Size / / /

Sleep in threadbare night, gray and steady
as a float of fog. God or what I call it beating
heavy in my gut. Dreaming as gray recursion,
as god weeping fog. The Angel Who is All Eyes
and the Angel Who is All Wings still know
how to speak to each other. It’s easy: they sing.

They sing! They sing!

Can’t you hear them singing? Their voices
sound just like the moon and her syrupy light.
Fog is made of dead souls hanging in the air.
It is. Do not speak to me of water vapor. Stop
telling me how to see the world. Queen of
queens, of long dark hair and blasphemy.
Of forcing the sword back into the stone.
Let’s fight the stone. Hack and slash until
it bleeds dense lunar silence. The Angel Who
is All Hair, combing herself. The soul which
grows and seethes. Flowers unblooming,
petals folding back together. They hide their
faces, roll down their stems and disappear
back into the dirt. November, the Angel
Who is All Dark Blue Evening. November
the forest floor becoming and the pale ghosts
wandering in their bedclothes and the yellow
birch trees weeping leaves as the Angel Who
is All Tears falls to earth from a storm cloud:
we call her November because that is her name.



Jaye Nasir is a writer from Portland, Oregon whose work blurs, or outright ignores, the line between the real and the unreal. Her poems, essays, and fiction have appeared in many small publications, both local and international, as well as in art galleries and live readings. Find more from her at https://jayenasir.weebly.com/.
Current Issue
18 May 2026

Maybe we overestimated ourselves, I thought, watching the ferries hum against the wine-dark sea. Even if we floated above it, we were still bound to the ocean, engulfed in all its weight and inescapable history. To believe otherwise was a kind of hubris. But we had believed otherwise anyway, and so each of us had become something smaller, less human, suspended in a brittle net of want and memory. And then she appeared. At the wrong time, in the wrong place. My Scylla, my monstress, my deathless siren of anglerfish light. Longing, in that empty, unmoving ocean, for things that had not existed for centuries. How could anyone blame her? The only alternative was to grieve. 
My grandmother slit my father’s bones and let them fly with yeast.
the nightingale was caught in a net / and brought to a lab for further study.
Friday: The Midnight Shift by Cheon Seon-Ran, translated by Gene Png 
Issue 11 May 2026
Issue 4 May 2026
Issue 20 Apr 2026
By: Athar Fikry
Podcast read by: Emmie Christie
Issue 13 Apr 2026
Issue 6 Apr 2026
Issue 30 Mar 2026
Issue 23 Mar 2026
Issue 16 Mar 2026
Issue 9 Mar 2026
By: Lio Abendan
Podcast read by: Jenna Hanchey
Strange Horizons
2 Mar 2026
Strange Horizons invites non-fiction submissions for our March 30 special issue on “Fungi in SFF.”
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