Archive
Volume 1, Spring 2009
Poetry
Featured Poet: Ted Dodson
Interview with Ted Dodson, by Astrid Drew
We Are Our Own
Cartographers
Question to Sailors Hating the
Sea
Question to Physicists
Question to the Cyclops
Question to the Baseball
Player Who’ll Never
Win the World Series
—-
Nights, Here
Dated Globe
Dirty Silverware
by Carolyn Clark
Juhu, by Priyanka Ghosh
Since Sexton, by Margot Brown
Perigean Tide, by Robert LeBlanc
Arbitrareum (1): Eastern Path, and
Arbitrareum (5): Central Hill Top
by Francesco Grisanzio
Housework with the Bell Jar, and
Red Rose May
by Cherryl E. Garner
Fiction
Admiral, by John Greiner
Cloud Walking by Matthew B. Dexter
How to Make Zuppa Osso Buco, by Corinne Wahlberg
Essay
Toward a Cinema of Total Horror, by Jonathan Kieran
“Whatever vignettes of bodily intrusion and vulnerability may follow, however, present an altered set of possibilities; the universe of normal human relationships is undercut by the transition to one of body-hatred—physical misanthropy—and extraordinary victimization. All horror movies are concerned largely with the play of these two universes.”
Art
A pair of fabulous photographers graced the pages of Interrobang’s inaugural issue. Click the thumbnails for larger versions of their work.
JUSTIN BENTTINEN is an alien collecting data incarnated as a human. As such, it is his mission to observe as many things as possible. His aesthetic is informed by a love of living things, the beauty of decay, and a knack for seeing the universe in a water drop. A native to Rhode Island, he loves finding out what he can in this small yet rather interesting space. Shoots both digital and analogue photographs. Soon-to-be graduate of the University of Rhode Island with a B.S. in Marine Biology.
STUART WINDOW is an English immigrant with an implausible and unfortunate surname. He is a self-taught photographer currently roaming South County, Rhode Island.



