Welcome to the second issue of The Brasilia Review.
Chris Estrada breaks down the life of a folk musician in Brazil and the force of culture on him.
Meredith Caraher’s narrator has a vision in a nightclub that leads her back to her roots. Paolo Cornacchia lifts the hatch of a World War II bomber. Margaret Lesh sees the touching underside of brutality. And James Maintenance confronts a life in what it has collected.
David Rawson reminds us to try harder, while B.D. Reid faces the totality. Mason Shreve tells us what the clouds know.
Your editor delineates the pen and the performance. Designer Nayrb Wasylycia takes a swat at the sun.
The Brasilia Review is a cliff that will resist erosion.
Fiction
Last Train to Eden by Meredith Caraher
194X by Paolo Cornacchia
I Married a Cage Fighter by Margaret Lesh
Attic Conversations by James Maintenance
Non-Fiction
Zé Paraíba by Chris Estrada
The Actor as Writer by Dan Souder
Poetry
Aus Einem April by David Rawson
fv. by B.D. Reid
The Convenience of Living by Mason Shreve