Issue 139

Winter & Spring 2011

  • Welcome to the second issue of TriQuarterly Online. In the months since we launched, we've attracted an enthusiastic audience from around the world, and can boast visitors from over a hundred countries on six continents. In this and every issue you'll find outstanding new fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry, plus book reviews, interviews, commentary, and a lively blog. The electronic format also allows us to present work from TriQuarterly's extensive print archives. We look forward to receiving your comments and responses at triquarterlyonline@northwestern.edu.


    Managing Editor: Dana Norris
    Faculty Advisor: Susan Harris
    Technical Advisor: Matt Wood
    Copy Editor: Ruth Goring
    Graduate Fellow: Ari Bookman

    Book Review Editor: Charles Berret
    Fiction Editors:Danielle Burhop, Tien (Mimi) Nguyen, Ankur Thakkar, Stephanie Tran
    Nonfiction Editors:Charles Berret, Sarah Hollenbeck, Dana Norris
    Poetry Editors: Aaron DeLee, Lana Rakhman

    Staff: Emily Ayshford, Alex Bergstrom, Allison Bletnitsky, Alana Buckbee, Jen Companik, Katherine Defliese, Schuyler Dickson, Ann Gadzikowski, Cathy Gao, Barbara Ghoshal, Dane Hamann, Noelle Havens, Tedd Hawks, Beth Herbert, Sarah Jenkins, Sarah Kalsbeek, Jen Lawrence, Kevin McFarland, Erin McNulty, Sambath Meas, Ashley Mohney, Hana Park, C. Russell Price, Vanessa Bates Ramirez, Paula Root, Misty Shelley, Virginia Smith, Leah Struass, Megan Sullivan, Matt Tzuker, Elizabeth Winkowski, Karen Zemanick

Poetry E. Louise Beach Poetry E. Louise Beach

Come, let me love you

When you doze into late afternoon,

propped and pillowed like an exhausted child,

baleful billows from open windows;

when you no longer walk with me by the river,

by sinews of ink and willows

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Poetry E. Louise Beach Poetry E. Louise Beach

Ophelia’s Flowers

After the opera Hamlet by Ambroise Thomas

Something’s very wrong

when a girl begins to sing—

loudly, lowly—

hauntingly dispersing posies

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Poetry E. Louise Beach Poetry E. Louise Beach

Homage to Messiaen

Click, click, click.

My husband picked them off

with his camera

as they were flying

across the sky to reach

sundown’s reddened roosts:

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