Account Options

  1. Sign in
    Screen reader users: click this link for accessible mode. Accessible mode has the same essential features but works better with your reader.

    Books

    1. My library
    2. Help
    3. Advanced Book Search

    Ls Land Issue 3 -

    The standout piece is “The Boundary Tree,” a short comic by M. Yeong that uses a sparse, almost woodcut-like line art to tell a story of two neighbors disputing a property line that may or may not be haunted. Yeong’s pacing is masterful: each panel breathes. Elsewhere, the prose poem “What the Drainage Ditch Remembers” is a surprising gut-punch, turning a mundane landscape feature into a chronicle of forgotten labor and loss.

    LS Land Issue 3 won’t be for everyone. It’s introverted, weird, and occasionally messy. But for readers who believe that small-press comics and lit mags can still surprise—who want art that looks like a backroad rather than a highway—this is essential. 4/5 stars. ls land issue 3

    A few contributions lean too heavily on abstract metaphor without grounding. “Rot Season” has lovely sentences but feels like it’s reaching for a conclusion it never finds. Still, even the weaker pieces fit the issue’s theme: land as memory, land as wound, land as stubborn, living thing. The standout piece is “The Boundary Tree,” a