For over 20 years, Epiphany has published literature that guides readers toward unexpected revelation. Learn more about us and the writers we publish.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
The Hill of Lost Things
Obviously, she says, I can’t come to the hill anymore. Don’t make that face! I’m not welcome anymore.
“The Kingdom Comes Like a Joke” & “Manifesto”
“the kingdom comes like a joke / told by a child, littered with /
what do you get and what happens now / and how many how many how many / like a game / of lost and found”
Brief and Continuous Encounters with Brief Encounters: Lenney and Kitchen’s Collection of Contemporary Nonfiction
“Why did you put your eye on other things? Why did it all go on without you?”
After the Election
“What he didn’t understand was that the more heavenly our experience, the starker its contrast with my mind’s occupations, the wider the chasm would yawn between us, the more alienated I’d be. It was like the story of Moses, in which the water of the Egyptians was turned into blood. A curse had crippled me. Shown blue ocean, I saw crimson gore.”
Interview with Olga Zilberbourg
I am very interested in writing about those moments when people judge each other, exploring how people’s judgments of others reflect on their own character and understanding.
What Is and What Will Ever Be
What is a ghost? Is it an apparition that appears at night to frighten us? Is it a spirit at unrest, refusing to pass on to the next life until it settles a score with our world?
The Essence of Another: On the Convention of Eliding Names in Fiction
The literary device of eliding proper names of course predates Clarice Lispector (“Interrupted Story” was originally published in 1942).
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