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Wrath-Bearing Tree
Wrath-Bearing Tree
  • Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
  • Poetry
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Issue 082: November 2023, Nonfiction

New Review by Michael Gruber: “The Myth of the Clean Air War”

November 6, 2023 by Michael Gruber

A review of Kimberly K. Dougherty’s Airpower in Literature: Interrogating the Clean War, 1915-2015 One of war’s most pernicious myths is that new technology will not only hasten its outcome but les...

Issue 081: October 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s “Strike Through the Mask!”: Memory and Memoir in Afghanistan

October 1, 2023 by Peter Molin

The opening of this month’s column repeats much of a Time Now: The Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in Art, Film, and Literature post I wrote in 2018. The rest updates and expands upon that post by ref...

Issue 081: October 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Sofiia Tiapkina: “To Forget or Not Maybe,” “Grasping the Sky,” and “Airless Embrace”

October 1, 2023 by Sofiia Tiapkina

  to forget or not maybe to forget or not maybe to fight for memory or not i’m here i’m she lying on my back underneath me blue cherries of bruises ten backs all pierced by bullets all r...

Issue 081: October 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Steve Gerson: “Our Prayers”

October 1, 2023 by Steve Gerson

Our Prayers where are the shields/we need/to stop the blastof bullets Glockand AKassaults?that overwhelm the bluein our veins?that enter our brains ourschools the bodiesof children with unicornback...

Issue 081: October 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Michael Gruber: Review of J. Malcolm Garcia’s “Most Dangerous, Most Unmerciful: Stories from Afghanistan”

October 1, 2023 by Michael Gruber

Humanity in Afghanistan For the average American G.I. who served in Afghanistan, the country was of a different world. Most understood Afghans had relatively little in common with us, its would-be ...

Fiction, Issue 081: October 2023

New Fiction from Kirsten Eve Beachy: “Soft Target”

October 1, 2023 by Kirsten Beachy

For Sallie. By Picture Day in November, Sophie had perfected the downward stab and counting to twenty. She clenched her soft fingers around her rainbow pony pencil, raised her fist high, and then s...

Issue 081: October 2023, Nonfiction

New Fiction from Chris Daly: “The Rothko Report”

October 1, 2023 by Chris Daly

    “My father’s work takes you to the edge of the abyss and invites you to look.”   -Son of Rothko   Dateline South Florida, October, 1962: It was Monday 2:00pm EST when Sister Linu...

Issue 080: September 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s “Strike Through the Mask!”: Interment at Arlington

September 4, 2023 by Peter Molin

The vet read that the hero’s burial ceremony in Arlington Cemetery was taking place the following Tuesday. As it happened, the vet was going to be in Arlington, the county in Virginia, that day and...

Issue 080: September 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Luis Rosa Valentin: “Desperate Need of Help”

September 4, 2023 by Luis Rosa Valentin

Desperate Need of Help

...

Issue 080: September 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Jennifer Smith: “So This is My Career?”

September 4, 2023 by Jennifer Smith

New Poem by Jennifer Smith: “So This is My Career”

...

Fiction, Issue 080: September 2023

New Fiction from Kate Sullivan: “All Sales Final”

September 4, 2023 by Kate Sullivan

GoodSouthernBoy™ is born to a RegularAmericanFamily! in Tennessee. You won’t learn where exactly, and if you do, you won’t remember. It’s not important. GoodSouthernBoy™ stands over six feet tall, ...

Issue 080: September 2023, Nonfiction

New Fiction by Joe Millsap: Dreamland

September 4, 2023 by Joe Millsap

Muhamet reaches for a plastic water bottle resting on the metal filing cabinet that serves as a nightstand. He drinks the last of it, tosses the empty bottle to the floor. It’s early, no sunl...

Issue 080: September 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from F. Ahmeti: Bunker Mentality

September 4, 2023 by F. Ahmeti

“The home of the Albanian belongs to God and the guest.” Kanun Durres reminds me of the Jersey Shore. The mix of family fun and adult nightlife, and the dirt, is not unlike the town featured on the...

Adrian Bonenberger, Issue 080: September 2023, Nonfiction

New Review by Adrian Bonenberger: John Milas’ “The Militia House”

September 4, 2023 by Adrian Bonenberger

In the Mind of Madness There is a nightmare I used to have with some regularity even before my time in the military, in which a house from my childhood concealed some horrible and sentient threat b...

Issue 079: August 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s “Strike Through the Mask!”: The Afterlife of Words and Deeds

August 7, 2023 by Peter Molin

A recent Los Angeles Times review of A Line in the Sand, the latest novel by Kevin Powers, the author of seminal Global War on Terror novel The Yellow Birds, proposes that GWOT fiction written by v...

Issue 079: August 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Jim Kraus: “Amphibious”

August 7, 2023 by Jim Kraus

    AMPHIBIOUS In Hokusai’s “Kanagawa Wave,” the boatmen look like a school of masquerading fish about to disappear into the vast trough between waves, the scene a masque for the knowing ...

Adrian Bonenberger, Issue 079: August 2023, Nonfiction

New Review from Adrian Bonenberger: Jaroslav Hasek’s “The Man Without a Transit Pass and Other Tales”

August 7, 2023 by Adrian Bonenberger

There are few things I like better than sitting down with a copy of classic Central or Eastern European literature from the 19th century onwards, especially its short fiction. The best authors from...

Issue 079: August 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Andrew Davis: Korta Za: Go Home

August 7, 2023 by Andrew Davis

Andrew Elliot Davis was born July 1, 1990 in Worcester, MA; his family moved to Milford, NH, where he graduated high school in 2008. Although Andrew had a lot of different interests as a young man,...

Fiction, Issue 079: August 2023

New Fiction by Pavle Radonic: Murder, War and the Dead

August 7, 2023 by Pavle Radonic

An old unsolved murder mystery in a foreign sea-port. Ship Captain the victim, done nobody any harm. Who killed Captain S. Palori and why? Why was Palori’s mission kept quiet from the populac...

Fiction, Issue 079: August 2023

New Fiction from Andrew Snover: Dana and the Pretzelman

August 7, 2023 by Andrew Snover

The Pretzelman died yesterday. He was shot on his corner half a block from his home, and if he has family they’ll pile stuffed animals, and one of his boys will spray-paint RIP, and someone will ta...

Issue 078: July 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s “Strike Through the Mask!”: Spotlight on MilSpeak and Middle West Presses

July 3, 2023 by Peter Molin

Major publishing house enthusiasm for war, mil, and vet-themed books has noticeably waned in the past few years, but two small presses, MilSpeak Foundation and Middle West Press, have emerged to fi...

Fiction, Issue 078: July 2023

Fiction by David Abrams: “Thank You”

July 3, 2023 by David Abrams

Thank you Thank you for your service Thank you for going Thank you for coming back Thank you for not dying Thank you for taking the bullet, the mortar round, the shrapnel that is making its way to ...

Fiction, Issue 078: July 2023

New Fiction by Cory Massaro: “Gran Flower”

July 3, 2023 by Cory Massaro

  I fill the big bucket with soap and water and start heading across the field. It’s early on a Sunday and Gran Flower will want his solar cells cleaned, which they say isn’t really necessary,...

Issue 078: July 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Todd Heldt: “This Is A Drill, This Is Only A Drill” and “Suffer The Children”

July 3, 2023 by Todd Heldt

ACTION IS PRETTY / image by Amalie Flynn   This is a drill. This is only a drill. They voted to abolish history. There had been no commercials. We didn’t know which wrong to fear most, a...

Issue 078: July 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Justice Castañeda: “There Will Be No Irish Pennants”

July 3, 2023 by Justice Castaneda

  There Will Be No Irish Pennants “Discipline organizes an analytical space.” [1] Field Day & Inspection. Windows shut blinds open half-mast.  Sinks will be bleached, faucets are to be poi...

Issue 078: July 2023, Nonfiction

New Review from Larry Abbott: Lauren Kay Johnson’s “The Fine Art of Camouflage”

July 3, 2023 by Larry Abbott

  Camouflage can exist on a number of levels. There is the basic military definition of disguising personnel, equipment, and installations to make them “invisible” to the enemy. There is the i...

Issue 078: July 2023, Nonfiction

New Review from Rachel Kambury: David Chrisinger’s “The Soldier’s Truth: Ernie Pyle and the Second World War”

July 3, 2023 by Rachel Kambury

The War of Little Things A review of David Chrisinger’s The Soldier’s Truth: Ernie Pyle and the Story of World War II “I’ve got something I want you to have,” Grandpa Art told me, apropos of nothin...

Issue 078: July 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Laura Hope-Gil: “The Train”

July 3, 2023 by Laura Hope-Gil

We were staying in the youth hostel in Zermatt at the base of the Matterhorn and on a day trip to see the castle in St. Nicklaus. I was twelve and my sister fourteen. My period started the night be...

Issue 077: June 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s “Strike Through the Mask!”: American Veterans and the Ukrainian Crisis

June 5, 2023 by Peter Molin

Bordentown is a pleasant town located on the New Jersey side of the Delaware River about twenty miles north of Philadelphia. For a small town, Bordentown has seen a fair amount of history and notab...

Photo by Roman Mager on Unsplash
Issue 077: June 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction by I.S. Berry: “Math and Other Things I Learned from War”

June 5, 2023 by IIana Berry

Numbers don’t lie, they say. 2 + 2 = 4. No matter how you rearrange it; no matter how you solve it. Turn it into subtraction (4 – 2 = 2), and it still works. Math’s rules are inviolable, unyielding...

Issue 077: June 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Carol Everett Adams: “Rabbit Trails”

June 5, 2023 by Carol Everett Adams

    RABBIT TRAILS in the Texas dust. We’re flat in the dirt so we can poke around down there with a long stick, while above us bullets fly and children hold up their honor roll certificat...

Issue 077: June 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction by M.C. Armstrong: “Murder Most Foul: The Role of Lyndon Johnson in the Murder of John F. Kennedy”

June 5, 2023 by M.C. Armstrong

   What is the truth, and where did it go? Ask Oswald and Ruby, they oughta know. “Shut your mouth, ” said the wise old owl. Business is business, and it’s a murder most foul...

Fiction, Issue 077: June 2023

New Fiction from Adrian Bonenberger: “American Fapper 2: Still Fappin’”

June 5, 2023 by Adrian Bonenberger

  I know what you’re thinking. What could this story possibly be about. Let me catch you up. First of all, you’re wondering whether I shot Angela’s kid or Angela. The answer is: I shot neither...

Fiction, Issue 077: June 2023

New Fiction by Cam McMillan: “The Colors of the Euphrates”

June 5, 2023 by Cam McMillan

She came from the south, wearing a bright red dress and carrying a light blue backpack, weaving through the well-worn paths on the banks of the Euphrates that had been carved out by foot traffic an...

Issue 76: May 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s Strike Through the Mask!: “So Say We All and the Veterans Writing Workshop”

May 1, 2023 by Peter Molin

Justin Hudnall, the founder and director of the San Diego-based performative writing-and-reading collective So Say We All, asked me to lead a Zoom writing workshop for veterans and veteran-affiliat...

Issue 76: May 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Corbett Buchly: “Messages from Below”

May 1, 2023 by Corbett Buchly

    messages from below the radio signals emanated from the depths commuters puzzled over the whistles and squawks that cut through their favorite programs cryptologists went to work but ...

Issue 76: May 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Larry Abbott: Review of Joy Damiani’s “If You Ain’t Cheatin’, You Ain’t Tryin'”

May 1, 2023 by Larry Abbott

Joy Damiani:  If You Ain’t Cheatin’, You Ain’t Tryin’ (and other lessons I learned in the Army) Available on Amazon in Kindle and paperback versions You will hate this book.  You will hate being co...

Issue 76: May 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Thomas Donovan: “After the War”

May 1, 2023 by Tom Donovan

There was a heavy snowfall that February night in 1946. A six-year-old boy watched from his bedroom window as the big snowflakes slowly covered everything. The  intrusive sounds of my Uncle Ray’s r...

Fiction, Issue 76: May 2023

New Fiction from Eddie Freeman: “The Skirt Fetcher”

May 1, 2023 by Eddie Freeman

Sadie was a do-gooder, someone who was aware of the deeply rooted systematic injustices that perpetuated oppression throughout the world, and who wanted to do something meaningful about it. She was...

Fiction, Issue 76: May 2023

New Fiction by Bob Kalkreuter: “Unhitched”

May 1, 2023 by Bob Kalkreuter

He remembered that day. God, did he remember it! His worst day in a year of worst days, a day he’d spent the last six months trying to bury. A day he’d regret for a lifetime, even though he himself...

Issue 075: April 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s Strike Through the Mask!: A Review of Andrew Bacevich’s “Paths of Dissent”

April 3, 2023 by Peter Molin

What did you do if you were deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan and believed the wars you volunteered to fight were unethical or badly managed? Keep quiet and perform your duties as best you could? Tak...

Issue 075: April 2023, Poetry

New Poetry by Jehanne Dubrow: “Poem for the Reader Who Said My Poems Were Sentimental and Should Engage in a More Complex Moral Reckoning with U.S. Military Actions”; “Epic War Poem”; “Tyrian Purple,” and “Some Final Notes On Odysseus”

April 3, 2023 by Jehanne Dubrow

When the goddess cries out,
her voice is a mountain against
the fighting. But the old soldier
keeps running—war like weather
in his ears, a summer storm,
in his pulse ...

Fiction, Issue 075: April 2023

New Fiction from Jane Snyder: “Mandy Schott”

April 3, 2023 by Jane Snyder

They sent us home from school early because of the snow, just hard little flakes at first. I didn’t look in the garage for Dave’s car because it was the time when he’d be at work. I went into the r...

Issue 075: April 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Antoinette Constable: “A Hundred Roses for Olga Herzen”

April 3, 2023 by Antoinette Constable

To some people outside our circle, Charles Rist was seen as a saintly hero. Charles Rist, our grandfather, was a famous economist, and vice-governor at La Banque de France. He was among the first t...

Issue 075: April 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Patrick Hicks: “A Woman’s Place”

April 3, 2023 by Patrick Hicks

Ravensbrück did not fall from the sky. It was planned. It was built. It was managed. The only all-female concentration camp in the Third Reich was so large and complex that no single person—whether...

Issue 074: March 2023, Nonfiction

Peter Molin’s Strike Through the Mask!—Elliot Ackerman’s “The Fifth Act: America’s End in Afghanistan” and Jamil Jan Kochai’s “Haunting of Hajji Hotak and Other Stories”

March 6, 2023 by Peter Molin

It’s a commonplace that America largely ignored the long war in Afghanistan while it was being fought. Now, after a brief flurry of heightened interest in the 2021 evacuation of Afghan allies...

Issue 074: March 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Lauren Kay Johnson: “Inheritance of War” an Excerpt from The Fine Art of Camouflage

March 6, 2023 by Lauren Kay Johnson

I swore I would never become a soldier like my mother. She called it a blip, a few months out of an otherwise enjoyable career with the Army. No one saw the blip coming. Both of my grandfathers ser...

Issue 074: March 2023, Poetry

New Poem by Sandra Newton: “Naught”

March 6, 2023 by Sandra Newton

NAUGHT There is naught to be done for it: We are over As the ocean is over its attraction And is now crawling Back from the shore, Having fucked it thoroughly. We are done Like steak on a grill, Si...

Issue 074: March 2023, Nonfiction

New Nonfiction from Joan Stack Kovach: “What He Wore”

March 6, 2023 by Joan Stack Kovach

He was always a very sharp dresser. Firstborn child, he toddled around in a merino wool coat from Lord&Taylor and a short pants suit from B Altman that would be handed down to his younger broth...

Excerpt, Issue 074: March 2023

New Fiction from Michael Loyd Gray: “The Song Remains the Same”

March 6, 2023 by Michael Loyd Gray

Dalton bought a used F150 in Kalamazoo with oil rig money and drove north to a trailer he owned south of Mancelona. It squatted on ten acres that were his along a creek. It was way out in the booni...

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Recent Posts
  • New Fiction by Kevin M. Kearney: Freelance
  • New Fiction by J. Malcolm Garcia: Pleasantries
  • New Poetry by Sara Shea: “Customs”
  • New Poetry by Benjamin Bellet: “What Was It Like?”; “Zero Five Thirty”; “West Point”
  • New Review and Interview by Larry Abbott: James Wells’ Because
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