Domestic Pleasure by Julia Nusbaum
‘How, she wonders, did she end up here? Different from her mother, but somehow exactly the same.’
Remnants by Rae A. Shell
‘She was not allowed to give up. She was programmed for success. She could not process a future without success.’
Oatman by Inés G. Labarta
‘She considered telling Kayleigh about her obsession with Olive Oatman. How the tattoo made her feral, and how much Ellen wanted that for herself too.’
Carving Out My Girlhood by Beatriz Salvador
‘I craved the abandoned houses, the stillness of the woods.’
Coming of Age by Megha Nayar
‘My mother always said that mingling too much with boys was dangerous. It could cause an accident and tarnish a girl’s life for good.’
Mange by A.C.
‘In those spaces between their whispering mouths, I led a love life like nobody I’d ever known.’
Bathtub Kinship by Lukas Kofoed Reimann
‘In the water, my body isn't ambivalent, ambiguous, complicated—it's easy to read in its queerness.’
Between the Sky and Earth by Swetha Amit
‘For the first time in the two months since he moved there and since Sarla's demise, he found himself awakened by a new sense of purpose.’
Blind Spot by Maggie Timlin
‘Martina leaned down into her bag and pulled out a pair of vivid blue surgical gloves. She pulled them over her sinewy hands, knuckles bulging against the latex.’
Refund, Discount or Gesture of Goodwill by Jasmine Kahlia
‘Ever since the dog, Brodie, got hit by that Hermes van, Katy had been like this.’
The Monsoons Are Almost Here by Shrutidhora P Mohor
‘The showers will come in installments, unloading themselves from black clouds on one village at a time. They will embrace me and my mother river too.’
A Perfectly Worldly Poison by Maddie Bowen-Smyth
‘Evie’s disturbed by the glint of the blue bottle from where the bathroom door hangs ajar. She folds the newspaper and swallows, feeling its accusation lodge in her throat.’
The Other Side of Styx Street by Rebecca Kilroy
‘She wades in and floats on her back and waves of forgetting wash her clean. It’s a good dream.’
Lips by Arielle Burgdorf
‘She played the part of the gamine, maybe too much so. Imitating a man caused trouble.’
Strawberry Jam by Clare Reddaway
‘You said the perfect thing that made me feel safe and loved and comfortable and forever. And I can’t remember what it was.’
The Ghost by Constance Mello
‘It was like embodiment had simply flaked off her, like dry skin at the end of a long winter.’
Reading Into It by Jordan Nishkian
‘This was the part of new romance that Layla loved—the part when she felt like a dog chasing a car, when all she wanted was a short, intense burst of closeness.’
An Able-Bodied Façade by Scarlett Murray
‘Our society is so hell-bent on understanding the psychology behind the individual that we can’t even look our bully in the eye and get the revenge that we’ve been dreaming up for years and years.’