Issue 166
Summer & Fall 2024
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EDITOR’S NOTE
Welcome to Issue 166 of TriQuarterly, curated with care by our fantastic team of readers and genre editors. The writers and multi-disciplinary artists found in this issue tackle a vast range of scopes, themes, moods, energies, forms, and approaches to language. It’s always a special challenge to come up with patterns and words that unite them all, but I think that’s an ultimately good thing.
This issue is expansive; it inhales and exhales. Strangeness lurks in unexpected places, taking the shape of a baby gator or a red jar or a proselytizing billboard.
Thank you to the TriQuarterly genre editors — Patrick Bernhard, Jennifer Companik, Emily Mirengoff, Laura Joyce-Hubbard, Starr Davis, Daniel Fliegel, and Sarah Minor — and to my assistant managing editor Kira Tucker for all the work you’ve put into curating this issue, and thank you to our readers. A lot of hands touch every issue of TriQuarterly, yielding a kaleidoscope of stories.
As always, my recommendation is to choose your own adventure when it comes to the order in which you read these pieces. Jump between genres. See what the kaleidoscope reveals.
– Kayla Kumari Upadhyaya
Image from we pilot the blood by Quenton Baker
349 Things I Don’t Need to Worry About Right Now: The Ollie Impossible
The Ollie Impossible. The Fukushima Azuma Baseball Stadium.
THE GREAT ADVENTURE
The woman hailing a taxi in the rain
who is almost crushed by another taxi
Double Surgeon’s Knot
When I tie one nearly invisible fishing line
to another nearly invisible fishing line
We Were All Born Half-Dead
We were all born half-dead in 1932, said Roque Dalton, half-alive.
What About the Here and Now?
“When you die, you will meet God,”
reads the billboard
foregrounding the stretch of industrial factories
off the state highway
on my commute home each night.
Why a Kansan is Burning His Own Field
A shorn grass edge talks down but you can’t talk down
a blazing pasture. Now, gasoline crackles rainbows over wheat stubble.