Cover photo by Dattatreya Paul*

Where I live, two different types of ferns look in at me. One of them is a pine tree. The pine cones hang alluringly. For it is nature’s quaint mystic policy that though a pine tree has both male and female cones, cross-pollination is the norm. Or is it the pine tree’s rebellion against what nature first thought was advisable? Living the norm is a matter of habit. Healing from the scars of the norm is a process of choice.

Being a social animal, human beings often get defined by the community they are in and the company they keep. The social mores and codes of conduct seep into their existence. In this amalgam, there emerges a peculiar thing that differentiates one from the other. It is the individuated experience and perception that creates difference of expressions. This is born out of a discomfort. It maybe the discomfort of ill-fitted shoes, of square souls in round pegs of normalcy. Or it might be the other way around. It may be an eerie knowledge of an opinion that questions the normalcy of norms of difference too. Our vision is to harness this discomfort that writers, artists, and other creative individuals feel.

We have showcased 23 creative writers/artists in the inaugural issue of The Pine Cone Review, who perceive brownness and being brown in their own ways. My heartfelt gratitude is extended to the contributors, without whom this issue would not be possible.  I hope readers will find this issue intriguing.

Best wishes and regards to all on behalf of The Pine Cone Review Team .

Susmita Paul

Editor-in-Chief

Poetry & Art Editor

The Pine Cone Review

02nd January 2021



Table of Contents



Coconut Monica Nathan


2 Artworks Piu Mahapatra

2 Poems Suchita Parikh Mundul

Samosa Shringar Moniratna Roy

2 poems Stephen Oladayo Oladokun

The colour of my skin Aishwarya Das Gupta

Troupe Carl Scharwath

Hijab Mark Andrew Heathcote

The Colours of Life Geetha Nair G.

Devi Ma Padmini Viswanathan

She tree Ann Privateer

War Tali Cohen Shabtai

Shades Chitra Gopalakrishnan

2 poems Ivan Bekaren

A World of Sepia Dibyasree Nandy

Step forward Anannya Dasgupta

Diwali Amrita Bhattacharyya

The Circle The Woven Wyrd

Abstract nature Cynthia Yatchman



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*Dattatreya Paul is a young artist who loves all things related to outer space, vehicles and colours. He is a kindergartener who wants to have two jobs when he grows up: an architect and a tram driver.