Curbside Splendor Issue 2: Fall 2011

Curbside Splendor Issue 2

Issue 2 of our semi-annual collection of short stories, poetry, and photography celebrating urbanism, out November 2011.  Order a print version direct from us here:  store.  Order an electronic version at Amazon.com.  

Issue 2 features work by Christine Sneed, James Tadd Adcox, Debonair Oates-Primus, Dan Melling, Paul Luikart, E. Michael Desilets, Lavinia Ludlow, Michael San Filippo, Kerry Lanigan, Richard Schnap, Farah Ghuznavi, Simon Pattullo, JB Mulligan, Kathleen Rooney, John Grey, Elisa Gabbert, Ben Spies, Muyassar Kurdi, Mather Schneider, KG Newman, and Tom Molanphy.

Add to your Goodreads:  Curbside Splendor Semi-Annual Journal

Here are some reading videos from the book:

 

 

This collection features previously unpublished work, along with a few pieces previously published on our website.

ISSN 2159-9475;  ISBN  978-0-9834228-4-6

5" x 8", perfect-bound paperback, 150 pages long.

Designed by Karolina Faber.

Edited by Leah Tallon and Lauryn Allison Lewis.

Photography by Garett Holden, Karolina Faber, and more.

Cover based on photograph by Michael San Filippo.

"Everything in this issue begs to have the reader understand what it means to share stories (tragedies or successes) with people that are close to us. They also show how strangers can influence our lives. That's what being an urbanite is all about, lives intersecting other lives. The casualness of the issue gleams what all of us are looking for: meaning in the obvious, the routine, and the fascination in the behavior of people. Curbside Splendor focuses on appreciating the substance of what it means to be urban." - Another Chicago Magazine (ACM). Read full review: ACM Digs Curbside

"May I be blunt? I love Curbside Splendor. I have almost despaired of university literary journals – I can feel the boredom of the great plains and the drudgery of academic work through every line. Where did the art of engagement go? Curbside is refreshingly free of political correctness and the strictures academic hot house. It's even run by people with day jobs in the real world -- imagine that! 'Curb' stories, poems, and short shorts are punchy, direct, often hyperbolic – reflecting the mind-set and communication style of city life." - Christina Gombar, acclaimed author and editor.