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Refugees in a Banana Republic
Literary

Refugees in a Banana Republic

Early dawn, when fog hung…

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A Day with Breanne Mc Ivor
Interview

A Day with Breanne Mc Ivor

Meet Breanne Mc Ivor. She…

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Nocturnal Conductions
Humor

Nocturnal Conductions

The first time it happened,…

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The Lady of the Water
Fiction

The Lady of the Water

I’d thought Central America would…

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Never Will I Leave Home
Literary

Never Will I Leave Home

You have not seen our…

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Two Blind Men
Flash Fiction

Two Blind Men

They knew well I was…

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An Interview with Ernest Brawley
Interview

An Interview with Ernest Brawley

Ernest Brawley, a native Californian,…

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Whenever she entered the classroom, Jameela felt like she had horns sprouting out of her head everyone stared at her strangely with wide eyes. She would sit quietly in the far corner of the classroom always feeling a light-year distance between herself and her teacher who never tried to speak with her, nor shake hands with her, during attendance. She thought her hands must be covered with millions of viruses and bacteria, which made the teacher hesitate to shake hands. The teacher never called her name “Jameela Maseeh” during attendance like she did to other students. Instead at the end, she would glance over the edge of her glasses at the shadow sitting in the far corner of the class and mark “P” with her pen in the register. The dust in Jameela’s black, curly hair showed she had walked two kilometres on foot to reach school. When she looked…