Amber Edmondson: Here, Together, We Breathe

Well so we had a polar vortex. Well so it’s ice and all. Some believe that time repeats. Well so then, we remember the future too.

Amber Edmundson’s “Here, Together, We Breathe” is like that. Obtain all its printed glory here, or download a PDF (or both!).

Amber Edmundson - Here, Together, We Breathe[PNG]

Read on.

Hearts in the dark

Dear Reader,

Here’s wishing you well for the winter solstice and the new year, and any holidays you might like to add in there as well. (Up to and including Burns Night, o’course.) Or to put it another old way, Yuletide Greetings!

It’s been a year of two great issues (2.3 and 3.1) containing phenomenal work from stylistically varied artists and writers. Just the way we like it. Storm Cellar gets better and better, and we couldn’t do it without you all, writers and readers alike.

We’ve received so many well-wishes and lovely submissions this year, it’s hard to believe. Thanks. We’re so grateful we’re not even going to plead with you to donate money in any amount via PayPal to stormcellar.editor@gmail.com.

Nor will we ask you to buy or download a copy of the magazine just because it’s ah-mazing. That would be crass of us.

It’s going to be a job of work to do everyone proud for a whole ‘nother year, but we’re up for it! We’ll work like svartálfar. So: thanks. And: here’s to more Storm Cellar!

Read On,

Sidney, Ben, Lindy, Robin, & Michael

Josette Kubaszyk: In the Never-Never

Disparate elements are juggled to spectacular effect in Josette Kubaszyk’s memoir “In the Never-Never” [sample version]. We’re not even going to try to describe it, except to say it displays that ineffable kaleidoscopicity of memories of things fragile.

 I am not the girl from the corner down the block where my mother found my name. Something pretty plucked from the sparkling, quartzy gravel of the street. Josette. Elle a sauvé le nom.… She liked the sound. The shape. The image of the corner girl.…  I am not Jacquelynn, my sister who, along with me, was born during my mother’s French phase. Bookended between the first three and final two in her gallery of children. In a still life we stand seven, end to end, like too many apostrophes cupped within an end quote. Above us the spirit of an infant brother lingers. An illusory question left unanswered, an unexplained stoppage of breath. His ghost an invisible umlaut….  We are going away. Vacation in winter. The wheels of the blue station wagon whir, spinning us in a centrifuge, whirling us south to Never-Never Land. We dream and wake, dream and wake. Dream. The silvery hubs spin forward, then backward, rotating dizzily inside themselves. Spinning and wheeling into our dreams again, again, again, again, again.  In Australia, the remote country of the Northern Territory is called The Never-Never, and locals think of the beautiful harsh land with nostalgia… European emigrants say it is the place you never, never want to go. The white hot heat of the red desert will dry you up like a baked turtle, and only your shell will remain.  A jerk yanks me through the open hatch. Grabbing wrists, my father whips us from the car and into the dewy roadside grass. Orange flames snap at a wheel in the early light.…[Continue reading]

Get the 100pp. issue proper at our Etsy store as a PDF or in print (or both!).

Read on.

2014 Pushcart Nominees

What it is, kids?!?! Have you ever been this excited I think not.

For the 2014 Pushcart best of the small presses &c. &c. no particular order:

These choices were really hard y’all!!!! So condolences to the nominees and their families.

Read on,
Thee Storme Cellare Crewe

Mayah El-Dehaibi: Earth: Six Ways to Cope with the End of the Mercury Retrograde

This week, it ended. Now comes young & restless Mayah El-Dehaibi with some flashy solutions. Get the real deal here as a PDF or in oh-so-tangible print (or both).

She put the potato peeler back in the kitchen drawer. It wasn’t fair. He was speeding up; soon her chances would be as good as gone. She began to send smoke signals his way. Today I smashed a hurricane into my face. He glanced at her in passing and turned another broad corner. Why don’t you stop and help me pick this splinter out of my arm? His jaw was steel, frozen forward. Her moon withered. She chopped off her hair, scrubbed her skin raw.…[continue reading]