This issue is dedicated to the life and legacy of
Jeffrey “Boosie” Bolden
Associate Editor, The Fourth River, 2016-2020
Chatham University MFA, 2018
Rest in Power
I think literary journals as a rule have more of a sense of what is being written more widely than, say, publishing houses. Literary journals’ distance from the commercial aspect allows an avenue that’s invaluable for the literary scene.
I really feel like The Fourth River, especially the poetry, has this opportunity to shift the stereotype around what “nature poetry” can be, and that’s why I’m always asking you all to look for the risks, look for the surprises. Look for the weeds poking up through the cracks in the sidewalk, in a really denaturalized setting, because I find that more interesting.
When I told people I was trying to write poems as an investigation into the impacts of fracking, they often immediately asked, “Are you for it or against it?” They also sometimes said, “Poems?”
Stephen Crane wrote of my bitter
heart a century ago.
On her last day in an unfamiliar city, she imagines her name is Valentina, her hair longer than it has been since she was nineteen, her skin, less freckled.
While morning turned to afternoon, I walked in the state
forest. I saw no one, but found a metal tower collapsed
It materialized in Chadron, Nebraska, six-hundred miles from where we started,
eleven hundred more from where we needed to go.