Beijing Lights #18: Without a Good heart, We Lose Our Purpose
“I’m satisfied financially. I can afford a drink and some cigarettes every day. That’s good enough. Remember I used to go hungry.”
“I’m satisfied financially. I can afford a drink and some cigarettes every day. That’s good enough. Remember I used to go hungry.”
Is there anything that has no risk at all? I doubt it.
In this chapter of Monologue a returning local writes a love letter to the city he grew up in.
Presenting the loud, tumbling, and heavily felt poetry of Max Yu, a rising poet and playwright from the San Francisco Bay Area living in Shanghai.
Monologue is a collection of graphic non-fiction stories centered in Chengdu. The author of this chapter, a local from Chengdu, . . .
Spittoon is proud to introduce Monologue, a series of graphic non-fiction narratives created by Jacob Wanuch. We begin with a double installment, one story of finding and one of losing a home.
Novelist Damyanti Biswas talks crime fiction, secrets, short stories, and why she’s donated the author proceeds from her debut novel to two charities.
“I don’t have much to complain about—I married a good woman, I have an adorable son. I think my life’s been a worthy journey.”