Prose
Jan 24th, 2018 |
By Defenestration
The people across the street will not teach me piano. They told me ‘no’, even after I had put on a clean shirt, combed my hair, and walked all the way over there. I thought it would be like asking for a cup of sugar, like neighbors sometimes do. “Will you teach me piano?” I asked nicely.
Posted in Fake Nonfiction, Prose |
Comments Off on “Piano Hoarding Christians,” by Kristy Gherlone
Tags: Fake Nonfiction, Kristy Gherlone, Prose
Jan 17th, 2018 |
By Defenestration
On this day, I had reached the limit of my tolerance. It had gone too far and I now felt compelled to express my disdain for the ubiquity of cheese that has spread like a noxious malignancy throughout our culinary culture. Yes. You heard me. CHEESE! Fromage. Parmesan. Pec-er-ino roman-o. Cheddar. Prov-a-lone. Monterey Jack. I spit out these words like profanities.
Posted in Prose |
Comments Off on “Hold the Cheese,” by Mike Frenkel
Tags: Mike Frenkel, Nonfiction, Prose
Jan 10th, 2018 |
By Defenestration
My brother Jim called to tell me he was about to bid on a 50-acre island in the middle of the Illinois River.
“We want to scale down,” he said. “Do the Thoreau thing. You know—Walden Pond.”
Posted in Nonfiction, Prose |
Comments Off on “A Thoreau Thing,” by June Forte
Tags: June Forte, Nonfiction, Prose
Jan 3rd, 2018 |
By Defenestration
I wrote seven feature length screenplays between the ages of twelve and seventeen. That’s one per year plus an extra one junior year when I got too stoned by myself for the first time. None of these screenplays were ever produced because I both was underage and undertalented (that’s untalented with an extra der). I list them here so my sister’s future children shall be able to see how much cooler their uncle could have been than them.
Posted in Nonfiction, Prose |
Comments Off on “Screenplays I Wrote When I Was a Teen,” by Lee Blevins
Tags: Lee Blevins, Nonfiction, Prose
Dec 27th, 2017 |
By Defenestration
As a child one rarely questions religious beliefs. Your parents tell you what to believe and that’s that. My father was never the religious type, but would occasionally be found to utter a short prayer whenever convenient for him. My mother, however, adhered fairly strictly to the Islamic tradition and made the effort to pray as much as possible. Namaz, she called it. The incongruity between my father’s more lax perspective and my mother’s incessant incantations really made me wonder. Did God want to be constantly bothered with the insignificant events of our daily lives or was He more into the gestalt? What if God really was a micromanager? Would someone like my dad end up getting the cold shoulder because of his inconsistent appeals?
Posted in Nonfiction, Prose |
Comments Off on “Logic, the Universe, and Pigs,” by Ali Kashkouli
Tags: Ali Kashkouli, Nonfiction, Prose