• Issue Archive
  • Submissions
  • Contests
  • Poetry
  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction
  • Blog
  • About
  • Issue Archive
  • Submissions
  • Contests
  • Poetry
  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction
  • Blog
  • About
Invisible City
MENU
You are here: Home / Archives for Nonfiction

Contest Winners, Nonfiction

in response to the viral r/askreddit thread titled “what’s classy if you’re rich, but trashy if you’re poor?”*

On Saturday, diner day at Cozy's, I’d wear my new mascara and order a face-sized breakfast. I’d whisper, “do we look rich?” Grandma wore furs. She said things like “primo” and “I betcha.” We were fancy together. Fancy. Fancy. Fancy. I’d fancy-chant till I was dizzy. Grandma was how I learned to salt my pancakes. “To wake the syrup,” she said. I began salting my eyelids, too, after I first saw her with the palette. Her tender strokes. We lived with tense necks, seized by a …

Continue Reading →

Contest Winners, Nonfiction

Blaze

I am emptying the fireplace ashes so you can make a fire to seduce me. There’s a pile of tossed bills to be burnt because they have information someone might steal. Our signatures. The pile suggests, via nonrelativistic classical mechanics, a closed system: paper made from wood, wood burning paper. No rock. Maybe a pair of scissors is lying around here somewhere. I am filling the bag as fast as possible because seductions are time-sensitive. The height, the weight, the heat, all are factors. …

Continue Reading →

Nonfiction

Meditations on Trash in a Time of Dumpster Fires

Just before seven a.m., I hear the garbage truck. I’ve already taken the black bin to the curb. The old hockey bag spread inside the front entry for the past month didn’t fit, despite the fact I’d been dismembering it for weeks, disposing of it in serial-killer pieces. A strap, a zipper, a flap of soiled canvas. All that’s left is the plastic frame and the wheels. Braless, I pick up the bag, and sprint barefoot down the driveway. The garbage man pulls up. His truck is a side loader. He releases …

Continue Reading →

Nonfiction

Undoing

It’s been quiet in the car for a few minutes. With the windows down, I’m breathing in the newly-minted greenery that’s emerged from hiding overnight. “So there’s one thing I don’t understand,” you pipe up from your booster seat. “If there needs to be a sperm and an egg in the uterus, how does the sperm get into the uterus?” Last week, it was enough for you to know the recipe for a baby is a sperm, an egg and a place for it to grow. The leaves were buds and we’d go off-trail on our forest …

Continue Reading →

Nonfiction

The Land Holds My Memory

Somewhere there are photos, color slides taken in the late 1960’s of me sitting on top of a large rock. Buck teeth, hair held back from my face with a kerchief, and scrawny legs. My parents have just purchased a piece of land. It is a nice lot, seven-eighths of an acre in Truro, Massachusetts, near the tip of Cape Cod.  * Every July during my childhood we’d visit this land to pick blueberries. We could pick them near the dunes, but these were our blueberries. The lot began at the top …

Continue Reading →

Nonfiction

Wichita Fridge

Wichita Fridge Day-old fried cheese curds. Three Vortex IPAs. Pickles. More pickles. Low-sodium soy sauce (brand: Dillons), jumbo ketchup, two packs of brown eggs (organic but not free range). Whole milk, low-fat milk, whole cream, half cream. Deviled eggs, butter, one full wasabi tube. Greens going bad. Portland Fridge Trader Joe’s carrot juice. Farmers' market greens. Goat cheese we can’t afford. Beer, beer, beer. Three different hot sauces, full-sodium soy sauce. Bread so dense you …

Continue Reading →

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Read More

  • Poetry
  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction

Let’s Connect

  • Send us your work
  • Tweet @invisiblecitySF
  • invisiblecity@usfca.edu

University of San Francisco

  • Master of Fine Arts in Writing
  • Archive: Switchback Journal

Invisible City

Literary Journal of the MFA in Writing Program at the University of San Francisco

Note: The contents of Invisibe City do not necessarily reflect the views of USF or of the MFA program.

Privacy Policy

© 2020–2025