A troubled teen is the focus of Cynthia Morrison Phoel's "A Good Boy," published in TMR Volume 26, number 3. We follow Dobrin, the young man struggling with his parents' silence. Ever since his father purchased a satellite dish instead of saving money to heat their home, Dobrin's mother has refused to speak to her husband. Dobrin stands by as his father gets drawn into the dish's allure, and together they watch beautiful girls dancing on late-night television. These scenes are particularly haunting, as Dobrin envisions his mother in the next room, such a contrast from the lascivious women that populate the television screen. Set in Bulgaria, the story explores poverty, marital issues, and one boy's attempt to become a man despite his father's shortcomings. Phoel's work has recently appeared in the Spring 2008 issue. -- Brittany Barr
Cynthia Morrison Phoel earned an MFA from the Warren Wilson College Program for Writers. In addition to the Missiouri Review, her stories have appeared in the Gettysburg Review and Harvard Review. She lives in Newton, Massachusetts, with her husband and two children.
Featuring work by: Carl Adamshick, Nat Akin, Maury Feinsilber, Charles Green, Alison B. Hart, Peter Levine, William Lychack, Andy Mozina, Todd James Pierce, Jennifer Richter, Brandon Schrand, and Jillian Weise.
With an interview with Chuck Klosterman.

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