Italians live with this very strong belief that the amount of hatred you feel towards your partner in a romantic relationship is equitable to the amount of love you have for them. This love/hate courtship shows itself as a couple fights in the town piazza, two actors performing for the crowd. There is no shame in public. She smacks him across the face for whatever wrong he did, or he’s screaming at her, an inch from her nose, vile insults are sprayed at each other, he grabs her arm a little too hard when she walks away, it’s all very beautiful to them. This same scene placed in an American coffee shop or mall would be a hideous sight for us. We keep these spectacles for our private homes and whisper the results to our best friend’s weeks later. But here in Italy, I imagine the onlookers thinking, “Che forte amore.” What strong love. “Ti amo o ti ammazzo”: it was a hit pop song on the top 40 countdown last summer in Florence, but it represents this concept that the Italians have been living with forever, probably. “I love you or I kill you”.
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Issue 110, published April 2024, features works of poetry, flash fiction, short nonfiction, and visual art by Seo Jin Ahn, John M. Blodgett, Roger Camp, Teresa Hyoju Chang, Sarah Chavera Edwards, Mark Connelly, Mark Crimmins, Elias Diakolios, Kim Farrar, Steve Fay, Sam Graham, Sydney Greiner, Angie Hexum, Ken Hines, Richard Holinger, Aidan J Hong, Diane Hueter, Kathryn Jordan, Jian Kim, Jihu Kim, Josef Krebs, Linda Laderman, Nicholas Mayo, Martha Nance, Larena Nellies-Ortiz, Gloria Demasi Nixon-John, Edie Noesser, Larry Oakner, Yeobin Park, Eric Roy, Claire Scott, Cindy Sams, Vimla Sriram , Maxwell Tang, Jim Tilley, Katherine Tunning, William J Waters, Ian Wells, and Stephen Curtis Wilson.