Volume 20 | 2024

The vicennial volume of The Tusculum Review considers everything most on the world’s mind right now: testosterone, pregnancy, fertility, childbirth, warfare, male desire, female diplomacy, immigrants and indigenous, nonbinary bodies and written forms, addiction, religion, God, disconnection/solidarity, warrior PTSD, age/youth, goodness/guilt, grief, land.

Mirela Musić headshot

Essayist Mirela Musić joins a salmon-fishing operation in Alaska and compares her Montenegrin parents’ Brooklyn marriage to the boat captain’s greasy treatment of her. Guest judge Mary Cappello chose “The Nature of Alaska” as the winner of the 2024 Tusculum Review Nonfiction Chapbook Prize: “This is an essay about the precariousness of sleep; the indefinable nature of home; and the power of place to hold us or eject us. It’s about finding family or fleeing family; it’s a wrangling with the terms by which we accept our own oppression.”

Musiċ’s essay is at the center of the volume with ocean-immersive, tension- and color-filled illustrations by Virginia Commonwealth University BFA candidate Ayla Bramblett that are as sharp-toothed as Musiċ’s essay. “The Nature of Alaska,” published in the journal in its entirety, is also available as a stand-alone limited edition chapbook. Similarly not to be missed is a folio of Bramblett’s self-portraits and a description of her artistic concerns and craft methods.

Karen Fisher headshot

Karen Fisher’s “The Bright Suns and the Dark Suns,” an excerpt from her next novel, follows young Civil War veteran and doctor Briggs into the crowded post-war frontier after he finds himself unable to live in New York City with his wife. He walks into the west, through varied landscapes described with the same outdoor acumen and poetry that made the prequel to this book, A Sudden Country, an award-winning favorite: “Alone, he finds his way to brinks and descends. Swamps or thickets he doesn’t care, or direction, generally west. He is looking not for a particular place but for a simple end to feeling.”

With his uncle Sewell’s team, Briggs cuts a trail through to Yellowstone, then joins the Hayden survey: