The death of a bird haunts the relationship between two siblings. A
lonely narrator waits for a bus that never comes. A boy makes soup with
his grandmother and wonders about the memories she has buried. For the
sixteenth edition of Verge, we asked contributors to reflect on the
theme of Home, a word that took on a new meaning after a year of
solitude and separation. We chose this theme because we hoped to read
about homes of all kinds: unhomely homes, abandoned homes, unlikely
homes, forgotten homes, found homes. And we were awed by the beauty,
depth, and variety in the pieces we received. Our writers explored homes
of past, present, and future; they probed the bleakness of domesticity
and mourned the loss of what was once held close. They wrote about
familial ties and found communities, about the painfulness of childhood
and the bonds of ancestry. Writing, indeed, to make a home in.