All posts tagged: David Ryan

The Most-Read Pieces of 2024

Before we close out another busy year of publishing, we wanted to take a moment to reflect on the unique, resonant, and transporting pieces that made 2024 memorable. The Common published over 175 stories, essays, poems, interviews, and features online and in print in 2024. Below, you can browse a list of the ten most-read pieces of 2024 to get a taste of what left an impact on readers.

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January 2024 Poetry Feature: Part I, with work by Adrienne Su, Eleanor Stanford, Kwame Opoku-Duku, and William Fargason

“I wrote this poem on Holy Saturday, which historically is the day after Jesus was crucified, and the day before he was resurrected. That Spring, I was barely out of a nervous breakdown in which I had intense suicidal ideation … The moments of quiet during a time like that take on more meaning somehow, reminders I was still alive. And that day, that Saturday, I saw a bee.”

—William Fargason on “Holy Saturday”

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The Shirt by David Ryan

He fingers the cloth, imagines the fingers of a millworker feeding the cord into a sewing machine, shuddering wooden bobbins in some industrial town. And then he tries it on.

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Dispatch from Moscow by Afton Montgomery

A toddler in a blue t-shirt cocked a pistol at me. Silver glinted in October sun. He clicked the trigger, Dad and Mom looking on. Got her is what the kid said to Dad, a man closer to seven feet tall than six.

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October 2024 Poetry Feature: New Poems by Our Contributors, with work by Nathaniel Perry and Tyler Kline

“These poems are ‘versions’ of the psalms—or more accurately, they are poems that freely borrow phases from the King James versions of the psalms and think on some of the themes. [They take] place in the fictional setting I’m calling The Olive Garden (not the restaurant)—a kind of grove and adjacent town where the speaker has been sent by something resembling God.”

—Nathaniel Perry on “34 (Song, with Young Lions)” and “36 (Song, with Contranym)”

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Silk Road by Nieves García Benito, translated by Carmela Ferradans

Rashad Brahim is in “no man’s land”: that stony and rough place in between Castillejos and Sebta in northern Morocco, facing the Spanish border. Born in Dosso, in southern Nigeria, he was now twenty-two years old and had always wanted to leave his homeland. How he and his friends, Abdellah Salim and Abderrahim Zinder, have come this far is a mystery.

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The Con Artist by Glenn Bertram

 

gazebo in front of lake
 
“‘The Con Artist’ is a story about performance, both conscious and habitual. The promise of escape—permanent, or perhaps merely transitory—figures heavily”
 

—Glenn Bertram

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November 2024 Poetry Feature, with work by G.C. Waldrep, Allison Funk, and Kevin O’Connor

“The sound of the two shoals at Glendale [South Carolina]—the Upper and Lower—is a particular sound, a peculiar sound. Sound is real, but not real in the same way matter, as matter, is real. And we don’t see sound, which seems wrong, somehow—within the tyranny of seeing.”

— G.C. Waldrep on “Below the Shoals, Glendale”

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Waters of Reclamation: Raychelle Heath Interviews Caroline M. Mar

“When my dear friend Carrie was looking for someone to do this interview, I jumped at the chance. I loved her first book, Special Education, and was really excited to read Dream of the Lake. The themes of language and identity spoke to me deeply.”

—Raychelle Heath

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Woodpecker by Jeffrey Harrison

its head popped up from the hollowed-out stump / like a jack-in-the-box, beak raised / at an angle that looked either jaunty / or quizzical, as though asking something / of us, but not waiting for an answer, / which, in any case, we wouldn’t have had.

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More to the Story by Michael David Lukas

For a long time, I told myself that it was the feeling of the thing that mattered, the refraction of truth if not the truth itself. Then I got that email from Uncle Herb—‘There’s more to the story than you might think’—and emotional truth wasn’t nearly enough. Not by a long shot. I needed to know where those Nazi medals came from.

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Thanks for a great year! We’re excited to continue sharing work by writers all over the world with you in 2025. Keep up with the art, prose, and poetry we publish each week by subscribing to our newsletter

The Most-Read Pieces of 2024
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The Shirt

By DAVID RYAN

 

Jonathan finds the shirt on the closeout rack at a trendy vintage shop in Provincetown. He’s never heard of the maker, the satin tag embroidered in the neck as if by hand, it looks British, probably twenty, thirty years old, this short sleeve—the cloth heavier than cloth, at least the cloth of shirts he might normally afford. The muted blue-green-grey rayon shimmers, the smallest blues and greens houndsteeth fused into a strange harmony within the gray and fine-lined black blocking. Its gentle plaids inferentially iridescent. And this, like an aura hovers about the shirt, its inferred past, as if the weave of fibers are quietly singing an elegy, an amassing of light. He fingers the cloth, imagines the fingers of a millworker feeding the cord into a sewing machine, shuddering wooden bobbins in some industrial town. And then he tries it on.

It’s his favorite shirt for a couple of years. One night, he wears it over a white, long-sleeved henley to a club where a friend of a friend knows the singer in the band playing. Jonathan and his friend get backstage. For reasons later forgotten—perhaps in a fit of generosity produced by the free bourbon in the dressing room, he lets the drummer, who’d commented on how beautiful the shirt was, wear it on stage. Jonathan and his friend return to the audience for the show. There his shirt appears, on stage, shimmering under the lights, and the moment of its glory, strangely perhaps, feels as if belonging to Jonathan.

The Shirt
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Friday Reads: August 2022

Curated by SOFIA BELIMOVA

Is your summer to-be-read list getting sparse? Check out these exciting reading recommendations by TC’s latest contributors, including vibrant poetry that explores identity and relation and two novels that dwell on strange encounters and liminal places. 

 

Image of Maya Marshall's poetry collection: woman in a white slip with a blond afro and animal mask.

Maya Marshall’s All the Blood Involved in Love, recommended by Susanna Lang (Contributor)

Those of us already familiar with Maya Marshall’s poetry have wanted to see a collection for years, and her debut, All the Blood Involved in Love (Haymarket, 2022), is worth the wait. There are many poets writing now who focus on their identity, but they do not all have access to such rich language that lifts the concerns linked to her identity—Black, female, queer—to the level of poetry. 

Friday Reads: August 2022
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Solar

By DAVID RYAN

now that your dad’s gone your mom gets lost in the dark a lot; lost mid-stairs, or in the walk-in closet, or deep in the pantry, lost in the dark sub-terrain of the basement; or here, now at the kitchen counter, glaring out the lost window at the lost backyard, an array of convex and concave mirrors, rigged foil panels, little jet booster engines idling; sun pours in shimmering off her shoulder, crests around the gloss of her face; and you watch as she slowly turns now that your dad’s gone—

Solar
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