Before the Collapse Portland rain has a personality. Not dramatic like Florida storms or biblical like Midwest hail; it is patient, insinuating, a fine insistence
Author: imabdullahdera@gmail.com
I’m standing here because of them — that’s why I brought this Thanksgiving meal. My grandfather, Walter Greene, is 78. Earlier this year, he went
I’m homeless, but not because I want to be—every place that offers me a bed tells me, “You can’t bring your dog.” My name is
Scared Lily ran straight to me that day — and everything changed. My name is Walter, and I’ve walked the same delivery route for years.
They didn’t know. They had no idea that the man standing quietly by the pillar, the one they were sneering at, held the pen that
The world didn’t end with a bang; it ended with the screech of tearing metal and the smell of burning rubber on wet asphalt. I
The sound of a gavel striking wood is usually the sound of order, of finality. But on the day my husband, Tmaine, sued me for
An Invoice for a Heart I called my parents to tell them my husband had died. “We’re busy,” my mother said, “it’s your sister’s birthday.”
On our silver wedding anniversary, my husband gave me divorce papers instead of a gift. “Twenty-five years is long enough,” he announced, his voice amplified
The suburban sky outside Chicago was bleeding into a bruised purple, the kind of autumn twilight that smells of burning leaves and coming frost. I