HOOT ONLINE, ISSUE 88, SEPTEMBER 2020 – MICRO FICTION, POETRY, MEMOIR, BOOK REVIEWS
American Bio #2
by Abby Minor; artwork by author
Nice now to be Norway pines blowing with great silken sounds outside my window. One of my windows, for I have many, for I “have” a lot more than most. “Wear a sapphire or emerald stones” one medieval medical guide says for contraceptive advice. Of course we can’t all afford great jewels.
by Shawn Berman
I remember being 13, watching ScarJo belt out lyrics from The Pretenders, that beautiful pink wig of hers swaying back-n-forth under the dancing neon lights of a run-down karaoke bar.
Years later, I wonder how that wig is doing. If there’s a way for me to take it out to dinner, Italian—something fancy in Manhattan, preferably on the Upper East Side.
I know it’s silly but I can’t help but dream of a life where me and that wig runaway together to some stupid suburb, sipping frozen margs on a little wraparound porch, screaming at kids to get off our lawn, as we watch the sun set, stealing cheek kisses from one another. Life would be so simple. So perfect. And we would live happily ever after. Ahh.
LITTLE IS REQUIRED OF ME
by Bill Ayers
No one expected me to mow
so late in the year, in November,
but now that I have, after sleeping in,
then rising to find you in the back yard, raking,
I can’t help but feel proud.
Plus, I am happy I got to see the yellow mums
that aren’t visible from the windows.
Not only that, but where we put grass seed down
a month ago and gave up on and forgot about
there are so many pale green threads.
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Abby Minor lives in the ridges and valleys of central Pennsylvania, where she works on poems, essays, and projects for reproductive justice. Her most recent chapbook is *Real Words for Inside* (Gap Riot Press, 2018).
Shawn Berman plays a mean air guitar and runs The Daily Drunk. Some of his recent work can be found in Hobart, Rejection Letters, and (mac) ro (mic). He tweets rad GIFs @sbb_writer
Emory Russo is a trans man, cat lover, and closet idealist currently living in Tampa, Florida, though he grew up in Maryland. He can be found on Twitter @emoryarusso.
Bill Ayres’ book of poems, What Passes for Wisdom, comes out in October from Finishing Line Press.