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
Waiting For Gilbert
(DOG wags his tail, runs to the window and jumps on the windowsill.)
DOG
I think it’s him! He’s back! I knew he would come back.
A Marriage is a Story We Tell and Keep Telling
(We are in darkness. A beat. Then:)
FI: Did you notice the little red fox this morning?
What is Held Within a Scene (A Short Story in Play Form)
Stage. A hospital bed is stage right. An unconscious teenaged girl lies in the bed. She has a breathing tube. Other tubes crisscross her chest and are attached to a monitor, and intravenous bags are affixed to a pole at the head of the bed.