Read the winning piece of our 2025 Nonfiction Contest “Through the Mirror” by Jessie Cato selected by Lucy Ives.

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Summer 2024 • Vol. XLVI No. 3 Extinction |

Extinction Studies

Lucienne Rickard has spent five weeks drawing a large-scale pencil sketch of [a] critically endangered bird. Picking up her eraser, she tells her audience, “If we don’t do something soon, this is what will happen.”

— Stephanie Eslake, The Guardian

The hardest species to remove 
was the Xerces blue butterfly.

Something to do with rendering
the multiplicity of microscopic scales

that cohere, from a distance,
as a wing. A wing bordered

by a fringe of gossamer
that the artist, in the effort

for absolute accuracy, smudged
with her palm, dispersing

the graphite to better feign
the flicker of movement

Some of the animals, smeared
against the paper in the midst

of disappearance, trailed what was left
of themselves behind themselves,

dorsal fins erupted into cloudbursts
of crosshatch, blots of nothingness

stippled through the eye of a crayfish.
Nonetheless, most of the wipeout

took no time at all. The last image
that remained, a swift parrot, the artist

began to erase with a slow gash
through the feathers of the breast.

Then the artist drew a door.
Then the artist left the room.
Photo of Matthew Tuckner

Matthew Tuckner received his MFA in creative writing at NYU and is currently a PhD candidate in English and creative writing at the University of Utah. His debut collection of poems, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, is forthcoming from Four Way Books in 2025.

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