2014 Pushcart Nominees

pushcart_cyclopsAs the Day of the Turkey approacheth, we figure it’s a good time to baste these glowing pages with thankfulness. We’re grateful for our audience; there’s no point in beaming stories out into space if no one’s receiving the signal, so readers: thank you. We’re also grateful for every story and poem that hits our inbox, whether we publish it or not. Our continued existence depends on submissions, so writers: thank you.

Finally, we want to extend a laurel and hearty handshake to each of this year’s Pushcart Prize Nominees:

Andrew Hemmert, “Dinosaur World” (poem)

Aida Ibisevic, “Little Monster” (fiction)

Anna Lea Jancewicz, “Unexpecting” (fiction)

Ally Malinenko, “Vital: A Love Story” (fiction)

Trevor Tingle, “Xenophobe” (poem)

Yvonne Yu, “The First Last Mermaid Porn Queen” (fiction)

Together, those six pieces sum up everything we love at Jersey Devil Press.

One last thing: if you read something you like—in this magazine or anywhere—leave a comment, if you can. The internet is essentially just one big bathroom wall, so take a moment to let someone know you were there.

November Issue

Tick-tock, Doc.

Tick-tock, Doc.

Guys. GUYS. Our sixtieth issue. If you were to read one issue per second, starting now, it would be a full minute before you finished reading all of them.

I’ll pause to let that sink in.

Issue 60 has little things: a splinter, subatomic particles, spaces between teeth. It also has biggish things: a fish that’s not a fish, a stuffy guy in fancy dress, the consequences of time-travel, a pachyderm.

All these things, and more. Absorb it online or cop the PDF.

It’s Aliiiiiiiive!

May your Halloween be haunted and rock-free.

May your Halloween be haunted and rock-free.

It’s time to put on your best Scotchtoberfest kilt and tune up those bagpipes; Issue 59 is here!

Gio Clairval kicks things off with a tale of a dental assistant who sends some of her patients home with a little something extra. Then Don Katnik cools things down with a wintry supernatural tale. Mark J. Mitchell reflects on the grim state of the job market in a melancholy yet whimsical sonnet, and Gary Moshimer sets spines a-tingling with a story of a babysitter with questionable taste in dairy products and a baby who is anything but helpless. Next up is Yvonne Yu, who takes a surprisingly candid look at sexy mermaid fantasies. Finally, Gregory J. Wolos ends on an upbeat note with a story about a crematorium explosion survivor and his furry neighbor. And over everything the lovely, spooky cover art from Yuri Shwedoff sets an autumnal mood.

Read it by a crackling bonfire, if you can. And don’t forget the s’mores. Check it out online or read the PDF.