The South Carolina Review

SCR Issue 57.1 Cover Reveal

The most recent South Carolina Review issue is nearly ready for release. Before that day, here’s a first look into the issue’s cover art, complete with commentary from the artist.

South Carolina Review 57.1 Cover art titled 'White Noise' by Mason Engler.

White Noise by Mason Engler (He/Him)

Traditionally a symbol of independence and mystery, a black cat sits in an intimate space, inviting the viewer to engage with the scene while subtly subverting expectations of solitude. Often thought of as a place for privacy and routine, the bathroom becomes a moment of connection through the companionship of the cat, turning this mundane setting into one of a shared presence and introspection.

The familiarity of the bathroom highlights a strange intimacy with the animal as it joins the viewer even into the most private areas of life. The scene encourages reflection on the boundaries, or lack thereof, between humans and animals. Even within a constructed space and a place that is often overlooked, the presence of another living being introduces a reminder of our interdependence with the natural world in everyday life.

About the Artist

Mason Engler is a visual artist and painter working with oil paints since 2021. He currently resides in Charleston, South Carolina after graduating from Clemson University. Initially inspired by the rich biodiversity of the Lowcountry and its interconnected ecosystems, Mason’s recent work reflects a nuanced shift toward a deeper exploration of human connection and mutually dependent relationships with the surrounding world. Finding inspiration in everyday interactions and the environments that shape them, he captures these fleeting moments to shape the narratives that emerge in his creative process. His work transforms the familiar into something slightly askew yet undeniably relatable.

Meet Our Newest Ronald Moran Poetry Prizewinner, María Esquinca

Each year, SCR presents the Ronald Moran Prize in Fiction and Poetry for the best fiction and poetry of the year. Our poetry winner for this year was María Esquinca, with her poem “Dream In Which I Return Home” from SCR 56.2

Maria Esquinca is a Xicana fronteriza and an abolitionist. She was born in Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico and grew up in El Paso, Texas. Her manuscript “Where Heaven Sinks” was selected as the winner of the 2024 Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize. It was selected by former U.S Poet Laureate, Juan Felipe Herrera. Her poetry has appeared in Waxwing, Michigan Quarterly Review, South Carolina Review, Best New Poets, and others.

Here’s what Maria has to say about her poem:

“I was trying to use dreams, or dream logic to unearth childhood memories. The way the images shift in the poem, from the moon, to the bedroom, to the shadows, mimic the way we dream. The way images shift with no explanation. I think subconsciously I was trying to write about my childhood, but I wasn’t ready to write about it, so this was an attempt to get at something larger. I was also inspired at the time by “Ghost Of” by Diane Khoh, and the way we can be haunted by family, and family memories, and so there’s some of that too.”

Meet our Newest Ronald Moran Fiction Prizewinner, Matt Lumbard

Each year, SCR presents the Ronald Moran Prize in Fiction and Poetry for the best fiction and poetry of the year. Our fiction winner for this year was Matt Lumbard, with his story “Big River, little river,” from SCR 56.2

Matt Lumbard is from Verona, New York. He currently lives in Washington, D.C. with two Mourning Doves named Acey and Deucey, and is at work on a novel. Follow him on Instagram @burrosagrado.

Here’s what Matt has to say about his story:

This story is about leaving. Whether they want to or not, everyone leaves us, don’t they? And if it’s not them that leaves, it’s us that leaves. Where are you going? You’ve been gone so long. Are you coming back? I miss you.

What becomes of home after we leave? It becomes a sort of franken-home. Part home and part not-home-anymore.

This story is about a moonstruck mute five-hundred-pound riverboat captain and a mythical seven-foot tall Giant River Otter. There is an angular rhythm to the simple words. There is comedy. Angular rhythm? Is this guy off his flower?

I wrote it in the early morning before work, which is unusual for me. I woke up with this in my head: “I am the dumbest man driving a boat on the Mississippi today. I weigh five hundred pounds. I want to talk to you.” I liked that, so I went and wrote the rest. There was no planning
or multiple drafts.

Is it a happy ending? Is it a nightmare? I think it depends on how you feel about home.



SCR Volume 56.2 Spring 2024

 

Contents

Poetry

NATALIE GIARRATANO Farmer’s Almanac: Wildfire Outlook

LAURA VOGT Folklore of Past Lives

MARÍA ESQUINCA Dream In Which I Return Home; Dream in Which My Father Ask For Forgiveness; My Mother Crawls Out of The Ocean

DANIEL OOI My Christian Grandfather’s Taoist Funeral 

ELLEN JUNE WRIGHT The Secret Life of Wisteria; I Carry Wisteria In My Chest

JENNIFER GIVHAN Order of Operations ((or the Viral Equation that “Broke” the Internet) or Mothering Through Chronic/Mental Illness); My Daughter & My Daughter & I Test Positive for Covid

JAVIER SANDOVAL The Last Dozen Drizzled-City Nights

CHARLES BYRNE Everything happens for a reason

ZACHARIAH CLAYPOLE WHITE Medical History as Creation Myth

SHAUN TURNER The Bull Moose Bluff Charges

KENIA CANO Stone;Fiesta

MEGAN J. ARLETT Alhambra Incantation; August Afternoon in the Olive Orchards

JOHN T. HOWARD Our Father

JULIE FUNDERBURK Shoes

MEGHAN STERLING Love Poem for My Husband at 4 AM

JOSH LEFKOWITZ Forty-One Years

EMILY LAKE HANSEN Baby Got Back But It Won’t Fit In The Seat

ROBBIE Q. TELFER Pachyderm

AMORAK HUEY Everything I Know About Love I Learned from Indiana Jones

SARAH BROCKHAUS To the Cockroach

ANGIE MACRI Findings

JEFF NEWBERRY Word Problem

DOUG RAMSPECK River Birch

Fiction

BRADLEY BAZZLE Each Unique Specimen 

LESLIE PIETRZYK Girls Like That End Up Fine

MATT LUMBARD Big River, little river

M.O. WALSH The Staggered

WILLIAM WALKER Chemin de Dieu

ROBERTO ABAD If You Think About It, It’s Not So Bad SCR Series in Latin American Translation 

BHAVIKA SICKA Mooring

VASILIOS MOSCHOURIS The Impact

CLAYTON BRADSHAW-MITTAL Carolina Demon Story

DENNIS MCFADDEN Territorial Imperatives

S.J. LAURO Snake Luck 

Book Reviews

SCOTT GOULD One Foot Here, One Foot There: Khem K. Aryal’s The In-Betweeners 

JON SEALY Implacably Real: Ron Rash’s The Caretaker