This pandemic year has, reportedly, given us a more exciting night life in the form of more frequent and vivid dreaming. Are we really dreaming more? Or are altered days and rhythms leading us to better recollect and ponder our night lives? The content has surely reflected our times. Reunions with family and friends figure prominently in dreams. There are the mask dreams—scenes of people unmasked at restaurants, parties, other gatherings. People coming too close, unmasked, menace clear. Our prose piece this issue, “And Wicked Dreams Abuse the Curtained Sleep,” by Rob McKean, takes us on a personal and creative journey into the how and why of dream production
In our poetry section this issue, many of the poems ponder how we communicate across generational, and personal divides and constraints. Indian poet Ridhi Bhutani gives voice to an unheard generation and offers the power of silence in her poem. Doris Ferleger’s poems give insight into the difficulties of mother-son relationships and the challenges of communicating and living with a child with Tourette’s Syndrome. Paula Reed Nancarrow’s “Invocation” and Thomas Locicero’s “The Worst Day to Have an Autopsy” offer imagery about what we take away from the dead, while affirming the living.
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Be well, stay safe, help each other.
Leonard Lang, Senior Editor and Adrienne Pilon, Associate Editor
Contents
Prose
Robert McKean
• And Wicked Dreams Abuse the Curtained Sleep
Poetry
Doris Ferleger
• Praying at the Temple of Forgiveness
• Uncursing Tourettes
Ridhi Bhutani
• Oceans in Our Mirrors
Thomas Locicero
• The Worst Day to Have An Autopsy
Mark Belair
• The Neighbors Downstairs
Paula Reed Nancarrow
• Invocation
• Foreclosing on the Garden
Rachel Tramonte
• Call This Research
Tim Blackburn
• Letter from North Carolina
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