Harpur Palate: a Literary Journal

Volume 23, Number 2 (2025)
Letter from the Editor
The process of putting this issue together has become a pet project for my anxiety, but also feels deeply connected to the collective worry we feel in the wake of events that seem so very much outside of our control.
I’ve been fascinated with the idea of perception for a very long time. I am interested in the distorted ways that we perceive self, and the affected ways we understand others. This idea is mirrored throughout the issue. Whether it be Anna Smetanenko’s “After the Book” which investigates how an identity is altered and shaped by the works with which it partakes, or Hallie Fogarty’s “Mirror” in which facial features are and are not constrained by the rigid boundaries delineating where identity ends and face begins.
Ali Beheler’s poem “like Orpheus, led you :: like Orpheus, turned on you” reads “I dreamed so long of relaunching,/ To see your face. The first time./ body a life line, traced again—how hard” It, to me, speaks of an inner turmoil. And so in this time when we are simultaneously individual and part of a global collective, we struggle with the act of being, or being done to; of acting or being acted upon. The lines of our life being drawn in infrastructure, capitalist oligarchy, and productive benefit all locking us into a solipsistic prison. And in isolation, the walls feel insurmountable.
So when L Mari Harris tells us that we will in fact “love harder when we’re invested in the story,” and the story is about the love developed as a teen enacts mothering with her assigned egg, and though that egg is bound for the compost pile; we feel truth in their desire to have a love so tangible so sweet that it “can be lick[ed]… from… fingers, a love [we] can taste and swallow.” We understand the desire to consume the thing we so care about if only to preserve a feeling of physical connection for mere moments longer.
There is a numbness in this process of being that resonates, an otherness to the bodies we inhabit. So, when Susan L. Leary says “I give my mouth a bath & brush its teeth. I clothe my mouth in a simple orange dress, lay it flat for ironing, then hold my mouth accountable.” We understand the desire to have control over the parts of us that seem to function beyond our control.
And so we seek out stories. Stories to make us feel again. To feel connected. To feel understood. To feel heard. To feel not numb. And when Kiana Govoni tells us that “What… upsets [her is that she doesn’t want her] mother in an eternal ground. [that she’d] prefer her sitting in comfort, chest-free under a decade’s warm nightgown, bare feet dry with experience and life, ankles crossed on the couch while she watches people get surgeries or their pimples popped on TLC.” I understand this as a thing I also want, and I feel in community.
When I trace the lines in the piece “Triad Red Contrast: Postpartum,” by Juanita Holmes, I remember pacing squares and figure eights in dark midnight hallways. Experiencing life as blurred images hovering under the comforting regularity of practiced motion, and I feel in community.
So, more than anything else, as you artists and contributors bring your experiences to us, and ask us to see you. As my editors pour through your words, as we compile, we edit, we arrange, and we check for functionality; all in the hopes that our collected archive of pieces speaks to you, our readers, in the ways that it has spoken to us. Speaking to our painful, and broken, but also to our beautiful, and joyful, and vibrant. And in this way we lift where we stand. And though we may stand in very bleak circumstances, we do not stand in these places alone.
Sincerely,
Alycia Calvert (She/Hers)
EIC Harpur Palate 2024-2025
MFA 2022
PhD Bing U 2026
Fiction
With Nothing to Bring Us Together
Soramimi Hanarejima
We Love Harder When We're Invested in the Story
L Mari Harris
When Not Knowing Is More Important than Wanting to Know
Elizabeth Rosen
AN UNKNOWN ROAD
Karen Regen Tuero
Oh, Alan, Beta Tester
Francis Walsh
How to Turn Your Sister-in-Law Into a Frog According To the Manager of Joann Fabric and Crafts, Who Runs a Coven on the Side
Michele Zimmerman
Poetry
I couldn't find the words to describe you
Joselyn Busato
Banqueting
Rosa Crepax
Attraversamento
Lindsay D'Andrea
isolation sonnet #4
Clare Flanagan
isolation sonnet #2
Clare Flanagan
RUBIN'S VASE
Ella Harrigan
I TELL YOU I AM MORE UNHAPPY THAN I AM
Ella Harrigan
Girl(s) With the Nervous System of a Prey Animal
Sierra Hixon
On Kindness
Sierra Hixon
Tableau with Three Daughters
Stephanie Kirby
Anatomical Mouth
Susan L. Leary
If they chop open my body
Allie Stokes
Echidna in the Cave of Longing
John Blair
My Mother-in-Law's Recipe for Chicken Curry
Isra Cheema
Creative Nonfiction
Men Talking
Brian Benson
How to Fix a Broken
Melinda J. Combs
Grave Stepping
Kiana Govani
Art and Photography
Euforia abstracta en la ciudad invisible
Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky
After the Book
Anna Smetanenko
Triad Red Contrast: Postpartum
Juanita Holmes
In Reverence of the Sacred
Rosemary Kimble
Watercolor: #5218
Ellen June Wright
Growing toward the light
Angelica Esquivel
Euforia abstracta en la ciudad invisible
Vivian Calderon Bogoslavsky
Moments_of_the_Particle
Shae Meyer
Full Issue
Harpur Palate Volume 23, Issue 2
Harpur Palate .

Editors
- Editor in Chief
- Alycia Calvert
- Managing Editor
- Shannon Hearn
- Fiction Co-Editor
- Sam Corradetti
- Fiction Co-Editor
- Jesse Gilleland
- Poetry Co-Editor
- Ella Flores
- Poetry Co-Editor
- Jordan Franklin
- CNF Co-Editor
- Lena Gemmer
- CNF Co-Editor
- Suzanne Richardson
- Social Media Manager
- Lisa Compo
- … and we appreciate the love and care put into this issue by all our editors, but will especially miss the efforts of our incredible fiction editors, Sam Corradetti and Jesse Gilleland as they focus on finishing exams and dissertations. We continue cheering them on.
Cover Image
“MissFire” by Sui Jenneris
Sui Jenneris is an artist, mother, and counselor. Her art is marked by striking visuals and joyful compositions, reflects her unique upbringing and creative journey. Raised in Kingston, NY, by a tattoo artist parent, she was immersed in punk rock culture and imaginative thinking from an early age. This background influenced her style and outlook, bringing boldness and originality to her work. She recently celebrated her first solo exhibition, a milestone in her flourishing career.
From the artist: These collages and illustrative pieces are a reflection on nostalgia from childhood and also refer to how they can be a reflection in our emotions.