Tag Archives: Europe

“Mushroom Searching” Flash Fiction by Zary Fekete

These days there are many books, many pages, all promising, but the right way to begin is to ask grandmother. Which grandmother? Choose one. They are all correct and never lie. Nagyi or Nagyika or Mamikam. From Pest or Dunantul or the Alfold, they each have their secrets. They were all young once. Their routes led them from little country hamlets and acres of chipped Communist blocs, down through the decades, past wall after wall, papered with propaganda, each sign promising something just beyond reach, not quite true. But the mushroom recipe doesn’t lie. It just requires the right path.

Choose favorable weather. Just after a rain followed by a humid sun, hidden away in the shadows of the forest. Not a stir of breeze among the wet trunks. The only sound, the drip drip of soaked leaves and the tiny scurrying of beetles and ants among the underbrush. Bring along a basket lined with embroidered cloth for collection and grandfather’s sharp knife for exploring beneath rotting logs, make sure you aren’t bitten by something waiting in the soaking darkness. Wear the right clothes. Tuck your tights into stockings and tie petticoats around knees. Wrap each leg carefully so nothing can be caught in the grasping, greedy branches. Walk carefully. Hold hands. Pick a partner. Step where she stepped. 

Watch the ground carefully. Remember the legend of the boy who wouldn’t share his bread while he walked with his friends through the woods. He had a full mouth every time they looked back at him, so he spit out each guilty mouthful. The bread-droppings left a trail. They transformed into mushrooms, and that’s why when you find one there are always more nearby.

Once your basket is full bring it to the village examiner. Some mushrooms are safe, but some carry poisonous secrets. Some promise succor but silently wound. Some sing sweet songs but echo with a hollow gong. All taste sweet and feathery on first bite, but some have dark pools in their past. Bring home the good ones, but throw the rest into the stream and watch them float away.

Finally, prepare your soup. Mix the mushrooms with the right broth. Thin-sliced for clear soup. Thick-chunked for heavy stew. The mushrooms will take on the flavor of their companions. In this way they make good neighbors. They don’t betray secrets. They keep what is given to them. They protect what is beneath them. The preserve the family lineage deep below the earth.


Zary Fekete grew up in Hungary. He has a debut novella (Words on the Page) out with DarkWinter Lit Press and a short story collection (To Accept the Things I Cannot Change: Writing My Way Out of Addiction) out with Creative Texts. He enjoys books, podcasts, and many many many films. Twitter and Instagram: @ZaryFekete Bluesky:zaryfekete.bsky.social

This piece was originally published in Papers Publishing journal.


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“Baby Boomers Returning Home” Poem by Sarah Das Gupta

Piles of soft tissues, hidden layers of consciousness,
shifting sands on a distant shore.
That picture of the sea, the path of reflected moonlight,
the boat on the horizon that never arrives.
An antique sword on the grey wall; forgotten wars,
unremembered dead, no echoing bugle call.
Hearths, grates, long cold – once crimson embers, dead,
in half-forgotten places.
On dusty shelves, gilded volumes, lie unloved, unread,
Meredith, Disraeli, Carlyle, Macaulay, Chatterton, Gibbon,
confined to donnish chat in seminars or Senior Common Rooms.
The kitchen range, smell of new bread, of Christmas cake
stirred weeks before.
The kiss of warmth after wintry walks through snowy fields
and icy lanes.
A back gate unlocked, for next door to borrow eggs,
a pinch of salt, a packet of tea.
Vague shapes of ornaments, brash trash, gifts from Brighton,
Hastings and Winchelsea.
Fading in the shifting sands of time, those many dogs
chasing rabbits through golden autumn woods.
Asleep, dreaming, perhaps still following the old habits
across the fields of memory.
Music echoes, Mozart, Mahler, Chubby Checker, Conrad Twitty
smoke, log fires, the smell of rain.


Gas bills, health insurance, disabled badges, pensions, funerals
New York, London, Sydney, Paris, Rome, Berlin, Vancouver
Tissues tear, sand shifts,
the tide retreats again -


Sarah Das Gupta is a writer from Cambridge, UK who has also lived and worked in India and Tanzania. Her work has been published in twenty countries from Australia to Kazakhstan. It has appeared in over 200 literary magazines and anthologies including ‘The New English Review’, ‘ Moss Piglet’, ‘Songs of Eretz’, ‘Quail Bell’, ‘Waywords’, ‘Cosmic Daffodil’, ‘Dorothy Parker’s Ashes’, ‘Hooghly Review’, ‘Meat for Tea’, ‘Rural Fiction’ and many others. This year she has been nominated for Best of the Net’ and a Dwarf Star’.


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If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.