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We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
I’m in Canberra, on Ngunnawal country, at my childhood home helping to sort through stuff accumulated over a lifetime. My parents have sold the house after 45 years to move into a smaller townhouse with room for a carer when needed. It’s the end of an era. There is so much to process. And I’m trying to get some sort of closure.

Thrift – by Catherine Zhou
Departing, I lug a chair across a highway and the volunteer thanks me for my donation. I choose not to tell them about the missing screw. We’ll just take this into the back, they say. The curtains close and the thing is no more. Arriving, there are no walls. Baroque lanterns hang from metal frames. We’ve received a lot of guitars recently, he says. Do you play? The guitars are black and electric. A bookshelf curves around a field of children’s toys. It’s important to have no expectations here or you’ll be let down, so scour the spines. Find a book in Italian. Think, I could learn Italian if I tried.

Bog bodies: Iron Age dreamland – by Lucinda Lagos
I would like to share a recurring dream. I am wandering through a picturesque northern European marshland when I stop and drop to the ground with an overwhelming sense of purpose. I begin digging with vigour, the way you do in dreams, knowing that your actions are essential. Dream knowledge is its own canon; the implicit information I possess in a dream is unquestionable even upon waking. I find that every time I re-enter this familiar yet extraordinary dreamland, I am unphased by any strangeness, the dream and I being old acquaintances. In fact, I find the irresistible urge to dig comforting.

Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me – by Xiaole Zhan
I’ve had a recurring scene scorched in my mind since mid-winter 2020. I’m unsure whether the image emerged from a dream or if it grew from someplace in the dark wet of my brain like a tumour. The scene is of two people, each wearing a surgical mask. They have some kind of intimate relationship that cannot be entirely discerned, only there is a power imbalance – this is for sure – and while they attempt to speak to one another through their masks, the figure with less power suffers a nosebleed which slowly seeps through the blue cloth like a Rorschach moth.

Laptop death – by David Thomas Henry Wright
I carry the silver block tenderly, like a sick infant. I carry it onto the bus, onto the subway, across town, to the imposing glass temple. It is a characteristic of major cities of the 21st century. If your city has one, your city matters; if it doesn’t, you don’t. I am talking, of course, about the Apple Store.
Upon entering I am greeted with warmth. I inform, ‘Yesterday, my computer crashed. I can restart it, but I can’t log in. It just freezes.’ My host realises I will not be buying anything today. Warmth swiftly turns to disappointment masquerading as concern. He informs, ‘We are at capacity. Would you like to book a time for another day?’ I plead, pray, beg that I be seen today. It is a matter of utmost importance. ‘No, it is not possible,’ my host replies. The Apple Store, it seems, has no emergency room.

The goose of granite islands – by Suyanti Winoto-Lewin
Forty million years ago a great rift was opening across the remains of the supercontinent Gondwana. Australia and Antarctica had snuggled together for more than a billion years, but now they slowly cleaved apart. Ocean rushed in to sizzle over the hot, fresh scars, but the break was not clean. One band of granite, old and insistent, stretched between the parting continents. As Australia drifted north, the granite arm held fast to a corner of Antarctica, pulling a piece free and dragging it behind.

The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
It took me nine months to assemble the perfect human.
He is plopped screaming, slimy, squirming on my chest.
He is streaked with red. He is loud.
He causes destruction immediately upon arrival.
Perfect.

In Quarantine – by Megan Clement
WINNER , ISLAND NONFICTION PRIZE 2021
… The neon green BP sign across the road means the opposite of what it used to. It means I am stuck in this liminal space, with a guard at my door 24/7, squirrelled away to protect the health of Australians everywhere. This would be fine except for the fact that I’m here for 14 days and my father is dying and I don’t know if he has 14 days left …

This Moon – by Megan Coupland
It’s the tail end of 1873, November, and a clergyman is rugged up against a sluggish dusk. Along a Newfoundland coastline, Reverend Moses Harvey makes his way towards a fishing boat on the shore; he’s approaching the knot of fishermen who summoned him. The men, just in from the sea, are clustered around the carcass they’ve surfaced, a creature dredged inadvertently from the depths of Logy Bay, tangled in their herring nets. Harvey’s not there on church business. Instead, he’s made a name for himself locally as a collector of curiosities and the fishermen have offered him their haul: a giant squid, dead on arrival …

Ghost streets – by Alexandra Sangster
I have lived here long enough to know where the people who are not living anymore live.
Well not them exactly, but their ghosts.
All of the streets speak.
There is a build-up
of bones
(not the literal kind, not like in Paris with the catacombs or in Scotland with the pits of plague dead under your feet)
but bones none the less.

A thousand gifts – by Maki Morita
this story about food starts in a gym, but I’m talking free-to-air TV not protein bars — running on a treadmill to the white noise of Border Security could be the crème de la crème of suburban pastimes — did you know quarantine law makes good primetime drama? — we pant we glance we witness a family unravel souvenirs with which to adorn their kitchen — this is a tune to hum along to and I take another sip of water

Gifts from a harsh continent – by Tehnuka
I wake lying on my back, staring up at a bright Antarctic sky. Although I don’t understand how I got here, I’m not surprised at having been unconscious on the ice. A childhood spent reading tales of Shackleton and Scott has left me believing Antarctica is where scientists and explorers go to die, or at least lose their toes. Despite, or perhaps because of, this conviction, I leapt at the opportunity for fieldwork on a volcano on the edge of Antarctica, in what then seemed the wildest place on Earth. And over the next few weeks, whenever things go wrong – snowmobile accident, frostbitten nose, internet malfunction – we will say to one another, making light of it: ‘Well, what did you expect? It’s a harsh continent.’

The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
This graphic narrative was published in Island 169 to mark the conclusion of The Nanna, Island’s graphic narrative project. Curated by Joshua Santospirito, the project published comics from Australian creators in issues 166 through 169.

The Hairy Iceberg – by Kylie Moppert
Until a year ago, I lived in an apartment above a shop front in a leafy inner suburb. After decades of living in the outer suburbs, I’d flipped a coin and leased an abandoned restaurant with rooms upstairs. There were restaurants on either side, elm trees in the street’s central garden strip, and Victorian terraces boasting ironwork fences. I renovated downstairs into an artisan bakery and immersed myself in unrelenting hours of slow-ferment, wild-yeast sourdough …

Scarface 1–5 – by Kylie Mirmohamadi
A woman has a scar that will fade, with time.
1. She takes a selfie in the bathroom mirror. The scar down the right side of her face looks fainter, less raised, than in real life.
2. She sends it to some people. They say she looks good, beautiful, strong. They tell her they love her.
3. Her husband says that with a scar she is sexier.
4. His friend’s girlfriend, in Mexico, says there is a dried rattlesnake remedy for healing skin.
5. On a walk she listens to ‘Perfect Skin’, and David Bowie sings to her that everything will be all right, tonight …

The Conversation of Weaving – by RT Wenzel
I am not a self-taught weaver, but taught by the baskets themselves. A gifted basket using eel-trap techniques. Two thrifted, age-brittle flax baskets, spliced and braided. The extraordinary collection of moody, low-lit weavings at Okains Bay museum, chance encountered. My eyes and hands recognise the diagonals and crosses, the ribs and the spokes, the warp and weft of organic material, even before I learn a new technique. Someone in my ancestral line knew these shapes, these patterns; my fingers echo the hands of unseen teachers. But my teachers are primarily the plants themselves. Each plant has stories and preferences, and the conversation changes between seasons, storms, lunar phases …

Sharehouse Archaeology – by Ale Prunotto
At the house inspection, I squeezed past two people in the hall pushing fearfully on plasterboard that acted more like marshmallow than a wall. One whispered to the other: ‘this place is not fit for human habitation …’ True, it is maybe not ideal, what with the gaping hole in the hallway ceiling, and the mould spidering across the bathroom walls, and the broken ratty blinds, and the eternally leaking trapdoor in the kitchen, and that time the toilet got blocked and Linds got covered in filth trying to plunge it, and that time the carpet in the hallway became squelchy and we realised that water was trickling from the roof to the porch and through the 10 centimetre gap under the front door, and we called George, the owner, who in his cowboy style not only injected silicone into the crack in the roof but also drilled a hole in the floorboards so that any persevering water would filter directly into the billion-year-old foundations …

In the River – by Searlait O’Neill
St Mary drowned in the floods.
It can be strange seeing objects drown. The eye isn’t looking for movements, because there never were any to begin with. What is the eye looking for?
It was a white marble, her rock body. And it seemed to represent something.
The salt pillar?
Muteness?
All our lost souls watching on?
The cathedral was flooded, but they hosed it out.

Hawksbill – by Grace Heathcote
The turtle registers our presence with a flick of an eye, but does not pause. We are crouched so close we can see the salt-crust around her eyes, the dark-and-light patchwork of her face, the soft wrinkles on her neck. She watches us as we watch her. Where do we fit, I imagine her thinking: friend or foe?
Her strong back flippers scoop the sand to create a deep pit. Surprisingly dextrous, they stretch into the cavity and cup the sand carefully to lift it out …

Woonoongoora – by Caroline Gardam
The sun snuffs early and arrives late. Dawn is tardy, slow and defiant: a gentle light finally emerging, lightening – any birdsong chorus drowned by the rush of creek over rocks below, to the north. It’s a full three hours from first light to when winter rays deign to glitter the creek. Facing this little hut is a wall of green – an entire forest shuddering down from what we call a bluff because we think the name Fort is dumb for a proud outcrop. It’s part of the ridge along the scenic rim, of which I know nothing, but you gotta start somewhere …
Archive
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Arts Features
- Jun 12, 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- Apr 2, 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- Dec 11, 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- Jun 2, 2021 Fury - by Andrew Harper, on Lucienne Rickard’s ‘Extinction Studies’
- Jun 2, 2021 Julie Gough: Tense Past
- Jun 1, 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- Jun 1, 2021 Islands and Ships - by Joshua Santospirito
- Jun 1, 2021 The Intimacy of Daily Life: The News is the Weather - by Rosie Flanagan and Miriam McGarry
- Jun 1, 2021 Fragments of Place - by Andrew Harper
- Jun 1, 2021 Beware of Imposters (the secret life of flowers) - by Selena de Carvalho
- May 31, 2021 Welcome Territory - Selena de Carvalho responds to Tanya Lee’s ‘Landing’
- May 27, 2021 Sisters Akousmatica: Herstory of Radio
- May 25, 2021 Double Yolker - by Mish Meijers
- May 23, 2021 Stepping Back from The Edge: Re-imagining Queenstown - by Cameron Hindrum
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Fiction
- May 15, 2025 Good for nothing – by Winnie Dunn
- Mar 5, 2025 Myer is Our Store – by Gillian Hagenus
- Jan 10, 2025 Generation optimisation – by EL Weber
- Dec 4, 2024 Afterbirth – by Payton Hogan
- Nov 6, 2024 The miracle – by Nadia Mahjouri
- Oct 8, 2024 Chrysalis – by Lachlan Plain
- Sep 11, 2024 The mystery of the lost hours – by Sue Brennan
- Sep 4, 2024 Masters – by Andrei Seleznev
- Aug 7, 2024 Paan – by Josefina Huq
- Jul 18, 2024 A major theft – by Emma Rosetta
- Jul 17, 2024 Devotion – by RT Wenzel
- Jul 10, 2024 He is the candle – by Lucy Norton
- Jul 10, 2024 These are no clear directions – by Lars Rogers
- Jul 3, 2024 Bound – by Liz Evans
- Jun 26, 2024 Prelude to a flight – by Joel Keith
- May 30, 2024 Dear life – by Susan Francis
- May 27, 2024 Refuse – by Hei Gou
- May 15, 2024 bodytruth – by Orlando Silver
- May 15, 2024 Lux – by Linden Hyatt
- May 15, 2024 Gristle and bone – by Jade Doyle
- Apr 18, 2024 Kevin – by Sarah Langfield
- Apr 18, 2024 Start where you are – by Jenny Sinclair
- Apr 9, 2024 Light hazard – by Sophie Overett
- Mar 14, 2024 Magic – by Maria Takolander and David McCooey
- Mar 4, 2024 The Budgie - by Jing Cramb
- Nov 27, 2023 The Interpreter – by Mariam Tokhi
- Nov 13, 2023 This Time Next Week – by Richard Rebel
- Nov 13, 2023 The Cheesewring – by Campbell Andersen
- Oct 27, 2023 Rat – by Anjelica Rush
- Sep 14, 2023 Nursery – by Nicola Redhouse
- Sep 14, 2023 Home of the Pure Heart, House of the Dying – by Rafael SW
- Aug 21, 2023 Sandcastles – by Ruth Armstrong
- Aug 20, 2023 The Mowing – by Ivy Ireland
- Aug 16, 2023 In the Archives – by Keely Jobe
- Aug 11, 2023 A Thin, Brilliant Line – by Lal Perera
- Jul 6, 2023 The River Path – by Tadhg Muller
- Jun 6, 2023 Strokes of White – by Julian Fell
- May 23, 2023 The Blue Fox – by Michael Burrows
- May 23, 2023 How to Kill a Pea – by Lara Keys
- Apr 14, 2023 Dottie and Pin Go Somewhere – by Kate Kruimink
- Mar 29, 2023 The Planet Terrarium - by Philomena van Rijswijk
- Feb 2, 2023 Sloane on the Mountain – by Alexander Bennetts
- Feb 2, 2023 Infrared – by Ryan Delaney
- Feb 2, 2023 The Day the Wave Came – by Paul Mitchell
- Jan 17, 2023 Collateral Damage – by John Tully
- Jan 17, 2023 Philomela – by Orana Loren
- Dec 7, 2022 The Museum – by Gemma Parker
- Dec 7, 2022 The Moths – by Gillian Britton
- Dec 5, 2022 Finger-branches – by Eliza Henry-Jones
- Nov 10, 2022 The Grass Painter – by KA Rees
- Sep 23, 2022 Nithing – by Clayton O’Toole
- Aug 25, 2022 Animal Life of Penang – by Claire Aman
- Aug 25, 2022 Butter – by Daniel Ray
- Aug 15, 2022 Not Gone, Just Different – by Rae White
- Aug 15, 2022 Rigel and Betelgeuse – by A E Macleod
- Aug 1, 2022 Get Joy from GetJoy – by Alex Cothren
- Jun 20, 2022 No Tomorrow – by Catherine Deery
- Jun 20, 2022 The Great Aviary of Love – by Kathryn Goldie
- May 26, 2022 Moss – by Jane Rawson
- Apr 14, 2022 Bombera – by Josefina Huq
- Mar 17, 2022 One Man’s Trash – by Piri Eddy
- Mar 2, 2022 Geometry of Lament – by Alicia Sometimes
- Feb 10, 2022 Interiors – by Zac Picker
- Jan 21, 2022 Phantom Menace Hours – by Victoria Manifold
- Jan 21, 2022 Sea Legs – by Sophie Overett
- Nov 23, 2021 Celebrity – by Chris McTrustry
- Nov 5, 2021 Fisher Girls – by Barry Lee Thompson
- Oct 15, 2021 Cake Flat - by Marion May Campbell
- Oct 1, 2021 An Encounter - by Katerina Gibson
- Sep 16, 2021 Captain Boner - by Alex Cothren
- Sep 2, 2021 Into the Clear Blue - by Susan McCreery
- Aug 26, 2021 Surrogate Mother - by Helena Pantsis
- Aug 17, 2021 An August for My July Mother - by Karina Ko
- Aug 10, 2021 The Good Woman - by Anneliz Erese
- Jul 28, 2021 A Man Alone - by Mark O’Flynn
- Jul 13, 2021 Boxing Day - by Fiona Robertson
- Jul 2, 2021 Severe Weather Warning - by Miriam Webster
- Jun 24, 2021 Three Fragments - by Cameron Hindrum
- Jun 7, 2021 King of Sweets - by Atul Joshi
- Jun 6, 2021 Agency - by Tasnim Hossain
- Jun 2, 2021 Go Get Boy – by Alison Flett
- Jun 1, 2021 Tiefenzeit - by Tricky Walsh
- Jun 1, 2021 The Lever, the Pulley and the Screw - by Andrew Roff
- Jun 1, 2021 The Voices of the Magpies - by Laura McPhee-Browne
- Jun 1, 2021 The Tick Tock Killer - by Alex Cothren
- Jun 1, 2021 Birds - by Anne Casey-Hardy
- Jun 1, 2021 The Wolves - by Josephine Rowe
- Jun 1, 2021 Cod Opening - by Wayne Marshall
- May 27, 2021 Stingrays - by Christine Kearney
- May 25, 2021 Eve - by Laura Elvery
- May 23, 2021 The Teeth and the Curl: A Note to a Cousin - by Robbie Arnott
- May 23, 2021 Extension - by Anthony Lynch
- May 23, 2021 Okay is a Verb - by Erin Hortle
- May 23, 2021 Into the Flames, Down to Our Shoes, Vienna - by John Saul
- May 23, 2021 Just Maybe - by Dominic Amerena
- May 23, 2021 46 - by Ana Duffy
- May 23, 2021 Apple Suite - by Danielle Wood
- May 23, 2021 Foundations - by Michael Blake
- May 22, 2021 Blackbird - by Magdalena Lane
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Nonfiction
- Jun 2, 2025 a natural sort of being – by Miriam Jones
- Apr 3, 2025 Beasting – by Heather Taylor-Johnson
- Jan 28, 2025 ‘Called to beauty’ – an interview with Elizabeth Gilbert
- Jan 20, 2025 Grass, willow, skin – by Ben Walter
- Jan 10, 2025 Bunya: Axis limen – by Justin Russell
- Dec 11, 2024 The water’s edge – by Craig White
- Nov 22, 2024 Brackish tongue – by Roanna McClelland
- Nov 19, 2024 The only fish – by Ben Walter
- Oct 31, 2024 The ballet school – by Helena Gjone
- Sep 25, 2024 Great flying soar and in command – by Lily Chan
- Sep 19, 2024 Dhanggal Bawagal: Mussel Sisters – by Michelle Vlatkovic
- Aug 29, 2024 The libraries we must enter, the songs we will sing – by Jamil Badi
- Aug 22, 2024 Girl/Monster – by Simmone Howell
- Aug 14, 2024 Words inside words – by Ouyang Yu
- Jul 24, 2024 Snakes in the valleys, in their hair – by Ben Walter
- Jul 17, 2024 Wave and blue – by Beth Kearney
- Jun 26, 2024 Conversation IV: Permission to witness – by Libby King
- Jun 12, 2024 Rain Rain – by Indigo Bailey
- Jun 12, 2024 Clothing the whiteness – by Isabella Wang
- Jun 12, 2024 The other hand – by Carly Stone
- Jun 12, 2024 Collection of collections – by Meredith Jelbart
- Jun 12, 2024 We Were Here – by Sarah Firth
- May 30, 2024 Thrift – by Catherine Zhou
- May 27, 2024 Bog bodies: Iron Age dreamland – by Lucinda Lagos
- May 15, 2024 Its bowl of red blooms out of sheer love of me – by Xiaole Zhan
- Apr 18, 2024 Laptop death – by David Thomas Henry Wright
- Apr 18, 2024 The goose of granite islands – by Suyanti Winoto-Lewin
- Apr 2, 2024 The perfect human – by Niki Bañados
- Apr 1, 2024 In Quarantine – by Megan Clement
- Mar 31, 2024 This Moon – by Megan Coupland
- Mar 14, 2024 Ghost streets – by Alexandra Sangster
- Mar 4, 2024 A thousand gifts – by Maki Morita
- Feb 1, 2024 Gifts from a harsh continent – by Tehnuka
- Dec 11, 2023 The Last Ever Comic to be Published in a Literary Magazine…Ever!!
- Nov 27, 2023 The Hairy Iceberg – by Kylie Moppert
- Oct 27, 2023 Scarface 1–5 – by Kylie Mirmohamadi
- Oct 27, 2023 The Conversation of Weaving – by RT Wenzel
- Sep 14, 2023 Sharehouse Archaeology – by Ale Prunotto
- Sep 14, 2023 In the River – by Searlait O’Neill
- Aug 16, 2023 Hawksbill – by Grace Heathcote
- Aug 11, 2023 Woonoongoora – by Caroline Gardam
- Jun 22, 2023 Objects of Illness/Recovery – by Anna Jacobson and Katerina Bryant
- Jun 6, 2023 The Dark House – by Emma Yearwood
- May 23, 2023 Lines of Location – by Johanna Ellersdorfer
- May 23, 2023 How to Build a Brother – by Helena Pantsis
- Apr 28, 2023 Selfish Ghosts – by Heather Taylor-Johnson
- Apr 28, 2023 Sudden, Temporary Deaths – by Chris Fleming
- Apr 28, 2023 Wingsets and Snowdrifts: A Subantarctic Year – by Emily Mowat
- Apr 28, 2023 The Long Daylight – by Jo Gardiner
- Apr 28, 2023 Chaste – by Suri Matondkar
- Apr 14, 2023 Landfall – by Megan Coupland
- Feb 2, 2023 Lines of Curiosity – by Margaret Aitken
- Jan 17, 2023 Learning to Be Tame – by Carla Silbert
- Jan 17, 2023 Rubbish – by Liz Betts
- Dec 8, 2022 Pamirs – by Nathan Mifsud
- Dec 7, 2022 Compare and Contrast – by Gillian Bouras
- Dec 6, 2022 Who Owns the Greek Myths? – by Katerina Cosgrove
- Nov 22, 2022 I Go Down to the Shore – by RT Wenzel
- Nov 22, 2022 The Shimmer of Flying Fox Landscape – by Matthew Chrulew
- Nov 22, 2022 Animal Rescue – by Bastian Fox Phelan
- Nov 22, 2022 In the Rain Shadow – by Jessica Carter
- Nov 22, 2022 The Magpie and the Scarecrow – by Helena Pantsis
- Nov 22, 2022 The Right One to Rescue – by Sharon Kent
- Sep 23, 2022 Far Out, Cats – by M.T. O’Byrne
- Aug 1, 2022 Straight From the Horse’s Mouth: Windsor Chairmaking in Tasmania – by Dan Dwyer
- Jul 25, 2022 Living Poets – by Jessica Lim
- Jul 25, 2022 An Open Space – by Luke Johnson
- Jul 14, 2022 A Shadow From Country – by Naomi Parry
- Jul 14, 2022 The Sound of Light – by Verity Borthwick
- Jul 14, 2022 If You Join the Circle, You Must Dance – by Katerina Cosgrove
- Jul 14, 2022 Hospitality – by Nicole Melanson
- Jun 8, 2022 The Ocean Sounds Like a Motorway – by Melissa Fagan
- Jun 8, 2022 The Backyard Project: Notes from Stolen Land – by Lia Hills
- Jun 8, 2022 Schrödinger’s Butterflies – by Dave Witty
- Jun 8, 2022 Feel the Quiet – by Zohra Aly
- Jun 8, 2022 And a Moth Flew Out – by Helena Kadmos
- Jun 8, 2022 A New Garden – by Erica Nathan
- May 26, 2022 The Third Angel of Chernobyl – by Carmel Bird
- Apr 13, 2022 A Year Without Mirrors – by Sarah Klenbort
- Mar 17, 2022 The Turkeys – by Saraid Taylor
- Mar 2, 2022 Spectral Coordinates – by Brigid Magner
- Feb 10, 2022 Falling Asleep Under the Love Umbrella – by Clare Millar
- Dec 6, 2021 A Waving Forest – by Zowie Douglas-Kinghorn
- Dec 6, 2021 Changing Spots – by Sharon Kent
- Dec 6, 2021 A Questionable Survey of Suburban Eucalypts – by Uthpala Gunethilake
- Dec 6, 2021 The Rats Move In – by Karen A Johnson
- Dec 6, 2021 Fire There Is – by Searlait O’Neill
- Dec 6, 2021 Riverine – by Kavita Bedford
- Nov 24, 2021 How to Be a Better Mother – by Lisa Kenway
- Nov 8, 2021 The Funeral [Farewell Kenny-G] – by W<J>P Newnham
- Oct 28, 2021 6 Years, 6 Months and 24 Days Apart – by Saanjana Kapoor
- Oct 8, 2021 Good For It - by Lillian Telford
- Sep 21, 2021 Peace Body Pain Body - by Jarad Bruinstroop
- Sep 9, 2021 The Orchid - by Erica Wheadon
- Aug 26, 2021 Various Emilys/Gondals - by Josie/Jocelyn Deane
- Aug 17, 2021 Fluctuations in Landscape/Language/Lasagne - by Christine Howe
- Aug 10, 2021 Witchcraft, charming, &c. - by Eliza Henry-Jones
- Jul 29, 2021 Submerged - by Nova Weetman
- Jul 13, 2021 Pilgrimage to Frog Hollow - by Clare Murphy
- Jul 2, 2021 You Can’t Go Home Again - by Jenny Sinclair
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Poetry
- Jun 16, 2025 My fisherman – by Scott-Patrick Mitchell
- Jun 16, 2025 Rescue – by Toby Davidson
- Jun 2, 2025 with flowers – by Alexander Bennetts
- May 15, 2025 An Island of Dogs – by Ronald Araña Atilano
- Apr 3, 2025 Movable – by David Ishaya Osu
- Mar 20, 2025 The Burial Feathers – by Yasmin Smith
- Mar 20, 2025 Lateral ambling gait – by Emilie Collyer
- Mar 20, 2025 and – by Helen Jarvis
- Mar 11, 2025 Pedder Galaxias Pantoum – by Toby Fitch
- Feb 27, 2025 Night Movements – by Daniel Ray
- Feb 19, 2025 Chinese Funerals as Theatre – by Xin Lee
- Feb 5, 2025 Love Poem – by Luoyang Chen
- Dec 18, 2024 Washing my mother’s hair – by Helen Jarvis
- Nov 27, 2024 Friesland Farm under red clouds – by Cameron Lowe
- Nov 13, 2024 Dementia – by Anna Kerdijk Nicholson
- Oct 31, 2024 Visitor Ghazal – by Megan Cartwright
- Oct 14, 2024 1. – by Bobby K
- Aug 22, 2024 The Ascension on a MacBook Air – by Sam Morley
- Aug 14, 2024 The Edit / An Edit – by Michael Farrell
- Aug 7, 2024 Dysesthesia – by Shey Marque
- Jul 24, 2024 Dinner Call – by Anders Villani
- Jul 3, 2024 ‘Helen’ by Euripides – by Andrew Sutherland
- Jun 21, 2024 white nonsense – by Alice Allan
- Jun 19, 2024 Telegram – by Natalie Susak
- Jun 19, 2024 new year’s day – by Mitch Cave
- Jun 19, 2024 Advice and Warnings – by Jill Jones
- Apr 9, 2024 If Movement Were a Language: Triptych – by Svetlana Sterlin
- Mar 20, 2024 Posture – by Jo Ward
- Mar 20, 2024 23 vignettes on the rental crisis – by Anna Jacobson
- Mar 20, 2024 Stanzas – by Jo Gardiner
- Mar 20, 2024 Parturition Chairs I-V – by Isabella G Mead
- Mar 20, 2024 Grandmother’s Limbs – by Svetlana Sterlin
- Mar 20, 2024 Friendly fire – by Tricia Dearborn
- Feb 21, 2024 Day 210 – by Brigid Coleridge
- Feb 21, 2024 Shedload – by Chris Andrews
- Feb 21, 2024 Improbable Acts of Proximity – by Shey Marque
- Feb 24, 2023 Sestina After B Carlisle – by Stuart Barnes
- Feb 20, 2023 Antarctica – by Andrew Sutherland
- Feb 20, 2023 The Girls Become – by John Foulcher
- Mar 2, 2022 Jobs for Women: Annunciate – by A Frances Johnson
- Mar 2, 2022 Heating and Cooling in the Time of Isolation – by Jessica L Wilkinson
- Mar 2, 2022 Self-portrait as Frida Kahlo – by Katherine Brabon
- Mar 2, 2022 Exoskeletons – by John Kinsella
- Mar 2, 2022 The Memory of Water - by Amy Crutchfield
- Jun 7, 2021 In My Father’s House - by Suneeta Peres da Costa
- Jun 2, 2021 Another Kind of Winter - by Anne Kellas
- Jun 2, 2021 Water on Rock, Wind in Trees - by Pete Hay
- Jun 1, 2021 Voyager I - by Sarah Day
- Jun 1, 2021 Thirty Pieces - by A Frances Johnson
- Jun 1, 2021 Maria-Mercè in the Palm Grove - by Eileen Chong
- Jun 1, 2021 gadhalumarra - by Yaaran Ellis
- Jun 1, 2021 Pink Sun - by Toby Fitch
- Jun 1, 2021 Beach Front - by Ellen van Neerven
- May 31, 2021 Walking a Forest Trail One Summer Afternoon - by Judith Beveridge
- May 28, 2021 Sunlight / Dear Mum - by Graham Akhurst
- May 28, 2021 Hippophobia - by Chloe Wilson
- May 25, 2021 Tend - by Jo Langdon
- May 25, 2021 Distorted Depiction - by Cassandra Atherton
- May 23, 2021 Ash in Sydney - by Jake Goetz
- May 23, 2021 On the Day You Launch - by Damen O’Brien
- May 23, 2021 What the Glass Holds - by Jill Jones
- May 23, 2021 Ekphrasis - by Belinda Rule
- May 23, 2021 I Protest - by Ouyang Yu
- May 23, 2021 Pulled Apart by Seahorses - by Gavin Yates
- May 23, 2021 Sonnet 29 - by Stuart Barnes
- May 23, 2021 Waiting Room - by Felicity Plunkett
- May 23, 2021 Analogue - by Stephen Edgar