KWELI JOURNAL FALL ISSUE LAUNCH READING
Moderated by Toni Marguerite Kirkpatrick, contributors Alejandro Heredia, Eman Quotah, Jared Lemus and Lisa Teasley read and discuss from their work. Lisa Teasley will read from "Glossolalia," which appears in the fall issue and will be included in her coming story collection, FLUID, published by Cune Press, September 26, 2023
A Place at the Table in Echo Park, Essay in Alta Journal
Author and artist Lisa Teasley looks at October California Book Club selection, Natalia Molina’s A Place at the Nayarit, through her experience of Echo Park over the years.
THE NUMEROLOGIST, Short Story, in Red Canary Magazine
A week before the summer solstice, the numerologist Tim Luna worries the date into perfect configuration for Armageddon. He sleeps in a large closet surrounded by stacks of newspaper and magazine clippings salvaged from his parent’s garage in the medical district, low-end flats of Beverly Hills. The closet scent has acid for a top note, gasoline and mildew in the heart, and cat scat at the base. His partner, a very skilled bodyworker who calls herself Kiva Hands, breaks down into tears when she first confronts the closet and tells Tim — when he asks — that she will never move in with him as long as he has it.
FLASH FICTION AMERICA Anthology
Lisa Teasley's short story, "WHY I COULD NEVER BE BOOGIE" is in the new anthology, FLASH FICTION AMERICA, pubdate February 14, 2023
ESSAY ON CLAUDIA RANKINE’S CITIZEN AND MY OWN EXPERIENCES OF MICROAGGRESSIONS
Alta JournalWhile Jamaica Kincaid’s books arrived in my life as lyrical and deep psychological company, coming from a Black Caribbean perspective like my mother’s, Claudia Rankine’s Citizen: An American Lyric spoke more piercingly to me as an American Black woman.