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Erika Raskin wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
Second Marriage by E. K. Riley
She kept track of what belonged to her and what belonged to him. She felt guilty, but also compelled. The silver coffee spoons were h […] -
Fred Wilbur wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
An Ending by Adam Day
after Mark Bibbins Rays burrowing in sand like hearing someone typing an endless suicide note […] -
Elizabeth Howard wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
The Art of Susan Egbert
My involvement with art began early. My father was a freelance artist in upstate New York and I started showing pen and ink drawings w […] -
Elizabeth Howard wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
Photographer Aaron Farrington
When tracked down, Aaron Farrington was on a camping trip in the woods of Grayson Highlands State Park. We met soon afterwards in his basement studio […] -
Fred Wilbur wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
2023 Poetry Contest Winners by Fred Wilbur
It is our pleasure to announce the Winners and Honorable Mentions of the annual Streetlight Magazine Poetry Contest. How did we arrive at our […] -
Erika Raskin wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
A Map Of Her Mind By Benjamin Roque
Suddenly Emery stopped walking. He just stood there, a still-life in the afternoon, on a busy sidewalk. The crowd parted around him—one b […] -
Susan Shafarzek wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
Considering Volcanoes: What Lies Beneath by Mary Alice Hostetter
Mary Alice Hostetter has earned an Honorable Mention in Streetlight’s 2023 Essay/Memoir Contest There was no real reason for volcanoes and […] -
Fred Wilbur wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
Elegy for a Soldier by Will Hemmer
In the pulsing heat, in the black cathedral of war, the amber-tinted silver of infra-red illuminates a man. Nimble in the moment between the […] -
Emily Littlewood wrote a new post 2 years, 4 months ago
The Best Piece of Writing Advice Most Writers Don’t Listen To by Lauren Sapala
For most writers, writing is a strong inner calling. It feels like a passion that they can’t ignore, a destiny they must fulfill. And for writers w […] -
Sharon Ackerman wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Bloodroot in March by Gary D. Grossman
1. Regardless of the year, it’s the first flower seen on my daily hikes, pushing through every November’s abandoned duvet of tan and umb […] -
Erika Raskin wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
The Closet Full of Darlings by Erika Raskin
Lots of people have gotten credit for the literary adage advising writers to kill their darlings. In fact it was Arthur […] -
Erika Raskin wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Joshua Number Eight by E. Hume Covey
If you could sit totally still for long enough on the big rock by the sycamore, the catfish would peek out tentatively from the hollow u […] -
Emily Littlewood wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Interview by J Brooke of Hotel Cuba's author Aaron Hamburger
I first met Aaron Hamburger at a cocktail party during grad school. I was a writing student focusing on nonfiction and poetry and Hamburger was part […] -
Sharon Ackerman wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
a cricket's delight by IIma Quereshi
one tree- with its small hands and another with its star-laced fingers brush against the sky the sky that looks like a sea drained of […] -
Fred Wilbur wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Writers' Joy by Fred Wilbur
Writers or bloggers who write about writing often express the difficulties of practicing the craft in romantic terms of justification. Maybe not […] -
Sharon Ackerman wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Cockatiel not you by Sean Lause
Cockatiel, not you, a yellow and orange assertion. Bright with her own meanings, clatters round the outside of her cage, without […] -
Susan Shafarzek wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
The Hibiscus by Amy Boyes
Amy Boyes has earned an Honorable Mention in Streetlight’s 2023 Essay/Memoir Contest The hibiscuses arrived in six-inch grower pots. Packed for […] -
Erika Raskin wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
The Cat Goddess of Apartment 15B by Alex Barr
The back of Bill’s neck smells for some reason of peach and is delightfully warm to my lips. He murmurs something I don’t catch but sounds lik […] -
Elizabeth Howard wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
The Paintings of Jeannine Regan
Art runs in my family. My great grandfather was an architect in Germany before they immigrated to the U.S. before WWI. His daughter, m […] -
Fred Wilbur wrote a new post 2 years, 5 months ago
Laundry by Charlie Brice
Fat Auntie Ursal with her coffee-breath, baggy pink house dress, and worried rosary beads would haul a basket of linen to the backyard, pick […] - Load More