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American Short Fiction

Publishing exquisite fiction since 1991.

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When We Go, We Go Downstream

Carrie R. Moore

In the restaurant’s fading light, he tells the story to his woman. Warily, the way his father told it to him:

There once lived a man named Elijah. A man who, among many other things—blacksmith, singer, lover of russet pears—had been born a slave. In those days, Texas had yet again changed its mind about what it was. It had belonged to Mexico, then became its own fearsome land, then joined Polk’s America, then splintered off with the rest of the rebellious South. Texas dreamed of cotton and the hands to pick it. Elijah dreamed of Evaline, whom his master forbade him to call wife.

On that plantation by the Brazos River, they met by night, Elijah approaching the women’s cabin and unfolding the back of his throat to announce his arrival. Evaline heard the low, guttural trill of a nightjar and came out to meet him. They must’ve talked in that starry darkness. Perhaps she confessed that on the nights he did not come, she heard hundreds of such birds in the woods and believed him everywhere at once. Perhaps he told her about the extra minutes he spent playing with the horses instead of forging their shoes. Small victories against the master who was also his father. The man owned him in neither manner. [ . . . ]

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Issue 82
Issue 82
  • Lydi Conklin
  • Annie Liontas
  • Kyle McCarthy
  • Carrie R. Moore
  • KJ Nakazawa-Kern
  • Colleen Rosenfeld
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News

The 2025 Halifax Prize Winners We are thrilled to announce the winners of this year's Halifax Ranch Fiction Prize, judged by Eric Puchner. We consider it our privilege to have spent time with so many terrific submissions—thank you for giving us the opportunity to read your work. Congratulations to the winners!
Read the Winners of the 2025 Insider Prize Whose voices are these, I wonder each fall as submissions for the Insider Prize begin accumulating in my office. Four years on as director of Texas’s annual literary award for incarcerated writers, some of the names written across the bloated white and manila envelopes have grown familiar—essayists, short story writers, and the places they are relegated to calling “home”.  
Announcing the Winners of the 2025 American Short(er) Fiction Prize We are delighted to announce that Tony Tulathimutte has chosen the winners of our 2025 American Short(er) Fiction Contest. Thank you to our judge and to everyone who submitted—it is always inspiring to read your work. Congratulations to the winners!

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MFA for All Spring 2026: “Bodies in Space, Bodies in Place” with Katie Kitamura is still open. Register now!

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