
The Crane Husband

Children cut from the yellowed paper of eviction notices.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
He was too thin. Too light. Mom needed to make money. We needed more groceries. But I didn’t know how to ask for that either.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
There was a drawing of my dad. He was halfway buried in the ground, his arms stretched up and holding on to a bird as it desperately tried to fly away. The expression on my father’s face—panicked, pleading, an expression of sorrow and longing. I looked at the bird, its beak wide open, its one anguished, livid eye.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
Was there a string I could pull to stop my father from dying? Was there a patch I could secure to block my mother from going away?
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
It was January and weirdly warm. The whole world was warm. The deep freezes and wide snowfields that my mother remembered from her youth had transformed to winters that now oscillated between unsettlingly temperate damp and bitter cold.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
It thrilled me to my core to be taken seriously.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
Love opens the city gates wide, and allows all manner of horrors right inside.
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
She flew away. She was his mother and then … she wasn’t. She
Kelly Barnhill • The Crane Husband
The remains of an abandoned hobo camp sat heaped in a corner. The farm conglomerate had pressured the town to empty those encampments a few weeks earlier—that happened a lot during the run-up to planting season. They claimed it was for safety reasons, but everyone knew it really was an attempt to avoid any potential bad publicity if their “smart”
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