winter 2024

Issue No. 20

Dear Readers,

This issue marks the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Stonecoast Review, now firmly established among student-led literary magazines. Issue #20 of the Review continues our legacy of discovering and encouraging new and diverse voices.

Discovery and self-discovery have also emerged as prominent themes in this issue’s contributions, although characters’ epiphanies were not always met with enthusiasm. Sydney Lea’s “Giudizio Dolce” depicts the chastened narrator when his narrow, perhaps unjustified, view of a classmate from the past is revealed. While monitoring the online dating activity of “The Man in the Window Seat,” Robert Granader’s narrator is startled into wakefulness about the state of his own marriage.

Self-discovery is celebrated in Carla Sarett’s “Self-Portrait as Aging Tortoise,” a condition she never envisioned, but which has its advantages. The young character in Sarah Jackson’s “Coherence” struggles with their gender identity but is surprised and comforted by their uncle’s model of fluidity for physical substances and time. Danielle Frimer’s play, “a marriage is a story we keep telling,” engages a same-sex couple in a conversational journey, one that initially causes them to recoil against traditional wedding rituals, but concludes with discovering marriage’s special meaning for them.

And the narrator in Nuala O’Connor’s “Smoke in a Jar” finally understands her neurodivergent mind after decades of mystifying herself and others with its workings.

Thank you for reading the Stonecoast Review; enjoy the discoveries you make inside.

Sincerely,

Mary White

Editor-in-Chief

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The Man in the Window Seat

He pinches and pulls at the pictures on his phone, deciphering them like code. Every now and then he gets distracted and focuses on a background: a pair of boots, a fancy car. But mostly he studies the face, as if he’s preparing to write a dissertation comparing it to the Mona Lisa.

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Softly They Fall

The distant hum of an approaching vehicle cuts through the quiet of Westmore, Vermont. It vibrates off the frozen midnight air, air that is charged and heavy with soon-to-fall snow, air that holds more promise than the mess of metal and wire in front of me.

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Oyster City Under Water

Morning dawns gunwale gray and wet in Oyster City. The hurricane, first a roar in the night, then a howl, now a whisper of sea spray over the coast, barrels farther inland. Curtains of rain hang in the silence between gusts. The city stirs, ready to probe its wounds.

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The Onion

The mayonnaise has not been made.

As the onion contemplates how long it will be until someone notices that the mayonnaise has not been made, it sees Chef Doyle trying not to cry.

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Silent Night

I know what a church pew feels like; to sit on, to touch, to be watched by. I know that even the most comfortable of pews can feel cold. Just because it’s been a while, just because the church has done renovations and now these seats are cushioned, doesn’t mean I don’t know; it doesn’t mean I don’t remember.

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Like A Song

We were shingling in the drizzle
of another century—I guess
we needed the money—and Mel
called out. He was sliding

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Bosc

When sunlight falls on the pear
it becomes the meal of a long dead woman
with heavy sleeves and small dog. Smoke
from her chimney billows across the roof,

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Plague Diary — Week XI

I cook fresh artichoke—a head boiled bald,
butter melted in the day’s bragging heat.
The garlic bathes, my teeth glean flesh from each
earry lobe of bract, skin spit back to bin.

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Resonance

1. a nuthatch brings his wife to the potted bleeding hearts my mother gave me. it hangs on the front porch, vibrant red blooms beside the glass door.

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Defining the Third Element & Philoselene

Lith i um [‘liTHēəm] n.

1. Chemistry: soft metal that burns moon-white, lightest of the alkali, travels by river, swims in healing springs; reacts with our own carbon dioxide in Oxygen Masks, bends into plane, train, bike, and battery;

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Sept/ember

Morning of the twentieth, there is a universe on my wall. Just kidding it is only a burning square of light.

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