Journal of Alta California

The Gnome

T STARTED CURLED UP IN A LITTLE STORY I OVERHEARD: the one about being on drugs out in the woods and finding a disabled kid and bringing him back to your camp and feeding him, believing in your altered state the kid was a gnome. Well, I believed in it and told the story to my husband and his friends on more than one occasion. I kept telling it. I clearly loved to. I couldn’t tell you why. I found out several months later that it was an urban legend and felt the fool, unsure of whether I should tell them this or not. You know a story’s good when it will not abide its end, when it feels like a secret you might keep from your husband and your kid for a very long time indeed. How else to explain how

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Journal of Alta California

Journal of Alta California4 min read
The Slag Heap of History
They finally dismantled the Confederate statues on a summer Saturday morning. Shoppers were heading to Charlottesville’s downtown farmers market when the crane and flatbed truck arrived to cart away the controversial memorials to Robert E. Lee and Th
Journal of Alta California15 min read
‘Look Out or You’ll Be Poisoned’
The attempted murder happened on an ordinary spring day at the Carmel artist colony in 1914. The novelist Alice MacGowan went to get something to eat from the cooler on the back porch of her home overlooking the bay. When she took a bite of leftover
Journal of Alta California2 min read
Supernova
Thea Matthews was born and raised on Ohlone land, San Francisco. She holds an MFA in poetry from New York University, and her poetry has appeared in Southern Indiana Review, Interim, Tahoma Literary Review, the New Republic, and other publications. C

Related Books & Audiobooks