Wild Greens

Volume 5, Issue ii

Home

Wild Greens 5, no. 2 (December 2024)

Home

Welcome to the December 2024 issue of Wild Greens

To begin the issue, we start with a series of illustrated holiday homes in colored pencil by Melissa Lomax. This project, called “Holiday Houses,” began as an advent project. I like to envision this neighborhood of welcoming homes as a metaphor for Wild Greens.  

Speaking of homes, here’s some behind the scenes of our “home” here at Wild Greens. We’re a small team of volunteers. Hayley is our arts editor; Jacqueline works with all prose submissions, including personal essays and short fiction. Poetry is split between Myra and Jessica. Tim handles music submissions when we have them. As the editor-in-chief, I wear a lot of hats, but one of my main jobs is coordinating the editorial team and assembling the issue at the end of the month. What this means is that there are months where I might not read the issue in full until a day or two before it goes out to you!

All of this is to say, I was stunned to read Carolyn Martin’s poem, “Home Visit,” when I encountered it for the first time yesterday. She writes: “I’m thirty-five and terrified to make mistakes.” This hit…home…because yesterday was my 35th birthday! I’m brand new to 35, but I’m not new to making mistakes, and I still feel afraid of them sometimes. What has certainly not been a mistake is creating this community and sharing it with you.

After Carolyn Martin's poem, we turn to Meghan Woodard’s “Scary Trees, Cozy House” in watercolor, which shows a house in a dark landscape. The short story “Ice Fishing” by Suzanne Miller is about a woman who feels lost and drops everything to return to a place (and miraculously a person) that feels like home. “Remember,” by Irina Tall in pen and ink, depicts the memory of home.

Myra Chappius’s short reflection, “Song of Myself,” meditates on how the places we travel to become part of us. Grace Clark’s watercolor and colored pencil “Cozy Cottage,” drawn while the artist was traveling abroad in Ireland, is in illustration of the sense of home as a universal feeling.

The poem “Is it Home?” by Waseeq Mohammad reflects on the trouble of home when so many people in our war-torn world have been forced out of theirs. In Kristi Schirtzinger’s short story “Mama in the Road,” the narrator sees her own grief in the grief of her mother.

Jasper Glen’s “Searched, Then Sat” in acrylic paint first began as a self-portrait, but became something else.

Jennifer Lagier’s poem, “Soliloquy,” reflects on her sanctuary during the pandemic. Maggie Topel’s digital logo for Wild Greens is a mailbox, inspired by the importance of receiving letters from friends.

Colleen T. Reese’s poem “The best I can do is a love poem” reflects on being within someone else’s home. Melissa Lomax “Mushroom Home for Two” in pencil illustrates two woodland creatures in their adorable mushroom home.

-Rebecca

Support Wild Greens through our Ko-fi page!

Holiday Houses

by Melissa Lomax

Colored pencil

Inspiration: I really enjoy taking wintery strolls during the holiday season. It's such fun to see different types of houses decked out in various ways! This piece became an art advent project for me. I kept the illustration and colored pencils on my art desk. Then each day of December, I would look forward to adding a new home to the festive neighborhood!

Home Visit

Woodbridge, New Jersey, 1980
A weekend away from convent and classroom—lesson plans and evening prayers—and my mother and I share the kitchen sink. She washes, I dry, as chairs scrape linoleum and cigarette smoke disappears.My uncle is trashed like the whiskey bottletossed into the garbage can.His wife grouses about Mrs. Monekstealing her Thursday bingo seat.My father escapes into the living room,gearing up for another Yankee win.
Miles of time away and family’s the same. I smile to myself, as mother hands me a serving spoon. I hand her back a rarity: I’m thirty-five and terrified to make mistakes. She’s baffled by a part of me I never share,and attacks the grease lining a roasting pan. Giving it a vicious scrub, she finally says what she always says: You shouldn’t feel that way.
And what way is that?, I want to ask,but what’s the point? From her critiques about my cleaning skills to the Holy Rulewith its ‘perfection is the path to godliness’,I’ve been schooled. Thirty-fiveand scared to over-step borderlines.
Never mind, I say. Did I tell you about the fellow who falls asleep in my class?He must be bored, she says, turning the panup/down, left/right to check her handywork.It’s spotless now—she’s sure of it—and hands perfection to me.

by Carolyn Martin

Scary Trees, Cozy House

by Meghan Woodard

Watercolor

Inspiration: This time of year I always feel like being at home by the fire. I don't actually have a fireplace so I just get under my grandmother's large wool blanket and turn on the virtual fireplace on Youtube. This same grandmother, who we called Nana, ironically hated when the daylight hours shorten but loved the beauty of the naked fall trees. 

Ice Fishing

by Suzanne Miller

Celine sweeps all the files from her desktop straight into an already overflowing trashbin. She stuffs the gallery of framed childhood photos of herself with her dear papa into her emptied briefcase. “Passed over for partner again,” she mutters in disbelief, “Nothing to show for it all but a brass nameplate on this glorified glass box.” Glancing out at the twenty-seventh-story view, Celine is overcome with an almost irresistible urge to jump. 

Her mind reels back to her younger years, when she and her beloved papa would pass seemingly endless days on the vast Norwegian fjords, savoring the frozen stillness and waiting for the fish to bite. But those days had not been endless, her papa taken far too soon. And now, sequestered for more than a decade in her soulless Trondheim office, Celine has begun to doubt whether that companionable solitude with her papa had even been real.

Celine navigates the revolving lobby door, and plods down the bustling midday sidewalk, jostled by the heedless passersby. “I’m invisible in this city,” she thinks, when even the doorman of her own building stares right through her. 

She hastily packs a duffle, and forgoing her usually detailed planning, Celine retrieves her Volvo from the garage and heads northward toward Tennevoll. She mindlessly tracks the white lines on the E6 well into the deepening night, finally driving aboard the Skarberget ferry for the last leg of her journey. As the boat motors across the narrowest point of the glacial sea, her eyes rise heavenward. “I can never go back,” she murmurs into the star-strewn sky.

It is darker here than she remembers, but some long-held sensory memory guides her to the rough-hewn cabin abandoned so many years before. She pries open the door, an otherworldly squeal of hinges startling her amidst the sweeping silence. Inside she finds a dusty heap of scratchy wool blankets, a pile of logs still neatly stacked by the stove. She sets about warming the place, before collapsing onto her old cot fully dressed. She drags the familiar covers up to her chin and drops into a dreamless sleep.

Celine awakens early, shivering in the icy air. Wrapped in blankets, she rekindles the fire. She nibbles dried cod and mushrooms from her pack, bending toward the stove for warmth. Then she loads fishing gear onto her old sled, dons her arctic-wear, and trudges out onto the frozen fjord.

Celine had helped her papa make fishing camp here a hundred times, but now she sets about the task alone. She’d bought a flip-over tent at the last backcountry store she passed before her ferry crossing, and now it makes for an easy shelter. She drills and chisels through the ice, drops a line and sets her tip-up. She settles onto her camp chair with a heavy sigh. Contentment spreads through her at long last, and she can almost feel her father by her side.

Darkness falls early so far north, and after only a few hours in the hut, Celine drags her chair out to watch as the familiar Northern Lights bloom in the early evening sky. The dancing greens with fringes of pink light take her breath away. She blinks hard as strange vivid spirals of gold and purple appear in the center of the aurora. She gasps when a shimmering orb separates from the swirling colors and descends onto the ice.

Just as suddenly, the orb launches upward again, disappearing from sight. In its wake she spots a distant figure advancing in her direction. Frozen in place, she watches intently but feels no fear. As the form comes nearer, Celine sees it is a man. Lanky and tall, with blond windblown hair, he seems to radiate serenity. The closer he comes, the calmer she feels, and the more eagerly she anticipates his arrival.

The blond man feels somehow familiar, and taking his hand, she leads him back to the shelter of her cabin. He watches with interest as she lights the fire. She offers to share the last of her provisions, brown bread and apples, but he refuses with a slight shake of his head. She points to herself. “Celine,” she says, then turning her finger toward him, asks his name. He meets her eyes but gives no response.

She finishes her meager meal, and crawls exhausted under the bedcovers. Soon the man lays down on the second cot that had once been her papa’s. In an instant Celine is asleep, blissful images from her youth animating her dreams.

Morning dawns. Celine rises, again loads the sled, and signals the man to follow. They traipse out onto the ice, where to her surprise, the man kneels down and falls to work drilling a new fishing hole. Though unsure if he understands her words, Celine sits back and begins to spill bottled-up memories of her gentle papa, and the sweetness of their unhurried days ice fishing on this very spot.

She is heartened to notice the man nodding and smiling, so she carries on with her telling. As the day draws to a close, he again meets her eyes and, in a halting voice, reveals that he knows much about her life, for her papa often spoke longingly of his beloved Celine. She peppers him with questions. “Where are you from? Where is my papa now? Why are you here?” But the man says nothing more.

As the sun descends, the pair work in unison to break camp. Celine leans in to hear the man whisper that their time together on the fjord is almost at an end. “The orb will soon return to reclaim its stranded kin,” he tells her, and she clings to him, nearly paralyzed by the thought of losing this kindred spirit.

Determined to savor what little remains of their time together, the two huddle side by side far out on the bare ice. As darkness claims another day, the Aurora Borealis again appears, and from its center the orb. Before she even has time to bid the man farewell, her papa appears before her. He is older than she remembered, his fair hair now stark white. Overcome, she turns toward her mysterious companion, but the man is gone.

Celine’s papa smiles radiantly down at her as he reaches out his timeworn hand. Weeping, she grasps it in her own, and together they disappear into the night.

Remember

by Irina Tall 

Pen and ink

Inspiration: Sometimes the wind is just a sound in your chest, but when it is at your doorstep, the house that no longer exists... You'll want to be there to repair the stark roof that always leaks in the winter.

Song of Myself

by Myra Chappius

I’ve sailed through quite a few seas—the North, the Mediterranean, the Norwegian. I’ve had my feet planted on the chilly shores of Alaska, the historic streets of Amsterdam, the dusty remains of Rome’s Colosseum. I’ve traversed the skies of the Northern Hemisphere. None of these places have been home, and yet they all have been.  

All of these places—they live in me now. They’re not what I say when someone asks me, “Where are you from?”, but as I stood on them, and in them, breathing their air and seeing their stars, I took in something from them. Something that never leaves. Something I can call upon when I return. 


“I've learned that home is not a place, it's a feeling.” ― Cecelia Ahern, Love, Rosie


The first time I stood on Icelandic soil, I felt at home. I had never been to Iceland. Hadn’t dreamt of going there all my life. I don’t have any relatives there, no history. In fact, I’d be surprised if anyone in all of my African and Hispanic lineage has ever set foot there. There is no reason why it should set my soul at ease. And yet, it does. Each time I return there, the pieces lock into place and I feel myself again. I understand something new about myself each time. It is clear to me that at some point, in some life, this was home. 

The physical concept of home is difficult for me. I can feel content in so many places. I can find peace in the French countryside of Lourmarin, or wholeness in Getxo on the Spanish coast, or spirituality under cover of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel. Nevertheless, I can feel unmoored lying in bed beneath the roof I’ve lived under for two decades. The place is not what creates the comfort…not really. 


“Perhaps home is not a place but simply an irrevocable condition.” — James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room


We absorb—through experience, through time spent—the particles of each land we exist upon, however temporarily. We take with us—when we leave it—more than just souvenirs and memories. We are more. We are changed. And even though we go back to the square-shaped building we call “home”, we go back different. Those particles take root. They accompany us wherever we go after—to the next land, and the next—moving over, making room. Home always is, and ever becomes, the collection of it all inside us.

Cozy Cottage

by Grace Clark

Watercolor and colored pencil

Inspiration: I made this illustration when I was studying abroad in Ireland. As I was starting to miss home, I kept looking at all the beautiful cottages in the town we were staying in and imagining the people who lived in them. I realized that "home" is a universal feeling, rather than a specific place, and decided to capture that feeling in this illustration.

Is it Home?

Home grown always sounds better than war torn—unless it’s an outsider then you want to shroud them neatly in a war zone
Holidays are only lit if your family isn’t on fireHolidays are only lit if your bones aren’t freezing, huddled, tiredHome is only home if it’s where you’re safe and grownHome is only home if the entire world has one—
Otherwise we are all on our own

by Waseeq Mohammad

Mama in the Road 

by Kristi Schirtzinger

There she was, flat out on our gravel road, arms outstretched like Jesus in a blue floral dress. My foot jammed on the brake pedal even as my mind lingered on what I could pull from the freezer to thaw and what time Asa would be home from work. The view from my windshield didn’t make sense.

“Mama!” I said, falling out of the car. “Mama! Why are you in the road?” Her eyes were fixed on the sky, and I just knew in my bones she was dead. And then she blinked. 

“Oh, thank God,” I said over her. “Thank the Lord.”

“Can you get up?” 

The pulse in my ears drowned out my voice. “We need to get you off of this road.” 

She looked straight through me without recognition, “Go away,” she said. 

I got behind her shoulders and began lifting, but she straightened her back like Jesse used to do when he was having a tantrum. Her palms went flat on the road and the more I tugged, the more she gripped at the loose gravel. 

“I don’t understand what you’re doing, but can we talk about it from the house?”

“I’m not moving, Mae.”

I leaned over her. The inverted face was a wall of defiance. “Mama, come on now, get up. Tommy’s gonna be by with the mail any minute.” Then her eyes caught fire and she began chucking gravel over her shoulders at me.  “Leave me be.” 

“I will not leave you be!” I moved behind her again, jamming my hands under her armpits. “Now get up before you get us both killed.”

“Nobody’s asking you to stay. Let Tommy hit me; I’ll just dent that puny car of his.” She turned her face toward the cornfield. Her bosom heaved under her favorite dress, the one she wanted to be buried in. “When Ellis comes by in his new pickup, I’ll bet he runs me clean over, and he might as well.”

“How do you know Ellis is going to drive by here?”

“He does every afternoon on his way to Charlotte Murphy’s.”

I pictured Ellis coming to our door for the first time in his ironed bootcuts and checkered shirt straight out of Rod’s Western Palace. Mama blushed like a girl when he handed her the gas station bouquet of dyed carnations. Daddy would have brought her hand-picked wildflowers.

“So, this is all about that good-for-nothing?” 

No answer, just more rocks.

“And him running over you is going to accomplish what?” All the while I’m behind her, trying to move a boulder. She was a sturdy woman of German stock, and I was my father’s child, wiry and short.  “Move Mama! I know you can.”

“Go away, Mae. You and Asa don’t need me around anyway. You’ve got your job, and Jesse…”

Just then, I heard the voice of Merle Haggard crooning from Tommy’s car stereo.

“Mama! Tommy is coming down the road!”

“Well, I can very well hear that, Mae.”

Now I’m pulling on her muscular, bread-kneading arms, but it’s like picking a 50-pound feed bag off the ground. Tommy was coming fast between the farms, and I had half a mind to leave her, but the other half loved her and needed to problem-solve quick. I ran down the road toward that US Postal flag, bawling like an orphaned calf. “Stop! Stop!” His Honda screeched, and through the dust, he came running headlong toward me.

“What’s wrong?”

“My mama’s in the road,” I huffed. “She won’t move!” 

He ran beside me down the road. “Is she hurt?”

“No, but not for lack of trying.” He gave me a puzzled look, and I didn’t blame him. “It has something to do with Ellis Grove. Anyway, she’s determined to lay there until he comes by and runs her over.” 

“That’s crazy, Mae.” And then we were standing over her. She clamped her eyes shut, but I knew she hadn’t passed out. A fistful of gravel hit the road in a thousand tiny plinks.

“Put that down, Mama,” I said. “Tommy and I are going to lift you off the road. We’ll work all this out after we’ve had a good supper.”

“Well, don’t expect me to help you,” she said.

And she didn’t. Tommy took her upper half, and I took her lower half, and we moved her into the front yard. We dropped her slowly onto the grass, and she slumped silently over her knees. I had never seen my mother this pathetic. She would be embarrassed when she came to her senses.

I sat gazing out at the cornfield for a long time, trying to conjure Daddy on his combine. During harvest, she sat beside him in the big cab until every last ear was in. As the night would darken, I’d press my forehead against the windowpane, watching their silhouettes become one under an orange moon.

“Do you remember our tea parties out here with Grandma’s wedding China?” I put a hand on her back. I hadn’t touched her in so long. “I thought I was big stuff eating cucumber sandwiches and drinking mint julep tea.”

She buried her head in her knees and began a soft weeping.

I stroked her hair like she used to when I was the one crying. “Nail painting and flipping through Redbook Magazine. I can still see Daddy’s knuckly hands on those tiny cups when he joined us.” 

As I rubbed her back, the weeping grew to sobbing. “Ellis doesn’t want me anymore,” she said. “Why doesn’t he want me anymore?”

I wanted to say, Ellis is a city clown, stupid enough to wear snakeskin boots, and you’re smarter than that, but I remembered a time when I loved a fool. 

She wailed from a place too deep to reason with, so I gathered her up like clean laundry until the shuddering stopped. 

“I miss Daddy too,” I said.

Searched, Then Sat

by Jasper Glen

Acrylic paint

Inspiration: I started out this piece trying to paint a self-portrait, but ended up with a blindfolded subject sitting in an indoor/outdoor landscape that could be his home.

Soliloquy

“You aren’t the first to starve with a pen in your hand.” —Grisel Y. Acosta
During third year of pandemic isolation,immunocompromised, masked,I hunger for music, theater, crowded restaurants,remain sequestered behind a moatof fear, rising infections, co-morbidities. 
The dogs have become accustomedto my 24/7 presence, constant attention.I clean closets, reorganize cupboards.Over coffee, I read a friend’s new book,summon my sullen, uncooperative muse.
The garden has never looked better.I dead-head, pull weeds,sow foxglove and lobelia seeds.I cut Peruvian lilies, roses, bearded iris,display fresh bouquets upon kitchen counter.
At the laptop, I grouse and vent,memorialize expressions of discontentwithin documents I eventually delete.Time passes. I meditate, recite mantras of hope,compose a lengthy gratitude list.

by Jennifer Lagier

Wild Greens: Home (December 2024)

by Maggie Topel

Digital drawing

Inspiration: I took some inspiration from Animal Crossing for this logo, for both the color palette and the content. I tried to evoke the cozy feeling of having a letter from a friend waiting for you at home. I thought about the mailbox as being an important part of a home, because it serves as the communication channel to the outside world. It harkens back to the old days before cell phones, when messages would come to our homes instead of a device that we keep on our bodies at all times.

The best I can do is a love poem


Every Tuesday, I sit with the holes in your wall,where a shelf most apparently once stood.
I imagine the titles of books and shapes of bowls and wonder

How much dust might settle on my fingerif I should drag it along the side?
And what of the furniture still left in the house?A stylish lamp in the living  room.The patterned sheets on your bed.Clues of the things they take with themAnd the things that you kept.Quiet walls,White paint. It isrecently rented space. 
I was walking (and thinking) in Chinatown so nowyou’ll find little ceramic catshidden on top of the fridge.
It would be best if you didn’t notice it



yet.

by Colleen T. Reese

Mushroom Home for Two

by Melissa Lomax

Pencil

Inspiration: I've always loved the idea of cozy houses for woodland creatures. This sweet little pair has found a place to call home in a two-story mushroom! There is a reading nook by the fireplace, a table with chairs beside a big round window, and a tiny toadstool mailbox for wintery parcels. Most importantly in this very special home, they have... each other

If you like the issue, you can donate to Wild Greens through our Ko-fi page!

Artists and Contributors

Melissa Lomax

Artist

Melissa Lomax (she/her) is a freelance illustrator, writer, and cartoonist, with 20 years of experience in the creative industry. Some of her clients include American Greetings, Sellers Publishing, Great Arrow Graphics, Lenox Corporation, and Highlights for Children. Her comic 'Doodle Town' posts on GoComics.com, the largest catalog of syndicated cartoons and comics. When she is not in the art studio, she enjoys spending time in nature, drinking really good coffee, and 'everyday adventures' with her husband. Pop by her Instagram @melissalomaxart for weekly inspiration!

Carolyn Martin

Poet

Carolyn Martin (she/her) is a recovering work addict who’s adopted the Spanish proverb, “It is beautiful to do nothing and rest afterwards” as her daily mantra. She is blissfully retired—and resting—in Clackamas, Oregon where she delights in gardening, feral cats, and backyard birds. Her poems have appeared in more than 200 publications throughout the U.S., Europe, and Australia. For more: www.carolynmartinpoet.com.

Meghan Woodard

Artist

Meghan enjoys painting scenes from childhood, travels, dreams, and her backyard in watercolor. She began exploring this medium after the birth of her daughter in 2020, looking for a relaxing creative outlet that she could fit into her daughter's nap-time schedule or after a day of work. When Meghan isn't looking after her four-year-old or painting, she enjoys a performance and teaching career as a classical oboist. 

Suzanne Miller

Author

Suzanne Miller followed a non-traditional path, dropping out of high school in her teens, only to graduate from Yale Law School in her 30s. Recently retired, Suzanne lives in a lovely seaside town in Connecticut with Molly the Giant Schnauzer. Embracing her newfound freedom, Suzanne has rediscovered her early love of writing, penning personal essays and flash fiction. Most recently her work has appeared in CafeLit, The Rumen, Krazines/Moss Piglet, and surely magazine. You can find her Substack account at https://substack.com/@suzesq.

Irina Tall (Novikova)

Artist

Irina Tall (Novikova) is an artist, graphic artist, and illustrator. She graduated from the State Academy of Slavic Cultures with a degree in art. She also has a bachelor's degree in design. The first personal exhibition "My soul is like a wild hawk" (2002) was held in the Museum of Maxim Bogdanovich. In her works, she raises themes of ecology, in 2005 she devoted a series of works to the Chornobyl disaster, drawing on anti-war topics. The first big series she drew was The Red Book, dedicated to rare and endangered species of animals and birds.

Myra Chappius

Author, Poetry Editor, and Copyeditor

Myra Chappius (she/her) is the author of six works of fiction and poetry. While her passion lies with shorter creations, it is her aspiration to complete a full-length novel and screenplay someday. She enjoys reading, running, cinema, music, and seeing the world. When not doing mom things, she is working full-time, learning a new language, and planning her next trip. 

You can follow Myra on Instagram at @inwordform. Her work can be purchased on Amazon.

Grace Clark

Artist

Grace Clark (she/her) is an artist from Pennsylvania who received her illustration degree from Arcadia University in May 2024. She focuses on creating whimsical watercolor illustrations featuring animals and nature subjects and loves to add a touch of humor to all of her work.

Waseeq Mohammad

Poet

Waseeq Mohammad is a writer who likes to learn and gain allies. He hopes to inspire and/or entertain others with his work.

Kristi Schirtzinger

Author

Kristi Schirtzinger is an emerging author with an MFA in Creative Writing from Ashland University. She grew up in rural Ohio, where she and many family members still reside. Her work has been featured in The Black Fork Review, The International Feminism and Rhetoric Conference, Drunk Monkeys, Wild Greens magazine, Flash Fiction magazine, and Dark Winter Literary Magazine. Her fascination with Celtic history has inspired folktale retellings, short stories, and a novel about the Boudiccan rebellion of 60 AD entitled Three Summer Moons. Find Kristi’s work at https://www.gravelroadtales.com/ 

Jasper Glen

Artist

Jasper Glen is a poet and artist from Vancouver, Canada. His work appears or is forthcoming in The Brooklyn Review, Posit, A Gathering of the Tribes, Word For/ Word, Anti-Heroin Chic, Ranger Magazine, and elsewhere. Poems have been nominated for Best New Poets and the Pushcart Prize. jasperglen.com

Jennifer Lagier

Poet

Jennifer Lagier lives half a block from the stage where Jimi Hendrix torched his guitar during the 1967 Monterey Pop Festival. Visit her website: jlagier.net

Maggie Topel

Artist

Maggie Topel (she/her) is an artist and writer living in Philadelphia. She designs our seasonal Wild Greens logos and social media avatar.

Colleen T. Reese

Poet

Colleen T. Reese is an emerging poet who calls Philadelphia home. Her poetry has been published in The Purposeful Mayonnaise and Wild Greens magazine but is most often heard recited over a gin and tonic in dive bars across the city.

Jessica Doble

Poetry Editor

Jessica Doble (she/her) holds a PhD in English from the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. She's published two critical works: “Hope in the Apocalypse: Narrative Perspective as Negotiation of Structural Crises in Salvage the Bones” in Xavier Review, and “Two-Sides of the Same Witchy Coin: Re-examining Belief in Witches through Jeannette Winterson’s The Daylight Gate” in All About Monsters. Her poetry has appeared in PubLab and Wild Greens magazine. 

Tim Brey

Music Editor

Tim Brey (he/him) is a jazz pianist living in Philadelphia. He holds positions as Artist-in-Residence and Adjunct Faculty at Temple University and The University of the Arts, where he teaches jazz piano, music theory, and improvisation. Check out more of his music and his performance schedule at https://www.timbreymusic.com.

Jacqueline Ruvalcaba

Senior Editor

Jacqueline (she/her) edits fiction and nonfiction as the senior editor for Wild Greens magazine. She earned her BA in English and creative writing at the University of California, Riverside, and completed training as a 2021 publishing fellow with the Los Angeles Review of Books. She previously served as a co-editor for PubLab, editor for UCR's Mosaic Art and Literary Journal, and as an intern with Soho Press. In her free time, she loves to read all kinds of stories, including YA, literary fiction, sci-fi, and fantasy.

Hayley Boyle

Arts Editor

Hayley (she/her) creates the cover image for every issue of Wild Greens and serves as the Arts Editor. Hayley is a social justice seeker, world traveler, rock climber, dog snuggler, frisbee player, event planner, and storyteller. She loves to paint with watercolors, embroider, and write. She grew up reading sci-fi and fantasy, and, to this day, she still turns to those genres to help her make sense of the world. She calls Philadelphia home where she lives with her husband Evan and dog Birdie, and she wouldn't have it any other way. You can find Hayley on Instagram @hayley3390.

Rebecca Lipperini

Editor-in-chief

Rebecca Lipperini (she/her) is a writer, teacher, and academic living in Philadelphia, and the founding editor of Wild Greens magazine. She holds a PhD in English from Rutgers University, where she taught all kinds of classes on literature and poetry and writing, and wrote all kinds of papers on the same. Her essay on the soothing aesthetics of the supermarket was recently published in PubLab. She teaches in the Critical Writing Program at the University of Pennsylvania.

You can find Rebecca on Instagram @rebeccalipperini (personal) @wildgreensmag (you already know it).