Trudy

  • wish by Harry James The morning sun dappled the kitchen wall with an outline of wind-fumbled leaves loosely hanging on trees, cooking in the early morning heat. On […]

  • Fisher Samuel Harris Shows at McGuffey Art Center     I didn’t start making art until after I’d graduated from college. While I never got much of an artistic education, it turns out that […]

  • Duck Blind by Regina Guarino Across the narrow alley way between row houses, where trash cans totter and feral cats loiter, a window opens onto the neighbors’ kitchen. For o […]

  • Immersed by Caroline Kahlenberg     People will say it was suicide, but you mustn’t believe them. They’ll say I looked normal at first, a tall woman with long black hair […]

  • The Art of Kathleen Markowitz “I didn’t initially like abstract art,” admits artist Kathleen Markowitz, her vibrant paintings offering bursts of primary colors, suffused sur […]

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    It’s not hard to sneak into the Manhattan Exclusion zone if you know what you’re doing. The Coast Guard mostly looks for the guys who don’t know what they’re doing—the ones who rush past Spuyten Du […]

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    I’ve held season tickets on the fifty-yard line of health care for a long time, watching in alternating awe and horror at how medical interventions are provided. In the gratitude/wonder department, […]

  • Rose sat on the front porch, her custom at that dwindling time of day, watching. She tucked a strand of gray-white hair behind an ear. Her rocker squeaked against the floorboards. Light had fallen near […]

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    I left my body, my home, and my life at 5:14 p.m. on a Tuesday afternoon in May, just as the peonies outside turned their faces upward and smiled their brightest smile. One minute I was cutting up […]

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    The first photo I took, when I was twelve years old, was of treetops. I’ve always loved nature. My subjects over time have not changed—I still take pictures of nature even when I’ve traveled overs […]

  • Collateral Damage: 48 Stories, the title of Nancy Ludmerer’s debut collection of captivating short stories, invites threat and suspense, but her sterling craft and literary sensibilities upend all e […]

  • I have a touch of prosopagnosia (that’s Latin for: oh shit), which is an inability to recognize faces. For me it’s always been a transient condition, hitting without warning. Certain situations are predictably […]

  • Kay Rae Chomic is the 3rd place winner of Streetlight’s 2022 Flash Fiction Contest

     

    Stephanie climbed her porch stairs, nodded at the two pumpkins with carved misshapen noses, mouths, and teeth. One […]

  • The first time I saw Bad Dog Ollie, he gave me the stink eye. He was in a large pen with a flock of adorable puppies, who ran and tumbled and played in a group. He stood to the side, staring up at me with his […]

  • More than half a century ago

    (wtaf)

    when I was five, my parents bought a DC row house that came furnished

    (an estate sale? someone walking away from their whole life?)

    with lots of heavy dark furniture […]

  • John Adinolfi is the 2nd place winner of Streetlight’s 2022 Flash Fiction Contest
     

     

    All the times of their lives happened at the shore. She was a lifeguard. He was beach patrol. He tripped over h […]

  • Margaret Watson is the 1st place winner of Streetlight’s 2022 Flash Fiction Contest

     

    I try my best to ignore the telephone vibrating in my back pocket. I focus on what I am doing–massaging St […]

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    I began photographing at sixteen when I got my first paycheck from the local movie theater to purchase a 35 mm film camera, a Canon EOS Rebel G. The camera then never left my side the rest of high […]

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    I found my calling on a bleak Sunday afternoon in the fall of 1958, standing at the edge of a fetid swamp, questioning why bad things happened to little children. It was the day four-year-old Billy Flynn […]

  • Hi Kate,
    You’ll be able to find this as a hard copy in Streetlight’s 2022 anthology, which will come out next year. So glad you’re enjoying the pieces in our magazine!

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