6.15 / 50 Word Stories

Parentheses by MG Martin

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he is parking a car under a tree he doesn’t know is about to fall. the tree is a house but not a tree house and in it live all of the regrets that shape the shape of his past, one that sounds like a whimpering dog [...]

50 Word Stories: From the Special Issue Editor by JA Tyler

For the last few months I read submissions for this special Stamp Stories edition of [PANK], and with each new submission, the realization came louder: writing stories in 50 words or less is not about condensing beginning, middle, and end into an amuse-bouche. It is not about taking a larger [...]

I made notes of the noises by Ben Spivey

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I made notes of the noises in the music that sounded like words. Angelic tongues I could only draw as shapes. The home dialed noise-scribbling ants and turning clocks. My ears bled fountains out windows-splattering from the floor to my knees-into rivers and sand formed compact banks, [...]

Vitamin E=MC2 by Ryan Ridge

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& the explosions expedited the eradication of mountaintop pornography, somehow suctioning batches of bad cocaine through the rebels’ nostrils. Still, they were  ”winning.” You behaved glowingly, despite it all, in our room above the gas mask factory: smoking electronic cigarettes like a battery champion. Humming like [...]

I was the girl by Ken Sparling

The certainty that I am alone ensures nothing. And then the girl is gone, and I’m alone with myself again. I thought I was supposed to be with God, and wasn’t God supposed to be most apparent on this night of greatest darkness? But I don’t see him here.

Zero Or Less by Gregory Sherl

The sound above me: nothing. The sound below me: less than nothing. It is October in Florida, which means it feels like Virginia in July. My sister breathes quietly in winter. My sister is dead and it is not winter. I can’t remember the last time it snowed without her.

#99 by Ben Mirov

When the moment arrives
the moment is weary.
and then it’s gone
just like us. Just like love
which is like following a dead person
into the forest
when you should be tending
to your cabbages.
Putting up the wire fence
that will save them
from the rabbits.

Where He Lives by Robert Kloss

Those who scale the black mountain where He lives return charred and faceless, their fine outfits tattered funeral clothes. We bury them in our yards. The soil hums. The bushes glow and throb. And from the light comes choir sounds, mangled, and rusted harps, until the light speaks no more.

Every Tomorrow by David Tomaloff

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The soil, it dreams of one day the wood. The wood, it dreams of one day a tree. When the tree the heart, &the heart a sun, she that whispers in prayers the telephone sings &she as if all of this would every tomorrow &she [...]

Concerning the Sun Myth by Shane Jones

1.

The universe is a breathing being. The earth is tiny, but contains crystals the sun is drawn to. The universe allows the sun to become pulled by what is buried in the earth’s crust. The sun wants a specific colored crystal.

2.

From the [...]

When I Was by xTx

When I was little

When I was a little girl, summer brown, puffed nipples bracing to bloom breasts, an “uncle” paid me money to itch around his injuries.

The face he made was the same face he made when…

I was little

When I was a little girl

Sentence by Peter Markus

Because he could not remember his name, he remained nameless, and so he wandered the streets searching for someone, a stranger even, who might recognize him and give him back his name.

Where We Are There’s Silence by Parker Tettleton

I’m no one in a conversation. Nothing says Cover is over with an average grade. You’re in my yard when it’s me. Neighbors don’t wrap presents, poets wear out the stairs, you’ve never left to come back.

Compressed Novel by Matthew Mahaney

Prologue

Trees. Seasons. Birds. Symbolism.

Chapter

Childhood home.

Chapter

Clouded breath and stinging hands.

Chapter

Memories of the snow-sifted forest, small plastic sled erasing the scattered tracks of local rabbits.

Chapter

Noctilucent Sheen by Laura Esckelson

Our first howl signifies the loss of our only known home. We learn breath, the boundaries of flesh against flesh, unlearn the rumbling rushes of our mothers’ bodies. Our genome is the afterglow of fireflies in the brush, a rock paused on a slope, a child pushing to get out. [...]

How to Age by Lindsay Stern

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Materials:
Fugue, jar.

Procedure:
1. Trap fugue in jar.
2. Dismember the chords.
3. Extract the melody.
4. Bury the notes.