> on my iPhone
A memoir of family, New York streets, grocery items, crushes, and more, made entirely out of iPhone notes.
“Monster in My Bed” & Others
A series of paintings depicting queer narratives through mythological figures, by Paul Anagnostopoulos.
Hungry City
A sprawling essay engaging with ramen, New York, Teju Cole’s fiction, and hyphenated identities, by Vamika Sinha.
Everyone Wants a Working Class Origin Story Without having a Working Class Origin Story
“The problem in America then and now is that we muddle morality and social class. The bigger problem is that our country’s only worthy narrative is the rags to riches motif” – Samantha Neugebauer discusses class inequality and the American dream in this new essay.
(st)ars poetica
An experimental ars poetica in conversation with Teju Cole’s novel, by Vamika Sinha.
Washington Square Park
A short, blue story set in downtown New York, by Vamika Sinha.
Lonely Planet Guide
In the form of a travel list of New York restaurants, Vamika Sinha's new fiction piece focuses on the nuances of love, sex, dating and loneliness in the Big Apple.
Times Square, 2am
New in fiction, Zoe Jane Patterson trawls through New York City’s Times Square in the dead of night. What happens next?
Q Train
A traveler’s poem, set in New York City.
A Black Power Emblem is Sold at Forever 21
New in style odyssey, Vamika Sinha takes us through Harlem to the Schomburg Center, and explores the beret’s history within the Black Panther movement.
self-ish
“In a TV show, I’d be a supporting character you might feel conflicted about. I have spent too many moments of my life aspiring to be white” - inspired by Lyn Heijinian, Vamika Sinha prods at encapsulating identity in writing in this new prose poem.
money
An “open call for hopes and prayers”, Vamika Sinha explores New York as both capitalist hell and heaven.
new york
A romp of a poem showcasing the sounds, noise, music of New York City.
The Color Blue
Vamika Sinha weaves personal memoir with music criticism, jazz writing and New York history in this hybrid essay.