219.5 Winter fiction Buy this issue Rachel Hennessy guest edits Overland’s 2015 winter fiction. Featuring short stories by Shannon Burns, Kalia Forde, Joshua Kemp and Emma Rayward. Issue Contents Fiction Ford froth is infinite Emma Rayward Blue boy Joshua Kemp If he woke up Kalia Forde Australian crawl Shannon Burns Editorial Winter fiction Rachel Hennessy Browse the issue: Fiction Published in Overland Issue 219.5 Winter fiction · Ford froth is infinite Emma Rayward NO BREAKS rings in her ears when she goes to bed at night and if it is a good dream, she takes a break, and uses the toilet. She is resentful towards her boss, who doesn’t know she has IBS, nor can he ever, because he might fire her and say, YES BREAKS, as in, bye bye, see ya, you’re done. No breaks, IBS, and RSI in one hand, left or right, it doesn’t matter which, she can’t tell. Published in Overland Issue 219.5 Winter fiction · Blue boy Joshua Kemp He sauntered under the marri trees, feeling her absence. Ashley usually accompanied him on these mindless sojourns, but she couldn’t come out today. Her dad said she needed to help out at the bakery. He told his mum about this and she baulked. She said a child shouldn’t be expected to work. It was a form of slavery. Published in Overland Issue 219.5 Winter fiction · If he woke up Kalia Forde ‘The Sleep Walkers are coming,’ he whispered once in the dark, ‘and we have to be prepared.’ This has gone on for months now, him talking in his sleep, usually babbling incomprehensibly. It’s only on occasion, like that night, where he will say complete sentences. Sentences containing words I didn’t even realise he knew. Published in Overland Issue 219.5 Winter fiction · Australian crawl Shannon Burns ‘Even the rain is drowning,’ he mutters. If Thomas could only recover, or genuinely imagine, what it was to be. Instead his feet move damply and his mind glitches. Over and over, the same thoughts, the same corrections, the same aimless abstractions. Editorial Published in Overland Issue 219.5 Winter fiction · Winter fiction Rachel Hennessy I go to a store to try on coats. Slipping on one after another, I look at my reflection. What does this coat transform me into? Am I flashy, realistic, prosaic, magic or speculative? Is it a perfect fit or slightly too big? Are the sleeves a little too long? Are the seams showing just a bit too much? I am confused, and leave the store. Previous Issue 219 Winter 2015 Next Issue Aotearoa online