6 Dec 2021 The Rats Move In – by Karen A Johnson
- 6 Dec 2021 Fire There Is – by Searlait O’Neill
- 6 Dec 2021 Riverine – by Kavita Bedford
- 24 Nov 2021 How to Be a Better Mother – by Lisa Kenway
- 8 Nov 2021 The Funeral [Farewell Kenny-G] – by W<J>P Newnham
- 28 Oct 2021 6 Years, 6 Months and 24 Days Apart – by Saanjana Kapoor
- 8 Oct 2021 Good For It - by Lillian Telford
- 21 Sep 2021 Peace Body Pain Body - by Jarad Bruinstroop
- 9 Sep 2021 The Orchid - by Erica Wheadon
- 26 Aug 2021 Various Emilys/Gondals - by Josie/Jocelyn Deane
- 17 Aug 2021 Fluctuations in Landscape/Language/Lasagne - by Christine Howe
- 10 Aug 2021 Witchcraft, charming, &c. - by Eliza Henry-Jones
- 29 Jul 2021 Submerged - by Nova Weetman
- 13 Jul 2021 Pilgrimage to Frog Hollow - by Clare Murphy
- 2 Jul 2021 You Can’t Go Home Again - by Jenny Sinclair
- 24 Jun 2021 31.5°S, 159°E - by Keely Jobe
- 7 Jun 2021 Athai - by Lakshmi Narayanan
- 6 Jun 2021 Reality Check - by Jocelyn Prasad
- 4 Jun 2021 Principles of Permaculture - by Sam George-Allen
- 2 Jun 2021 Fury - by Andrew Harper, on Lucienne Rickard’s ‘Extinction Studies’
- 2 Jun 2021 How Do You Make Them Let You Belong? - by Erin Hortle
- 2 Jun 2021 Housing Climate: From Plastic to Concrete - by Miriam McGarry
- 1 Jun 2021 Thirst - by Rick Morton
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Poetry
- 31 Oct 2024 Visitor Ghazal – by Megan Cartwright
- 14 Oct 2024 1. – by Bobby K
- 22 Aug 2024 The Ascension on a MacBook Air – by Sam Morley
- 14 Aug 2024 The Edit / An Edit – by Michael Farrell
- 7 Aug 2024 Dysesthesia – by Shey Marque
- 24 Jul 2024 Dinner Call – by Anders Villani
- 3 Jul 2024 ‘Helen’ by Euripides – by Andrew Sutherland
- 21 Jun 2024 white nonsense – by Alice Allan
- 19 Jun 2024 Telegram – by Natalie Susak
- 19 Jun 2024 new year’s day – by Mitch Cave
- 19 Jun 2024 Advice and Warnings – by Jill Jones
- 9 Apr 2024 If Movement Were a Language: Triptych – by Svetlana Sterlin
- 20 Mar 2024 Posture – by Jo Ward
- 20 Mar 2024 23 vignettes on the rental crisis – by Anna Jacobson
- 20 Mar 2024 Stanzas – by Jo Gardiner
- 20 Mar 2024 Parturition Chairs I-V – by Isabella G Mead
- 20 Mar 2024 Grandmother’s Limbs – by Svetlana Sterlin
- 20 Mar 2024 Friendly fire – by Tricia Dearborn
- 21 Feb 2024 Day 210 – by Brigid Coleridge
- 21 Feb 2024 Shedload – by Chris Andrews
- 21 Feb 2024 Improbable Acts of Proximity – by Shey Marque
- 24 Feb 2023 Sestina After B Carlisle – by Stuart Barnes
- 20 Feb 2023 Antarctica – by Andrew Sutherland
- 20 Feb 2023 The Girls Become – by John Foulcher
- 2 Mar 2022 Jobs for Women: Annunciate – by A Frances Johnson
- 2 Mar 2022 Heating and Cooling in the Time of Isolation – by Jessica L Wilkinson
- 2 Mar 2022 Self-portrait as Frida Kahlo – by Katherine Brabon
- 2 Mar 2022 Exoskeletons – by John Kinsella
- 2 Mar 2022 The Memory of Water - by Amy Crutchfield
- 7 Jun 2021 In My Father’s House - by Suneeta Peres da Costa
- 2 Jun 2021 Another Kind of Winter - by Anne Kellas
- 2 Jun 2021 Water on Rock, Wind in Trees - by Pete Hay
- 1 Jun 2021 Voyager I - by Sarah Day
- 1 Jun 2021 Thirty Pieces - by A Frances Johnson
- 1 Jun 2021 Maria-Mercè in the Palm Grove - by Eileen Chong
- 1 Jun 2021 gadhalumarra - by Yaaran Ellis
- 1 Jun 2021 Pink Sun - by Toby Fitch
- 1 Jun 2021 Beach Front - by Ellen van Neerven
- 31 May 2021 Walking a Forest Trail One Summer Afternoon - by Judith Beveridge
- 28 May 2021 Sunlight / Dear Mum - by Graham Akhurst
- 28 May 2021 Hippophobia - by Chloe Wilson
- 25 May 2021 Tend - by Jo Langdon
- 25 May 2021 Distorted Depiction - by Cassandra Atherton
- 23 May 2021 Ash in Sydney - by Jake Goetz
- 23 May 2021 On the Day You Launch - by Damen O’Brien
- 23 May 2021 What the Glass Holds - by Jill Jones
- 23 May 2021 Ekphrasis - by Belinda Rule
- 23 May 2021 I Protest - by Ouyang Yu
- 23 May 2021 Pulled Apart by Seahorses - by Gavin Yates
- 23 May 2021 Sonnet 29 - by Stuart Barnes
- 23 May 2021 Waiting Room - by Felicity Plunkett
- 23 May 2021 Analogue - by Stephen Edgar