Serving House: A Journal of Literary Arts
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Contents: Issue 1: Spring 2010


::1::

Essays and CNF

Molly Gloss Desperado
Chauncey Mabe Can’t get your masterpiece published?
Blame Tony Blair
iPad’s real message: Resistance is futile
Vampires everywhere, oh my!
What does it mean?
Lennox Raphael Sex, Haiti & Pure Writing

::1::

Featured Author

Thomas E. Kennedy In the Company of Angels
[Excerpt + Reviews]

::1::

Flash Fiction

Clare MacQueen Tasting the New
Leslie What Dog Eat Dog

::1::

Interviews

Michael Lee Writing Through the Night: Stanley Kunitz
(An Interview with Michael Lee in Greenwich Village, 2005)

::1::

Poetry

Renée Ashley Look
Three Pieces: Ambiguous with Respect to Their Realization (Upon Hearing the Music of Three Young Experimental Composers)
Kurt Brown Two Blondes with Hammers
A Moment
Flower Conroy At the Tip of a Continent
Target Practice
Philip Dacey New York Postcard Sonnet #85
Don’t Tell Sister Mary Rose
Steve Davenport Last Night My Bed a Boat of Whiskey Going Down
Hartford, Illinois
Stephen Dunn One Source
Kathleen Graber Letter from Cornwall
No Lightsome Thing
H. L. Hix Calendologium
Tony Hoagland Walking in a Field I Find a Flower Like My Life
As on Earth So in Heaven
Jamie Iredell Playing Hands
Tumor, the
Gerry LaFemina Most Days
Paul Lisicky [Modernism:] Speedboat
[Modernism:] Teardown
[Modernism:] A Little Murder
Jack Marshall In the Only World that Matters
Hapless Ass Pulped Anonymous
Rick Mulkey Betrayal
Midlothian
Suzanne Parker Complications
The Rug Merchants
Lars Rasmussen King’s Claim
We Are an Egg

::1::

Reviews

Duff Brenna The Intimate Lives of the Founding Fathers
by Thomas Fleming
A New Reading of Rilke’s “Elegies”
by John Mood

::1::

Short Stories

Walter Cummins Nowhere
Thomas E. Kennedy In the Company of Angels
[An excerpt from the novel]
Lance Olsen Calendar of Regrets
[An excerpt from the novel]
Susan Tekulve The Stranger Room
Gordon Weaver Hamlet’s Advice to the Players
“...we have been born here to witness and celebrate. We wonder at our purpose for living. Our purpose
is to perceive the fantastic. Why have a universe if there is no audience?” — Ray Bradbury