Ephemeral States In A Mall Parking Lot In a state of youth, no one thinks they’ll one day grow to be old.
“In a state of youth, no one thinks they’ll one day grow to be old.”—Ephemeral States In A Mall Parking Lot by Moso Sematlane.
“In a state of youth, no one thinks they’ll one day grow to be old.”—Ephemeral States In A Mall Parking Lot by Moso Sematlane.
“We have been quarantined from the sins of the world long before the pandemic hit.”—Those That Remain by Roland Watson-Grant.
“When he sets eyes on you, you feel as though gangs of street cats are engaged in a deadly fight over your body.”—Fatima’s Dog, a short story by Abdel-Ghani Karamalla.
“Everything that ever gets brought in this house belongs to the tiny tyrant.”—A Cure For Loneliness, a short story by Tessa Harris.
“You cannot judge a woman until you’ve walked a mile in her shoes—or sat by her stirruped legs while she winces through an abortion.”—Now That I Have Seen You, a personal essay by Sylvia K. Ilahuka.
“Hospital staff said she could have gone home long ago, they simply never knew where to send her.”—Ouma Sofie’s Gold, a personal essay by Natasha Uys.
“I hear the swish. Before my eyes drink in the light, I hear the swish. An orchestra of brooms at play. Sky burns through the pane.”—The Street Below, an auralgraph from Maputo by Zerene Haddad.
“I’ll be nothing, a nothingness creeping on the body of existence.”—Escaping Places, a poem by Abdel Wahab Yousif.
“For Heaven there is a price to be paid.”—Church Of The Informally Settled, a poem by Ndaundika Shefeni.