Valerie Sargent

  • One time I was on a literary panel and the interviewer asked why I chose to have three kid characters in Best Intentions. I sat there thinking (all eyes on me), ‘Eek, is he saying that was too many? Should I h […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 5 years, 12 months ago

    I just wrote a new book of poems called Celestial Navigation. One of my favorite stanzas says:

    Penguins man the caps,
    huddle
    against the wind, sheltering
    downy chicks
    flaunting their […]

  • Erika Raskin wrote a new post 6 years ago

     

    To me, being alive means dealing with one challenge after another—some glorious, others not so much. My current, decidedly inglorious challenge is having chemotherapy for metastatic cancer. I think of ch […]

  • It’s insane to try to sort days out of days. Some days you have it and some you don’t, but the thing you have or not is never just one thing: it is a stockpile, an accumulation, a buildup, a collection, a poo […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 6 years, 1 month ago

    Once I spent an afternoon at Appomattox walking the Via Dolorosa of the Confederacy. The Richmond-Lynchburg Stage Road is mostly just a trace now but this is the scene of the last march. Here’s where Bobby Lee r […]

  • The plant in the corner needs to be watered. It’s staring at Anita again. A cold deadpan interspersed with the occasional slow blink. The plant doesn’t have a mouth but if it did she imagines that it would yel […]

  • I’m dreaming. I am in my old life, the life that no longer exists. I am married and I have a daughter, although in the dream she is young and not an adult. And things are going wrong. We are in the midst of a l […]

  • We put the canoe in, Sophie and I, before the sun had warmed the pond and the fog had dissipated. Enveloped by the smell of damp-draped earth, we paddled in silent synchrony, each paddle angled […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 6 years, 3 months ago

    Wednesday night in Deep Ellum, the eclectic little arts neighborhood lingering in the shadow of I-45 east of Dallas’s downtown. Ever since the 19-teens when Blind Lemon Jefferson came to the barbershops and d […]

  • The dog had gotten out, slipped out, wriggled out, sneaked out. Too smart for her own good—clever at door latches, willing to bide her time when the mood was on her to go solo. You’d think it was too cold to wan […]

  • From impressionism to pointililsm to my nursery-school grandboy’s stick figures with appendage-sprouting-heads, the outward expression of other peoples’ internal creativity knocks me out. Whatever it is. […]

  • K.E. Ogden is the 3rd place winner of Streetlight Magazine’s 2019 Short Fiction Contest.

    One short-haired, German Rex single-owner cat about one year-old, up-to-date on shots, I think, although Mom got a […]

  • Julia Ballerini is the 2nd place winner of Streetlight Magazine’s 2019 Short Fiction Contest.
    I was persuaded, if not coerced, to join a group therapy session. My boss was concerned about my mental well-being. I […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 6 years, 5 months ago

    I live a runaway life. I’m a writer, a wife, and a mother and, like a lot of women who tire of the multi-layered duties that come with that combination, I need to get away. Right now, what I’m running away fro […]

  • Bill Bruce is the 1st place winner of Streetlight Magazine’s 2019 Short Fiction Contest.

    “Hey”
                                       “hey”
    “What’re you up to?”
                                       “not […]

  • Co-judging the annual fiction competition with Suzanne Freeman is a little like being each other’s plus-one at a silent auction. We independently review the wares that are displayed on a virtual table, offerings […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 6 years, 5 months ago

    When I was seven, I made my own journal out of legal pad paper—a little book that sparked a lifelong passion for writing down my thoughts, feelings and desires. E.M. Forster asks, “How do I know what I think u […]

  • Trudy wrote a new post 6 years, 6 months ago

    ALLOWING THE LEAF

    For an ultrasound exam, I ran on a treadmill and then was hooked up to a machine that showed my heart pumping blood. It was an incredible thing to see my heart keeping perfect time, beating […]

  • The canary was still. It was too late to run. Too late to escape. Too late to pray for God’s mercy.

     

    Matt had been one of the lucky ones, one of sixteen coal miners chosen to work on a Saturday mo […]

  • You are quirky in a very classy way. Postcards and trinkets and such. You make it all so interesting.
    Unathi to Anita
    Dear Debbie,

    Is your spirit smiling as I work on my third act? It’s been over ten y […]

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