Skip to main content
  • Blog
  • UND Writers Conference
  • Scope of this search:
Floodwall Magazine
Floodwall Magazine
Scope of this search:
Scope of this search:
Floodwall Magazine
  • Home
  • Academics
  • English
  • Floodwall Magazine
  • Issue 11, Spring 2025
Skip Section Navigation
  • Floodwall Magazine
  • Recent Issues Show/hide children
    • Issue 9, Spring 2024
    • Issue 10, Fall 2024
    • Issue 11, Spring 2025
  • Submission Guidelines Show/hide children
    • General Submissions
    • Creative Writing Scholarship Submissions
  • Floodwall Archives
  • Floodwall Reviews
  • Greenway Press Show/hide children
    • Home & Mission Statement
    • About Greenway Press
    • Submissions
    • Our Chapbooks

Issue 11, Spring 2025

From the Editors

Time flies when you’re having fun! We are proud to present volume two, issue eleven of Floodwall, the University of North Dakota’s student-run literary magazine! Each issue seems to progress quicker than the last, and after the…generous winter the North Dakota powers that be granted us, it’s hard to believe we’re already wrapping up another issue and presenting the work of our incredible contributors with you, the reader. The team here at Floodwall are so grateful to our wonderful support system, both in and out of UND’s wingspan. Much love to you all, dear readers.

This issue is special for many reasons, including that of the incredible work showcased within its pages. But what is perhaps most spectacular is that Floodwall 2.11 is our fifth-anniversary issue! Floodwall 2.0—the revamp of the original magazine that entered hibernation in 2014—has now seen ten issues to production, each showcasing the beauty of UND’s own creative community. From start to finish, each issue has been produced by students attending UND. Those who know their lit mags might recognize that five years is no small feat—the average lifespan of a lit mag is around three years! We owe Floodwall’s success to a myriad of faces, both past and present; to Floodwall’s OG masthead, Floodwall 2.0’s original masthead, and all Floodwall volunteers, readers, contributors, and supporters, thank you. You are the lifeblood of this magazine.  

Following the transition of power nationally, Floodwall has seen its own baton pass. Two Assistant Managing Editors, Jasmine Patera and Veronika Linstrom, joined the team this semester and will fully take the reins as Co-Editors in the fall. They’ve done a wonderful job learning the ropes, and we have no doubts that they will continue to do so. Under the guidance of Floodwall advisors Dr. Patrick Henry and Dr. Courtney Kersten, there’s no doubt that Floodwall will continue to stand the test of time. Here’s to another five years (and beyond)! 

With the spring semester coming to a close at UND, curl up with our newest issue. Jeremy Hautau’s “The River Runs through It,” serves as our fifth anniversary cover image, reminding us of our namesake and deeply submerged roots in the student experience at UND. Dive into the pages below and explore the broad conversations presented. The twisted agony of family ties, brought to horrific extremes; confrontations with gender expectations, queer love, and the heavy hand of death; a deep consideration of images, and images displaying the world around us; and worlds that take the reader to the brink of magic and nostalgia—all these find their place here. Floodwall recognizes its distinct privilege to serve as an artifact of the student experience at UND. We hold their work close to our hearts, and our contributors bare theirs to you. 

The success of this magazine is reliant on that of our community. To our contributors past and present, thank you for trusting Floodwall with your creative work during your time at UND. To our supporters, faculty, and staff, Floodwall would just be a pipe dream without the guidance and mentorship you provide. Thank you. And to you, reader, our biggest thanks. Thank you for your kindness, support, and determination to see a student-run lit mag succeed at UND. You are worth creating for. 

We owe wonderful team of student readers, section editors, copyeditors, chief copyeditors, design and layout volunteers, and proofreaders a huge round of applause. Be sure to check out the masthead to get a full list of volunteers. They deserve their flowers.

To read this spring's issue offline, download the complete and searchable PDF file of Floodwall 2.11.

John Little Fiction Scholarship Honorees

Honna Westlund, Winner of the 2025 John Little Fiction Scholarship Winner

Haunted Hill

Tanvir Hasan Chowdhury, Runner-up for the 2025 John Little Fiction Scholarship

The Run

Fiction

Jameson Askew

The Sneaker Bride

Korbyan Chavez

On Dying

Sarah Golden

A Cracked Case

Backyard Blues

Labyrinth

Brenden Kimpe

Hoppers

Robert Moore, Jr.

Siren's Wail

Abigail Petersen

The City Dust Angels

Concrete Parachute

Ava Stockstad

Arcade

Thomas McGrath Award Honorees

Ella C. Weinmann, Winner of the 2025 Thomas McGrath Award

Paper Cuts

Burn the Girl

Maybe

Jasmine Patera, Runner-up for the 2025 Thomas McGrath Award

You Are Not Playing the Game

Albuterol sulfate; 90 mcg

Poetry

Clara Anderson-Cameron

Porterville, CA

dyke knight

Jameson Buckau

touch

Drake Carnes

Blinking Line

Korbyan Chavez

Womanhood Sucks

Sarah Golden

County Road Twenty-Two

Aubrey Griedl

Winter Haikus

Brenden Kimpe

A Message to You

The Writer

Tabitha Lee

A Queer Platonic

Kamea Modesitt

Written in the Stars

Robert Moore, Jr.

Ways to Catch a Frog

Chloe Piekkola

This poem is an orange.

Joseph Richter

Orange Cat

Azayla Sabin

Just Like Yesterday

James Stanton

Spring River

Fractured Family

Audrey Tumberg

An Irrepressible Hunger

Sammi Weber

below the surface

Elisabeth Yager

choke

Gladys Boen Scholarship Honorees

Jasmine Patera, Winner of the 2025 Gladys Boen Scholarship

Poetry as Performance: The Case for "Camp" in Catullus

Honna Westlund, Runner-up for the 2025 Gladys Boen Scholarship

Haunted Hill

Nonfiction

Korbyan Chavez

My Two Legs Are Broken, but Look at Me Dance

Veronika Linstrom

It's Just a Burning Memory

Robert Moore, Jr.

Why Do They Call Them Images?

Korbyan Chavez

Light through the Birch

Tree with Fruit

Birch in Wheat

Jeremy Hautau

The River Runs through It

Robert Moore, Jr.

Hoarfrost and Dirty Snow

Kya Olstad

Angel Wing

The Painted Sky

Department of English
Merrifield Hall Room 200K
276 Centennial Dr Stop 7209
Grand Forks, ND 58202-7209
P 701.777.3321
english@UND.edu
  • Facebook

We use cookies on this site to enhance your user experience.

By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies, Privacy Information.

Department of English

Floodwall Magazine
Merrifield Hall Room 110
276 Centennial Dr Stop 7209
Grand Forks, ND 58202-7209

floodwall@UND.edu
University of North Dakota

© 2025 University of North Dakota - Grand Forks, ND - Member of ND University System

  • Accessibility & Website Feedback
  • Terms of Use & Privacy
  • Notice of Nondiscrimination
  • Student Disclosure Information
  • Title IX
©