JUNETEENTH Special edition
Juneteenth: America‘s Unfinished Promise | Standing Alone at Vicksburg | Frank X Walker Reads “Amazin’ Grace” on Its 25th Anniversary | Kevin Tarver’s Poem For Colored Boys Who Still Dream
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Stories

Silhouette of a person falling backward against a soft rainbow gradient background, symbolizing vulnerability, struggle, and hope—accompanying Kevin Tarver’s poem "For Colored Boys" about Black queer youth and resilience.

For Colored Boys: A Poem

From Magic City, a lyric cry of solidarity against shame and silence.

Learning to Love the A Minus

Or, How the Pandemic Kicked My Kitchen Perfectionism to the Curb

The Special Decadence of Pimento Cheese

Sarah Brown knows exactly what’s right and exactly what’s wrong in the making of pimento cheese, specifically the sort that will send a shiver down your spine.

Four Poems by Will Wellman

Will Wellman brings us four poems from his heart — and from his native home of Florida.

The Old Man’s Favorite Bird Dog

His dog’s name was Rusty. He was a German shorthaired pointer. Daddy said he was the best bird dog ever.

Reconciliation Road

In a story from 2021, Maurice Carlos Ruffin and Tad Bartlett hit the road in Louisiana to talk about — and then write about — the South’s future.

Why We Hope

You can find hope inside every quality that defines us as Southerners.

About Salvation South

A refuge for Southern storytellers and a haven for Southern readers

That Dog Won’t Hunt

Richard Murff admits to being perhaps the only Southerner ever to own two hunting dogs, neither of which would hunt.

But I Have Hope

Russell Worth Parker is a North Carolinian and a retired Marine Corps lieutenant colonel. He’s seen a lot and, like all of us, he lives every day in a nation more divided than ever. Still, he has hope. This is why.

My Superpower

When Lea-Anne Jackson’s little sister was diagnosed with leukemia, Lea-Anne was convinced she had a superpower that would save her. Then one day, it stopped working.