Podcast Episode 32: The Battle for Florida

Welcome back to the Reckoning Press Podcast! I’m Aaron Kling, Reckoning‘s new audio editor. I’m also the reader and audio producer for this story. Hi there. Hello! Today, listeners, we have David Holloway’s “The Battle for Florida” from Reckoning 8. Holloway illustrates the beautiful tragedy . . .

Reckoning 4 Submission Call – Fiction/Nonfiction

For Reckoning 4, I am specifically seeking works which address the relationship of humans to the built environment: the city as organism; climate-changed urban spaces; architecture as environmental in/justice; the point of contact where human alteration and ecological alteration touch; fantasias of density and of absence; blurs between organic and . . .

The Rule of Capture

1.

There is no such thing as an empty lot.

2.

I knew foxes were living back in there in the woods behind the door factory, but the first time I saw one was when it was running away from a realtor.

It is curious how we can identify so many animals that we have never seen. We are taught to do it as children. Especially the animals dangerous enough to eat us, or wily enough to . . .

from Concrete Jungle

New Jersey

New Hampshire

Wisconsin

Montana

Over the course of a couple of years, I have managed to catalogue the most commonly listed invasive species for all 50 states using the USDA National Agricultural Library as my primary source. The difference in font size is directly dependent on the number of invasive plant species categorized as such by each state . . .

Goldie Locks Interview: “2222”

Read Goldie Locks’s story “2222” from Reckoning 1.

Michael: You live in Moscow. What’s your experience of nature like? My only knowledge of Moscow is through Russian literature in translation. Are there public parks? Do you visit them? Can you walk down to the Volga in winter and watch your fellow city-dwellers ice skating in winter? . . .