Saturday, July 18, 2026

Some learn and grow

 kw: story reviews, fiction, poems, short stories, collections

I'm nearing the end of 2026 Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small Presses, 50th Anniversary Edition, edited by Bill Henderson and other editors, having read another 22 pieces. Here and there a story shows a protagonist who learns something and grows up a little. Far too many authors show no evidence that they know what learning and growing even are. First, the list of the pieces that I rated as at least so-so, with my tiny comments:

  • "Transition Lenses" by Jessica Petrow-Cohen (poem). grief recovery; a semi-poem
  • "Werner Herzog's Ecstasy" by Maura Stanton (poem). evocative, mysterious. [a mix of iambic and trochaic pentameter]
  • "Typical Girls" by Amy Lee Lillard. AI takes over [neuralink plus?]
  • "Freefall" by Marie Goyette. surviving foster care
  • "Late Spring Epiphany After the Georgia O'Keeffe Exhibit" by Melissa McKinstry. expressive impressionism
  • "From Hedge to Hedge" by Wendy Willis. democracy of species
  • "A Black Mother's Child Considers His Lost Dream of Immortality" by Iain Haley Pollock. reality framed in classical imagery
  • "Whistling Past the Graveyard" by Ted Kooser. cancer memoir [see below]
  • "Nashville, 1999" by John Okrent. kindness in adversity
  • "Cairn" by Clint Bentley. loser gets a little less lost
  • "Plate Spinner" by Francine Witte. new hobby
  • "Don't Bleed on the Artwork: Notes from the Afterlife" by Wendy Brenner. unexpected joy [see below]
First, about "Whistling Past the Graveyard": I'm a cancer survivor, thankful for every day bought from the grave by God's grace in the hands of a master surgeon. Ted Kooser had it even worse than I did, and came through it.

"Don't Bleed on the Artwork" goes a few directions, but the main thrust is growth. I wrote "unexpected joy" because the unexpected job in a picture framing shop, and what the author learned and gained from the owner, led to unexpected growth and maturity.

In a memoir I've written on and off for more than a decade, a large section is titled "The twists and turns of life."

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