He is a Year 12 student at NLCS Jeju and an emerging young artist with a strong interest in architecture and design. His work reflects a curiosity about how spaces are used, experienced, and improved in everyday life. Often inspired by his school environment, he quietly observes overlooked or problematic areas and reimagines them through practical, creative proposals—such as redesigning the bicycle parking area for improved safety. Influenced by minimalist and functional design, he blends observation with thoughtful planning. He hopes to study architecture or design in the future to enhance urban spaces through innovative and efficient solutions.
The driver to my right is smiling, gazing at each of us in turn, waving us on. For her, I have no sympathy. But for the one directly across the intersection, a big-eared fellow at least eighty years old, if not closer to eighty-five, who came to a stop before either of us and first had his signal blinking to the right, but now has it blinking to the left, who has inched forward and pumped his brakes at least three times, I feel an overwhelming sense of pity, for within moments I will jam on the gas and swerve around him, honking if necessary, shouting obscenities out my open window, because I am in my forties and overwhelmed with mundane but nagging tasks that await me at work and at home—emails to return, spreadsheets to fill in, bills to pay, plumbers to schedule—boiling over with irritation whenever I’m in a car, having grown up in traffic-choked New Jersey, full of aggressive drivers who’ll cut you off the moment you give them an opening, and now living in mild-mannered Oregon, a place I love for its friendliness and slow pace of life, except when I’m on the road waiting for someone to recognize his obvious right of way. A fourth car approaches from the left, and before it can slow, I’m off.
Scott Nadelson
Scott Nadelson is the author of nine books, most recently the novel Trust Me. His work has appeared in Ploughshares, New England Review, Five Points, and The Best American Short Stories.
Michael Hower is a digital photographer and artist based in Central Pennsylvania. Originally trained in drawing and painting, he transitioned to photography over a decade ago and has since exhibited in more than 150 juried exhibitions nationwide, receiving over 50 awards and publications. His work explores systems of control, abandonment, entropy, and the persistence of human voice within constrained spaces. He is the creator of The Infinite Panopticon, an ongoing combinatorial photographic project inspired by literary and architectural systems.
Featuring:
Issue 118, published April 2026, features works of poetry, flash fiction, short nonfiction, and visual art by Carston Anderson, Jack Bordnick Studio, Kenneth Boyd, Brian Builta, Robin Carstensen, Max Cavitch, Suhjin Chey, Lucinda Cummings, Jason Davidson, Greg Freed, Sharon Goldberg, Dara Goodale, Jane Hammons, Caroline Hayduk, Ken Holland, Dylan Hong, Michael Hower, Greta Kaluževičiūtė, Brian Kim, Minjae Kim, Matt Leibel, Scott Nadelson, Rina Park, Scott Penney, Michael C. Roberts, Jim Ross, R James Sennett Jr, Mia Sitterson, Dawson Steeber, Travis Stephens, Daniel Thompson, Josje Weusten, and M. Brooke Wiese.
48 Pages, 6 x 9 in / 152 x 229 mm, Premium Color, 80# White — Coated, Perfect Bound, Glossy Cover
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