Volume 30, Issue 1
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POETRY Aaron Anstett • Bruce Bagnell • Sarah Barber • Kevin Boyle • Jim Daniels • Brandi George • Chris Haven • Tom Holmes • Kjerstin Anne Kauffman • Athena Kildegaard • Ashley Seitz Kramer • Peter LaBerge • Catharine Lucas • Troy Taylor FICTION Lawrence F. Farrar • Joseph Levens • Daniel Miller • Kama Shockey NONFICTION Paul Crenshaw • Susan Finch • Sonja Livingston • Dustin Parsons • Susan Perly BOOK REVIEWS Shannon K. Winston ART Ajean Ryan
Paul Crenshaw
She weighs a hundred pounds shivering wet but calls her biceps Lightning and Thunder. Some days she dresses like a ninja, but in hot pink. Some days I find her so high in the tree in the back yard I can feel where my breath begins and ends, somewhere near the point blood enters and leaves the heart, where the ribcage flutters like the pages of the books she reads while lounging high in the tree, as if this is normal, as if anything our children do is normal.
She tie-dies her underwear. She wears a shirt with someone else’s name on it. She re-upholstered our couch one rainy weekend and now it looks like a dairy cow. When I asked her why, she said she wasn’t sure but it seemed like a good idea at the time.
She once told me the War of 1812 started because the British were bamboozling America’s trade, so America had to kung fu karate chop them. She once told me George Orwell’s real name was Freddy Krueger. I once asked her why she had on two different-colored socks and she replied that she couldn’t find the matching one. When I asked her why she didn’t simply wear a different pair, she explained that she liked the first sock.
She is fourteen, her chest thin and frail as a bird’s. Or a kitten, like the one we saw outside the restaurant and she begged to take home. It was in a sorry state—eyes wild as olives, fur matted like my hair in the morning after I fall asleep on the couch. I thought of distemper and rabies and fleas. She thought of clipping out the matted fur, of small bowls of milk on Saturday mornings.
READ MORE>Ajean Ryan (she, hers) creates drawings, paintings, sculptures and installations based on the themes of abstraction, female identity and the domestic landscape. In her ongoing works she creates poetic metaphors of marks suspended in space using non-traditional drawing materials as well as traditional handicraft resources. Ajean received her BA in Fine Arts with a concentration in Painting from UCLA and then went to receive her MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts at UC Berkeley. She has exhibited nationally and internationally in museums, galleries as well as non-profit spaces. She has been the recipient of numerous awards and grants including the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and the Creative Capital Workshop Grant. Ajean is an Associate Professor of Drawing at Colorado State University and currently lives in Loveland, Colorado.
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Zone 3 Press sponsors two book competitions: The Zone 3 Press First Book Award in Poetry and The Zone 3 Press Creative Nonfiction Book Award. Winners receive $1,000 and publication of their book, as well as an invitation to give a joint reading at Austin Peay State University with the contest judge.
Zone 3 Press publications are made available from the Zone 3 Store and your favorite booksellers.
POETRY Aaron Anstett • Bruce Bagnell • Sarah Barber • Kevin Boyle • Jim Daniels • Brandi George • Chris Haven • Tom Holmes • Kjerstin Anne Kauffman • Athena Kildegaard • Ashley Seitz Kramer • Peter LaBerge • Catharine Lucas • Troy Taylor FICTION Lawrence F. Farrar • Joseph Levens • Daniel Miller • Kama Shockey NONFICTION Paul Crenshaw • Susan Finch • Sonja Livingston • Dustin Parsons • Susan Perly BOOK REVIEWS Shannon K. Winston ART Ajean Ryan
Paul Crenshaw
“She weighs a hundred pounds shivering wet but calls her biceps Lightning and Thunder.”
READ MORE>Ajean Ryan (she, hers) creates drawings, paintings, sculptures and installations based on the themes of abstraction, female identity and the domestic landscape. In her ongoing works she creates poetic metaphors of marks suspended in space using non-traditional drawing materials as well as traditional handicraft resources. Ajean received her BA in Fine Arts with a concentration in Painting from UCLA and then went to receive her MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts at UC Berkeley. She has exhibited nationally and internationally in museums, galleries as well as non-profit spaces. She has been the recipient of numerous awards and grants including the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and the Creative Capital Workshop Grant. Ajean is an Associate Professor of Drawing at Colorado State University and currently lives in Loveland, Colorado.