In lieu of a theme for Issue 25, the editorial team at Stonecoast Review sought the most thought-provoking work; celebrating and amplifying the best emerging artistry we could find.
We heard a broad collection of voices rising from our vibrant community of authors, collage & mosaic artists, disability advocates, editors, emergency physicians, gardeners, organizers, journalists, leadership coaches, librarians, massage therapists, MFA candidates, musicians, photographers, playwrights, poets, professors, teachers, theater directors, and of course, writers. Their words, not ours.
Through their uninhibited, collective expression, we find coherence in life’s fragility. Thank you to all our amazing contributors for your bravery in sharing your words with the world. We are proud to stand alongside you.
Ryan Schmidt
Editor-in-chief, Stonecoast Review
Latest Fiction
Silvie is as restless as the bubbles in her mother's water glass. As rare as the pine nuts her mother requests to quell cravings. As eager as the server to keep things moving after Silvie's father says, get her whatever she wants.
After Hannah wrote the speech, she memorized it, then performed it for her stuffed animals. By the fourth try, the words began feeling unfamiliar in her mouth, devoid of meaning, and that’s how she knew she was ready. If she treated it like a performance, she would get her point across, easy. And if she didn’t? She hadn’t thought that far yet.
Is it my turn? OK, hi, everybody. I don’t really know what to say. I’m fine, these days I walk a lot. But something weird happened yesterday evening. The phone rings, I answer, but there is silence at the other end. I waited and talked into the phone again, still nothing.
Latest poetry
my mother carried around
soft & heavy on the bottom
I would crinkle & shift
in her young, tan arms
if I was set down I’d lean in-
coherently to the side
(1991) I came upon a gray whale carcass along the shore, its body fouling the
littoral. Flies and flags of hide girdled the whale’s bones. Muscle and blubber
foraged.
Almost the end of an ER
night shift. My neck aches
from craning over a toddler’s
dog-mauled face.
I am reminded of something that does not exist:
ice and frostbitten waters, shipwrecks, a history
of cold. My brown fat cannot stand the cold.
The Mother’s Cupboard waitress slings breakfast burgers to linemen
yawning before their shifts. I’m touch-starved, picking at my home
fries, sipping coffee after night shift at the bakery.
latest creative non-fiction
Every Sunday afternoon, she would listen to the Metropolitan Opera live. Sprawled across the living room rug, she craved the vibrations of the songs in her teeth, the way they burrowed to the back of her brain. She dreamed of becoming an opera singer. She perfumed herself with arias and cadenzas. Hummed Sempre libera in the kitchen until she boarded it up. For the rest of her life, she ate like a bird.
Tonight, a tarot reader I follow on YouTube speaks of Deer Spirit, how this spirit is with me. I wonder if this spirit belongs to the 12-Point buck we hit on a paved road many towns ago, that night you picked me up from Gram’s apartment, because now I feel you everywhere.
Cousin, you with the tapered waist, long legs, flat stomach, the envy of my youth. All the genes that had done me dirty came out to look good on you. Until you opened your mouth and then it sounded just as if you had marshmallows jammed up your nose. Your voice, always, even when you were screaming sounding like a snuffed fire. We were thirteen.
latest popular fiction
“It smells like bunt disease in here.”
The woman showing Jess around the seed vault stopped and turned. She raised her eyebrows in a way that reminded Jess of her daughter. Jess imagined that the woman wore an ugly smile under her balaclava. That under her office furniture-colored parka, her chest swelled with drama and deep breath.
“That’s not possible. We don’t grow anything here. It’s just seeds.” Then, “You probably smell the drain line. It’s iced up again.”
latest dramatic works
AT RISE: Thunder, then the sound of heavy rain. A WAITRESS and a SINGER are serenading RAINA, thirties, with “Happy Birthday.” Slowly, we notice the music is different from what we’re used to. They finish with…
AT RISE: KAI sits at a bench between two rugby fields in athletic clothing, assembling their gear and putting on their boots. Offstage right, a men’s team competes in their first half of the match. Offstage left, a women’s team competes, also in their first half. The low rumble of people and gameplay is heard throughout the scene.

