We’re always grateful when gorgeous, deep, necessary work comes our way, or when a fascinating person chooses to spend time talking with us. And this journal is our opportunity to share that work, and those conversations, with readers who get it, people who need it. A readership has grown around this collection of artifacts and ideas, and within that readership a little community. Thank you for being part of it. We tend to celebrate the thing you might have otherwise missed. But today, we’d like to celebrate the most-read (thousands of reads each), most-accessed, most-shared writing at Pea River Journal. Think of this post as a little party for these 15 pieces.
Thank you, writers and conversationalists and makers and readers, for bringing this list into being. And if you’ve not yet read these pieces, here’s your chance.
The 15
Amanda Miska’s story Slow Wave
Win Bassett’s poem Only You Can Prevent Nothing
Our interview with Rachel Hyman
Robert Gray’s poems The Day I Was Born and Humidity
Our interview with Matthew Rouser
Ray McManus’ American Poem #2
Our conversation with Marium Khalid
Robert Fanning’s poem The House We Almost Bought
Grant Clauser’s poem Objects in Motion
Our documentary photographs for the Stay Fly mural in Phoenix conceived and painted by Sentrock and Mikey Jackson
Al Maginnes’ poem How Things Break in This World
Anthony Martin’s story Ill Not in the Mind
Richard Heby’s poem The Plum
Rafael Alvarez’ story Burdens of Home
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