the compassion anthology
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    • Poetry, 2019 >
      • Robbie Gamble
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      • Seres Jaime Magana
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      • Review of the movie GIFT
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      • Olive Paige
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      • Krisztina Asztalos
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    • Winter 2018 Art >
      • Dawid Planeta
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      • Herman Melville
    • Winter 2018 Essays >
      • Nikki Hodgson
      • Ciara Hall
      • Sara Roizen
      • Review of Claudine Nash's The Wild Essential
    • Winter 2018 Poetry >
      • Parker Anthony
      • Crystal Condakes Karlberg
      • Julia Lisella
      • Cynthia Atkins
      • Claudine Nash
    • Essays Summer 2017 >
      • Interview with Gail Entrekin
      • Patricia Reis
      • John Nelson
      • Mary Baures
      • Monette Bebow-Reinhard
      • M.J. Iuppa
    • Fiction Summer 2017 >
      • Jean Ryan
      • Daniel Hudon
      • Ray Keifetz
      • Anne Elliott
      • C.S. Malerich
      • Sascha Morrell
    • Art Summer 2017 >
      • Sara Roizen
      • Jill Slaymaker
      • John Mark Jennings
      • Janel Houton
      • Brandon Gorski
      • Tara White
      • Nancy Dudley
      • Elisabetta Lucchi
    • Poetry Summer 2017 >
      • Megan Merchant
      • Joey Gould
      • Claudine Nash
      • M.R. Smith
      • Kim Aubrey
      • Vivian Wagner
    • Winter 2017 Poetry >
      • Dan King
      • Kathleen Byron
      • Sam Bresnahan
      • Olivia McCormack
      • Danny Romanovitz
      • Kyle Quinn
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      • Elliott Grinnell
      • Olivia McCormack
      • Brendan Brown
      • Lauren Waisnor
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      • Kathleen Byron
      • Eddie Marshall
      • Sofia Colvin
      • Ishita Pandey
      • Mohsin Tunio
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      • Jyotsna Sreenivasan
    • Summer 2016 Art The Women Artists and Writers Exhibit
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      • Jennifer Markell
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      • Bahareh Amidi
    • Winter 2016 Fiction >
      • Blue Vinyl, Green Vinyl
      • The Cresting Water
    • Winter 2016 Art >
      • San Giovanni D'Asso Landscape Paintings
      • It's All About the River
      • Jellyfish Sculptural Drawings
    • Winter 2016 Poetry >
      • Poems from Songs in the Storm
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      • The Gleaners
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      • Named
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      • The Cloak
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      • Burn Myself Completely for Him and Souls
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      • Poem With a Question From Neruda and INDICTMENT
      • The Humans
      • Afghan Boy and other poems
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      • Transference and other poems
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      • The Ineffable Aspects of Forgiveness
      • He Was Better Than I’ll Ever Be
      • A Voice in the Desert
    • Winter 2015 Fiction >
      • White Heron
      • Freeing a Little of the Madness
    • Winter 2015 Art >
      • Cascade of Care and Life
      • Sentience
      • A Paternal Instant
      • Aurora, Paloma, and the Melangolo Tree
      • Seated Pose
      • Antigone's Map
      • Ladder
    • Winter 2015 Poetry >
      • Dissolution of the Soviet Union
      • Nicknames
      • Stopped at a Light,
      • Why mate for life? Red crown crane
      • The Prisoner
      • Stigmata
      • "Oh don't," she said. "It's cold."
      • Convene
    • Winter 2015 Essays >
      • The Forgiveness Project
      • A Stranger on a Subway
      • A Journey to Compassion
      • The Question of Compassion
      • Reflections on a Childhood Deforested
      • Click, Click, Click
Single Dwelling Blues
by Laton Carter
 
One cricket was noticeably louder than the others.
 
“Eddie!” cried its housemate. “Bring it down a notch!”
 
The cricket named Eddie continued with his song.
 
“For Pete’s sake, Eddie — you win already! Every female and her ovipositor can hear you. You’ve got the loudest forewings, we get it! Now, please …”
 
Eddie’s song rose into a boiling crescendo.
 
“Eddie … Eddie! Did you hear me? This is a team effort!”
 
Eddie broke off, mid-chirp, and turned to the claimant.
 
“Over there, on the other side of the hill,” Eddie gestured. The housemate moved his compound eyes and looked. Over there looked like nothing. A sea of darkness.
 
“… a man moved to be alone with his broken heart. And yet, despite this conviction, each night he walks outside and to the end of his driveway. He stands there, silent, and waits for a voice.”
 
 
Laton Carter’s first collection of poems, Leaving (University of Chicago Press), was selected by Mark Doty for the Oregon Book Award. His work appears or is forthcoming in Bear Review, Iron Horse Literary Review, Jet Fuel Review, phoebe, The Brooklyn Review, The Citron Review, The Journal of Compressed Creative Arts, and Shift: A Journal of Literary Oddities. “Single Dwelling Blues” first appeared in KYSO Flash.
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