Size / / /

Content warning:


Tiny woman born of dirt.
Where most bodies go to rest,
hers was startled to life.

Split leaves woven tightly.
A severed braid burned with sage
and prayer to begin again.

Dress yellow as the sun
that scorched the cursed harvest.
Head shrouded with a hood

making her not the playmate
of some small, ribboned-haired girl,
but a breed of witch who strolls barren fields.

I think that’s why I like her. Eyes wide
in black certainty. Glare stiff and long
as a roadside stalk. What do they see coming?

I never played with dolls. I saw their life
and feared acting their god. At night,
I stare back and render her song.

You belong to no one
but the earth. Wholly to the earth
you belong.



Meagan Chandler holds a bachelor’s degree in creative writing from Baldwin Wallace University. She currently attends the poetry MFA program at Bowling Green University. Her works have been published or are forthcoming in Everyday Fiction, Inscape, Allium, A Journal of Poetry & Prose, and The Ekphrastic Review.
Current Issue
21 Oct 2024

As children grow into adulthood, it is often hard to know who is the elder until you are told. With Akpan and Udo, anyone could tell at first sight, on first hearing, who was Akpan, the first son in every way, and who was Udo, the one who came after.
Glare stiff and long / As a roadside stalk.
ghost grandma turned to me like real grandma did last time we were here
By: KT Bryski
Podcast read by: Devin Martin
  In this episode of the Strange Horizons Fiction podcast, Michael Ireland presents Folk Hero Motifs in Tales Told by the Dead by KT Bryski, read by Devin Martin. Subscribe to the Strange Horizons podcast: Spotify
Friday: Wheel of the Infinite by Martha Wells 
Issue 14 Oct 2024
Issue 7 Oct 2024
By: Christopher Blake
Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 30 Sep 2024
Issue 23 Sep 2024
By: LeeAnn Perry
Art by: nino
Issue 16 Sep 2024
Issue 9 Sep 2024
Issue 2 Sep 2024
Issue 26 Aug 2024
Issue 19 Aug 2024
Issue 12 Aug 2024
Load More