Forget-me-not
False memory, flowers, Alzheimer’s, a farmer named Franz, and visions before death–you won’t wake up from this story until it’s done. Presenting Spittoon Monthly’s first featured writer of 2019, Nina Dillenz.
False memory, flowers, Alzheimer’s, a farmer named Franz, and visions before death–you won’t wake up from this story until it’s done. Presenting Spittoon Monthly’s first featured writer of 2019, Nina Dillenz.
“Poetry is my way to humanise everything inanimate in the city,” says Camilla BD. In three poems, Spittoon Monthly’s December poet casts her animating eye on Edinburgh and Beijing.
Words and subject test each other in these three minimalist poems by Tang Jui Piow. But how do you translate that? Ana’s foreword zooms in.
Poet Kassy Lee reflects on Beijing, Michigan, #MeToo, pain, empathy, dislocation and how poetry brings it all together in this interview by Jennifer Fossenbell.
The first in a series of interviews with the talent behind Spittoon’s comic collection CUE. Behold–contributing writer (CUE’s managing editor) Michael Marshall and artist (CUE’s art editor) Brendan McCumstie!
She noticed a mysterious thread sprouting from a mole. This is what happened when she pulled it. Short fiction by Chen Si’an 陈思安 with a short essay from the translator.
Short documentary film covering one inspiring month in the Spittoon community.