- 2 hours ago
By John Waddy Bullion

Thomas Edison was not fond of allowing his work to cross over into his domestic life, except for the time he beckoned his second wife, Mina, to come sit beside him at his workbench, where he helped her hook electrodes up to an oyster and deliver low-voltage shocks into the creature until its shell opened, disgorging a gleaming, white, opaque pearl the same size and circumference of the ball bearings the perennially sleep-deprived Edison was fond of cupping in his hands whenever he felt himself succumbing to exhaustion, so that he could instead drift into the twilight state of consciousness where he believed genius and inspiration were the most accessible, the same ball bearings that would would drop from his palms as he teetered on the precipice of deep, dumbfounded sleep, clatter noisily to the floor, and shock him awake.
John Waddy Bullion’s writing has appeared in BULL, HAD, X-R-A-Y, the Texas Review, Hunger Mountain, and Vol 1. Brooklyn, among other fine places, and his debut collection of short stories, This World Will Never Run Out of Strangers, is forthcoming from Cowboy Jamboree Press in November 2025.
Art by Lisa McLemore, an artist, poet, and photographer living in Washington DC.