Tag Archives: The Citron Review
-
Q & A with Jules Archer by JR Walsh
1December 10, 2020 by The Citron Review
Little FeastsJules Archer(Thirty West, 2020) Jules Archer’s Little Feasts is one of my favorite books this year and in a …
Continue reading -
Notes on the Creative Nonfiction Selections
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
When I moved across the street from a park eight years ago I was surprised by how loud it was. …
Continue reading -
Sandstone and Slate
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
by Jennifer Stewart Miller My ancestor John Mulford, of Eastham, MA, died on April 20, 1730, in his 59th …
Continue reading -
On Triumph
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
by Colin Bailes I keep wondering if I am the shore the waves crash roughly across, or the waves, …
Continue reading -
Not a Formal Diagnosis
2September 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
by Jules Archer Christophe, you took the psychopath test, scored high. I told you I still loved you anyway, …
Continue reading -
Notes on the Fiction Selections
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
My children have started to speak in hopeful sentences like “when coronavirus goes away…” and “when it’s safe to travel…” …
Continue reading -
Notes on the Poetry Selections
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
As I write this note for the fall issue, pileated woodpeckers are destroying my house. Beautiful creatures they are, and …
Continue reading -
Notes on the Micros
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
Sometimes we blow the bubble. It has to be big enough to hold us in. To keep the unwanted realities …
Continue reading -
Car Sickness
1September 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
by Travis Dahlke Google Image search the interior of your parent’s past cars. Do it right now and you’ll …
Continue reading -
A Few Notes on Marble
Leave a commentSeptember 23, 2020 by The Citron Review
by Jennifer Stewart Miller After improvements in transportation made it easier to cart the stone from distant quarries, marble …
Continue reading






