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NewPages Blog :: New Magazine Issues

Stop by the NewPages Magazine Stand to find the latest issues of your favorite online, print, and electronic literary magazines.

Magazine Stand :: Consequence – Volume 18.1

Many of the pieces in Volume 18.1 of Consequence focus on the power of language while addressing the consequences, realities, and experiences of war and geopolitical violence — whether in its written or spoken form. From H.R. Spencer’s poem “The Grammar of War” to Dewaine Farria’s essay “Speaking as a Veteran” to Bänoo Zan’s translation “Silent Language” to Glory Duruem’s short story “Our Unspoken Country,” which emphasizes the potency of things not said.

“As writers ourselves,” Consequence editors comment, “we certainly appreciate pieces that highlight the muscle of words, specifically how they can give shape to an ostensibly indescribable experience or help us discern and engage with convoluted realities. Of the many invaluable capabilities language possesses, its ability to help others glimpse, or even connect to, another person’s elusive experience or tangled world is possibly its greatest. Few other arenas spotlight this ability like those related to the consequences of war and geopolitical violence. . . . language, especially that which is well-crafted, has the ability to help us see the outlines and details of these oversized and often unbelievable realities.”

These details help us become more aware and, ideally, more deeply affected by these experiences. Or as Sayani De writes in “In the Same Tongue”: “Because stories need to be told for the larger collective, for the personal in larger histories, so that they can help to remember, resist, and transform.”

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – June 2026

The June 2026 issue of The Lake is now online. This monthly journal of poetry and poetics features new works by Ben Bruges, Clive Donovan, Andy Humphrey, Albert Hwang, Jackson, Paul McDonald, Larry Ollivier, Anya Reeve, Jeff Ryan, and Michael T. Smith.

This issue also includes Charles Rammelkamp’s reviews of Timestamp by David Breskin and every single beat of my heart Pamela Wax and Hannah Stone’s reviews of Lives Outgrown by Susan Darlington and The Professor of Transformation by Elaine Ewart. The Lake’s unique column One Poem Reviews invites poets to share works from recently published collections. This June issue showcases works by J Brooke, Emma Kate Brown, Jasmine Erice Harling, and Richard Stimac.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: L’Esprit Literary Review – April 2026

Founded in February 2022, the centenary month of the publication of Ulysses, L’Esprit Literary Review was born in celebration of the literary revolution of consciousness represented by High Modernism, and seeks to publish work written in the fearless, risk-adept, and revolutionary spirit. The online journal accepts submissions of short fiction, creative non-fiction, novel extracts, literary criticism, book reviews, artwork, and photography.

The April 2026 biannual issue features works by Richard Leise & Lillian Taylor, Jessica Faulkner, Katrin Arefy, Miah Jeffra, Daniel Barbiero, Kent Kosack, Caroline Bock, Chance Freihaut, Maggie Armstrong, Jennifer McMahon, Margaret Dunn, H. L. Onstad, Michal Tallo, Ann Landi, Amanda Michalopoulou, and Andrea Lewis.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Editor’s Choice :: (Out) On the Road

(Out) On the Road: The Radical Joy of Queer Travel by Lindsey Danis
Ig Publishing, May 2026

Queer people hold passports at twice the rate of the general population and collectively spend around $100 billion a year on travel—yet remain one of the most underserved groups in the travel industry. A new book aims to change that.

(Out) On the Road by LGBTQ+ travel writer Lindsey Danis is the comprehensive, by-us-for-us guide that queer travelers have been waiting for.

“LGBTQ+ travelers are a growing demographic. They are passionate about travel and willing to spend money on it. Yet time and again, they are ignored or told to stick to a handful of ‘safe’ destinations. This advice fails to build their confidence, validate their identities, or teach them how to advocate for themselves,” says Danis.

(Out) On the Road challenges that conventional wisdom head-on. Drawing on decades of personal travel and eight years as an LGBTQ+ travel writer for publications including AFAR and GayCities, Danis covers everything from navigating safety to funding travel to finding support and connection on the road. Readers will discover how to face their fears, expand their comfort zones, plan affirming adventures — both in the US and internationally — and return home transformed.


To discover more great books from small, independent, and university presses, visit the NewPages Guide to Publishers as well as our Books Received monthly roundup. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to stay up to date!

Magazine Stand :: Cimarron Review – 225

Since 1967, Cimarron Review has published imaginative, truth-driven poetry, fiction, and nonfiction by emerging writers alongside celebrated, award-winning literary voices. The newest issue (225) continues the tradition with poetry by Diana K. Malek, Jenn Blair, Lisa Titus, Sharon Lin, Dorsia Smith Silva, A.E. Stallings, Marisa Lin, Barbara Duffey, Jessica E. Pierce, SM Stubbs, Judith Skillman, Alec Hershman, Ori Fienberg, Danielle Hanson, Luke Hankins, Athena Kildegaard, nonfiction by Andrew Bertaina, Allison Field Bell, and fiction by Nona Caspers, Rebecca Orchard, JP Gritton, and Andrew Malan Milward.

Cimarron Review is a national journal of arts, letters, and opinions, published in the Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall at Oklahoma State University, Stillwater.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: New Letters – Winter/Spring 2026

Published by The University of Missouri-Kansas City since 1934, New Letters Winter/Spring 2026 celebrates the New Letters Literary Award winners and Editor’s Choice Award recipients as well as incredible fiction from Andrew Bertaina, Billy O’Callaghan, and Dimitra Rizou — including her graphic story “Let’s Finish Early and Give Everyone 7 Minutes Back” (“Trust us,” the editors say, “you’ll want to spend more than 7 minutes with this one”).⁠ This issue also features poetry from David Thoreen, Kelly Gray, and Doug Ramspeck, plus thoughtful essays by Courtney Santo and Elissa E. Minor. A full-color portfolio of artwork by Dean Kube is included inside in addition to the cover image.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Bellevue Literary Review – 50

With Issue 50, Bellevue Literary Review celebrates its 25th Anniversary of publication! As Editor-in-Chief Danielle Ofri writes in her foreword, “We certainly weren’t thinking in terms of a silver jubilee back when this all started with a wisp of an idea about creative writing on health, illness, and healing. But these themes are universal, and using the arts to grapple with our shared vulnerabilities turned out to be a prescription that resonates with an ever-growing community.”

Issue 50 includes the winners of the annual BLR Literary Prizes: Shannon Perri for the Goldenberg Prize for Fiction; Won Lee for the Felice Buckvar Prize for Nonfiction; and Dara Laine for the John and Eileen Allman Prize for Poetry. Readers will find a wealth of new fiction, nonfiction, and poetry filling out the issue, with Ofri commenting, “We recognize that BLR writings engage directly with experiences of illness, loss, suicide, and the realities of the body in ways that may be intense or affecting for some readers. We hope you will find meaning and resonance in the stories, essays, and poems contained herein.”

Cover Art by Charles Philippe Jean-Pierre.

Magazine Stand :: The Missouri Review – Spring 2026

The Missouri Review Issue 49.1 (Spring 2026) is themed “The Cost of Living” and opens with a foreword by Speer Morgan who traces inflation from America’s founding to our contemporary anxieties, reflecting on the roles of scarcity, ambition, literature, and the emotional costs of survival. The issue goes on to highlight The Missouri Reviews 2025 Editors’ Prize winners: Peter Kessler (fiction), Eden Mecham (nonfiction), and Seth Simons (poetry). Readers will also enjoy discovering debut fiction from Emrys Penrose, new fiction from Yi Jiang and Geneviève Mathis, new poetry from Alissa M. Barr and Martin Rock, new nonfiction from Denise Galica and Marina Hatsopoulos, features on Modigliani and Mae West, and a review of three recent poetry collection considered in the context of the legacy of Confessionalism.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: About Place Journal – May 2026

About Place Journal May 2026 literary magazine cover image

About Place Journal‘s May 2026 issue, The Ground Beneath Us: Place, Power, and Resistance, is a bold and unflinching issue that centers place as a living force shaped by history, marked by power, and sustained through resistance. In a political moment defined by state violence, environmental crisis, and struggles over bodily autonomy, this collection refuses neutrality. Instead, it asks what it means to belong, to remember, and to fight for the ground beneath us.

Bringing together poetry, essays, fiction, hybrid work, and visual art, the issue moves across landscapes both physical and imagined. Here, land is not backdrop but witness: to displacement and diaspora, to gentrification and ecological grief, to sacred memory and communal care. Each piece contributes to a larger tapestry that maps not only geography, but survival, resilience, and transformation.

Magazine Stand :: AGNI – 103

Art takes over in the newest issue of AGNI (103). Paintings by Danielle Mckinney put the thinking self among canvases and books, prefiguring essays by Christie Hodgen, John Cotter, and Mairead Small Staid. In poetry, Victoria Chang and Phillip B. Williams, and in fiction, Jan Carson and Andrew Zornoza speak a self’s truth through art, while poems by Hilda Hilst, (translated by Justin Greene), D. Nurkse, and Hayan Charara counter boggling visitations with the bulwark of language. In this issue’s introductory essay, Senior Editor Shuchi Saraswat resists numbness above all her Editor’s Note, “To Be in a Time Of War.” In nonfiction, May Teng and Ashaki M. Jackson, and in fiction, and Jane Morton and Charu Sinha find an answer in the telling, and the listening.

A full table of contents and several sample works from this print issue are available to read online alongside AGNI‘s unique online-only content, including poetry by Campbell McGrath and Jeff Whitney, “Rewriting the Script of Matrescence Memoir: A Conversation with Erica Stern” by Elizabeth Brogden, “’The Border Moves Through Us’: From Minneapolis, 2026′ blog post by agnimag, and “To Never Have Risked Our Lives: A Portfolio of Central American and Mexican Diaspora Writing” with poetry, fiction, essays, and conversations coedited by Esteban Rodríguez, Jennifer De Leon, and Ben Black.

Magazine Stand :: The Common – Issue 31

The Common Issue 31 includes essays about a friendship in Senegal and an injury that won’t heal; stories set in Turkey and India, and in a laboratory, a racetrack, a gym, and a farm; and poems on family, race, faith, Ukraine, and more by Fatimah Asghar, Olena Jennings, Ezza Ahemed, Lauren Delapenha, Aleksandar Hemon, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, and more. Visit The Common website for unique online content in addition to the print issue, such as “Conjuring Home: Talia Lakshmi Kolluri interviews Samina Najmi,” the podcast: A. J. Bermudez on “The Sixteenth Brother,” and the mesmerizing photo essay “On the Farm” by Nina Fuller.

TEACHERS! The Common website offers the section, “Teach The Common” with information about how to obtain classroom copies – with staff available to help select the best issues for the curriculum – and schedule a class visit with Editor-in-Chief Jennifer Acker.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Malahat Review – 234

The Malahat Review Issue 234 literary magazine cover image

The Malahat Review 234 opens with the 2026 Constance Rooke Creative Nonfiction Prize Winner, “The First Law of Adoptee Physics” by Hayden Park and the 2026 Open Season Awards: Andrea Bishop (fiction), “Show and Tell”; Stephanie Harrington (cnf), “Chimera”; and Cassandra Myers (poetry), “Quantum Entanglement for Honeybees and Other Yellow Collisions.”

The issue is also filled with great poetry by Lorna Crozier, Joe Gorman, Kath Healing, Leigh Kotsilidis, Steve Noyes, José Emilio Pacheco, (translated from the Mexican Spanish by George McWhirter), Ayaz Pirani, Jessica Popeski, Xitlalitl Rodríguez Mendoza (translated from the Mexican Spanish by Daniela Rodríguez Chevalier and Dora Prieto), John Steffler, Christine Walde, and Jordan Williamson; fiction by Diana Dima, Sophie Jai, and Claire Wilmot; and creative nonfiction by Carmen G. Farrell and Russell Thornton, as well as six reviews of new works of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction.

Cover: Moon Phases by Qian Cheng (2024).


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Valley Voices – Spring 2026

Published out of Mississippi Valley State University, Valley Voices Spring 2026 opens with “A Poetic Duet: An Interview with Tobi Alfier and Jeffrey Alfier” and continues with “Transience” a photo essay by Claudia Brefeld, spotlighting photos on “passing away” and “traces of time that become visible and highlight transience. This transience has a special beauty and melancholy inherent in it. And so, each photo tells its own story.”

Readers will also enjoy fiction and nonfiction by Jacqueline St. Joan, Charlie R. Braxton, Daniel Webre, and Susan Duke, and poetry from Michael Catherwood, V. P. Loggins, Charles Rammelkamp, Philip C. Kolin, Kerri L. Bennett, Caitlyn Burns, Patricia L. Hamilton, Susana H. Case, Susan Weaver, Bradley R. Strahan, Will Limehouse, Kelly Talbot, Bert Molsom and many more.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Greensboro Review – Spring 2026

The Greensboro Review has been publishing the best poetry and fiction from emerging and established voices since 1966, and their Spring 2026 issue (Number 119) continues this tradition, featuring the Robert Watson Literary Prize winners, Mai Mageed’s “Signs of Intelligent Life” for fiction and Anne Shafmaster’s “Love and Beauty” for poetry, as well as new work by Marcie Alexander, Taylor Byas, Michael Chang, Alex Chertok, Kennedy Coyne, Anna Egeland, Desmond Everest Fuller, Lyn Butler Gray, Tammy C. Greenwood, Julia Kolchinsky, Suphil Lee Park, K. A. Polzin, Alison Powell, Rick Rohdenburg, Jordan Roubion, Rob Magnuson Smith, Kate Welsh, Caroline White, Avra Wing, and Corey Zeller.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Midwest Quarterly – Spring 2026

The Midwest Quarterly Spring 2026 is a special issue on “Dyslexia and Reading Failure” with Guest Editor David P. Hurford. Articles in this issue include “Writing Systems, Reading, Reading Failure, and Structured Literacy” by David P. Hurford, “Red Ink” by Hailey Cavaglieri, “So Much More Than ‘Just A Mom’: The Struggle of a Teacher to Find Support for Her Son, A Struggling Reader with Dyslexia” by Michelle M. Keiper, “Social-Emotional Experiences of Individuals with Reading Difficulties” by Alex C. Fender and Amy Marcoux, “My Story With Dyslexia” by Paisley Plank, “Lessons from a More Enlighted Writer and Teacher” by Casie Hermansson, “Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Its Contribution to Reading Failure” by Thomas E. Hurford and Michaela R. Ozier, in addition to twelve other articles and several poetry contributions.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Boulevard – Spring 2026

The Spring 2026 print issue of Boulevard includes 2024 Nonfiction Contest winner Mohammad Hakima, and 2024 Poetry Contest winner Rachel Stempel. It also features a Boulevard Craft Interview with Aria Aber and a symposium on the question of silence in art.

Readers will also enjoy fiction from David Nikki Crouse, Connor Greer, Amanda DeMatto, Cormac Badger, and Cathy Kisakye; nonfiction from Patrick Blaney, Finn Deerhart, G.H. Plaag, Alison Powell, Molly Rideout, and Emily Weitzman; and poetry from Ayesha Asad, Angela Ball, Bruce Bond, Andy Chen, Ava C. Cipri, Patrick Donnelly, Nathan Erwin, Siobhán Gordon, AT Hincapie, Olga Mexina, Weston Morrow, and Brianna Steidle.

Cover: Digital collage by Hannah Kaylor.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Alaska Quarterly Review – Spring 2026

If you are looking for good literary media content, check out Alaska Quarterly Review on YouTube, “Diverse. New, emerging, and established voices. Readings and literary conversations with depth, complexity, and humanity.”

Unplug to enjoy the newest issue of Alaska Quarterly Review, Spring 2026, which opens with new stories by Amy Benson , Catherine Kim, Katherine D. Stutzman, Eion Connolly, Maria Kuznetsova, Courtney Angela Brkic, Wendy BooydeGraaff, Beth Staples, Michael Czyzniejewski, and Jeremy T. Wilson; essays by Joyce Dehli, Heather Sellers, Tom Kizzia, Debbie Urbanski; and poetry by Alison Jarvis , Margaret Mackinnon, Sara Eliza Johnson, John A. Nieves, Rebecca Macijeski, Brandel France de Bravo, Lauren Camp, Emily Skaja, Michael Montlack, Richard Spilman, Michael Waters, Brian Komei Dempster, Vandana Khanna, Lucas Jorgensen, Benjamin Grossberg, Rosebud Ben-Oni, Masin Persina, Jennifer Stewart Miller, Catherine Pierce, and Craig van Rooyen.

Cover photo by Erik Hill.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Baltimore Review – Spring 2026

Baltimore Review Spring 2026 issue is now online to enjoy, with opening lines that will entice you to keep reading. In creative nonfiction: “All winter we cultivate our manias.” writes Amy Halloran in “Vegetable Kingdom”; Annie Marhefka opens “El Sendero” with “In his dating profile picture, Greg has sun on his face. . . “; “At Pickles Pub in Baltimore” by Caroline Bock starts, “Within the first fifteen minutes, I learn that you haven’t read a book in thirty years…”; and “Searching for the Fifth Sense” by Betty Ruddy – “I used to have a nose.”

In fiction, the titles are enough, with Yuan Jiang’s “PagerDuty Against the End of the World,” Julien Shen’s “Ducks,” and Gordon Brown’s “Death of a Hotel Manager.” Poets featured in this issue include Zach Eaton, Amie Whittemore, Patrick Whitfill, Dana Holley Maloney, Meg McManama, Jane Hilberry, and Emily Kingery.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Mistake House Magazine – Issue 12

The namesake for the online Mistake House Magazine is Principia’s Mistake House, a small structure on the Principia College campus that showcases the creative process of architect Bernard Maybeck. Built in 1931, this cottage allowed Maybeck to test the materials and methods he would later use throughout campus. Mistake House continues to inspire Mistake House Magazine, whose vision is to create a home for literature and art that values both the creative process and final design.

The new May 2026 issue opens with Soap Bubble Set, showcasing one visual artist and one writer, this month spotlighting writer Saúl Hernández and artist Ron Young. The issue continues with fiction by Nic Hinson, Javier Perez Rizo, Leah Johnson, Genevieve Owens, and Sage Kirkbride; poetry by Sophie Cornwell, Brianna King, Zack Carson, Zack Carson, Wyatt Vaughn, Erica Moore, Milagros Muschella, Madi Raleigh, Gracie Jones, Kate Shipp, and Phoebe Robbins. This issue includes Mistake House‘s sixth annual photography section, featuring five student photographers: Ena Castillo, Maryam Ghasempour siahgaldeh, Fatemeh Fani, Lamiya Terrell (Editor’s Prize for Photography), and Graham Littell.

Magazine Stand :: Waxing & Waning – Issue 16

Waxing & Waning Issue 16 is a print issue themed “Free as Animal” and features poetry by M Anne Avera, Kathleen Fields, Kimberly Hall, Pramod Lad, C. Larkin, Bleah Patterson, Danielle Ryle, and John Wojtowicz; fiction by Ian Boisvert, Stacey Gordon, Derek Krause, Adam McOmber, Dalton Miller, and Mark Wolters; creative nonfiction by Annalise C Biesterfeld; drama by Samantha Dols; artwork by K Garcia, Adeline Jackson, Donald Patten, and Zahra Zoghi; and a comic by Cannon Hawley. Readers can order single copies of Waxing & Waning from the publisher’s website.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Blue Mountain Review – April 2026

The newest issue of The Blue Mountain Review, an online journal of culture, opens with an introduction by Major Jackson. He shares the kind of chaos and pain that drove him toward poetry, emphasizing how reverence for language and community among writers shaped his growth. Jackson argues seeing poetry not as ego or ambition, but as a lifelong, rigorous, communal practice contributing to a larger human conversation. Prince Stash is the focus of the new European issue of The Blue Mountain Review (April 2026), which can be read online via issuu, and also includes interview, music interviews, artwork, travel and fashion features, as well as fiction, essays, and poetry.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – May 2026

The May 2026 issue of The Lake, an open-access journal of poetry and poetics, is now online featuring new poetry by Mallika Bhaumik, Barbara Daniels, Paul Dickey, Glenn Hubbard, Hana Kelly, MK Kuol, Rebecca O’Hagan, Kristen Park, J. R. Solonche, and Matt Zambito. This issue also includes reviews of contemporary poetry collections, this month spotlighting Laura Kasischke’s I Was Bonnie & Clyde, Tom Kelly’s These Are My Bounds, and Polly Clark’s Afterlife. The Lake also invites poets to send a poem from a recently published book for its unique column “One Poem Review.” The May 2026 issue shares works from M.L. Lyons, Judith Priestman, and Jeannie Mackenzie. Contact The Lake if you’re a poet who would like to share a selection from your own book!

Magazine Stand :: Sky Island Journal – Spring 2026

Sky Island Journal Co-Founder and Co-Editor Jason Splichal opens Issue 35 with these chilling words, “You need to know that there are several writers in this issue who are risking their lives publishing with us. They’ve deemed that risk acceptable in order for them to express themselves and for you to have the opportunity to experience and share their art.” This is in keeping with the mission of Sky Island Journal, Splichal explains: writers are risking their lives to publish uncensored truth, and the journal is committed to protecting and amplifying those voices. Sky Island Journal posits itself as a champion of global freedom of expression and has done so while building an independent, supportive literary community connecting readers and writers worldwide.

In this newest issue, readers will find works by Alex Dawson, Alicia Potee, Andrew Fisher, Bella Melardi, Brandon McNeice, Dibyangana Maji, Elli Mari, Erika MacNeil, Grace Lynn, J. Alan Nelson, JH Tomen, Kristen Reece, Lorrie Ness, Madison McClintock, Mariam Anahita Amin, Melanie Maggard, Nabhan Khraishi, Paul Julian, Pratiksha Ahuja, Robert Nordstrom, Sarah Platenius, Sian Maciejowski, Sydney Lea, Zoleikha Baloch and many more.

Magazine Stand :: West Trade Review – Spring 2026

Publishing quarterly, three online issues and one print annual, West Trade Review Spring 2026 (Volume 17) is available to order in print with sample works open-access on their website. This issue includes a themed section “Borders & Border Crossings” as well as new poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction by Justin Taroli, Rebecca Makkai, Vincent Perrone, Elliott Gish, Madison Ellingsworth, Ericka Russell, Jill Barrie, Paul Hostovsky, Brice Maiurro, Dylan Tran, Lucy Griffith, John Muellner, Alex Vigue, Sean Thomas Dougherty, Christian Paulisich, Sharon Du, J.L. Chen, D Anson Lee, Schyler Butler, John Carmen Harper, Natalia Martinez, Christien Gholson, Cam McGlynn, Eileen Pettycrew, Amanda Turner, and many more. Cover image: Weightless by Denis Sarazhin.

West Trade Review is looking for submissions for their weekly Substack feature Trill: Poems That Resonate — “poems that uniquely explore each month’s theme and perform Olympic feats with language that leave a reader in wonder while still referring back to the basic things that make us human.”


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Revolute – Issue .007

The newest annual issue of Revolute .007 is now available for readers to enjoy online, opening with cover art by Michiko Itatani and an interview with poet Ally Ang, who comments, “As poets, it’s our job to be that call — that continuous call to imagination.”

The issue also features poetry by Gray Davidson Carroll, MICHAEL CHANG, Abigail Cloud, Z.T. Corley, Jose Hernandez Diaz, Theodore Heil, Elane Kim, Hilary King, Anzhelina Polonskaya; fiction by Chris Clemens, Bri Dent, Alec Evan March; nonfiction by Taylor Olsen, E.P. Tuazon; and Microreviews of Oh Oblivion by Robert Krut; The Hollow Half: A Memoir of Bodies and Borders by Sarah Aziza; Velvet by William Fargason; Ekhō : A Poem in Three Parts by Roslyn Orlando: A Study in Repetition; An Image of My Name Enters America: Essays by Lucy Ives; Lesser Ruins by Mark Haber; Good Night, Sleep Tight by Brian Evenson; Something Small of How to See a River by Teresa Dzieglewicz; and The Life of Violet: Three Early Stories by Virginia Woolf, edited by Urmila Seshagiri.

Magazine Stand :: Red Tree Review – Issue 6

Red Tree Review Issue 6 is available open-access online for readers to enjoy “incredible poems that surprise, harrow, and awe,” featuring new work from Andrew Robin, Anne Moore Odell, Michael Rerick, Kathleen Hellen, James Croal Jackson, Justin Hollis, Greg Field, Jessica Purdy, Phillip Sterling, Hilary Sideris, Andrew Vogel, Colleen Harris, Bart Edelman, and Martha Clarkson. These poems from both new and established writers move from the elegiac to the uneasy, observational and nostalgic to surreal and grief-stricken.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Writing Disorder – Spring 2026

The newest issue of the open-access online journal The Writing Disorder opens with “The Art of Light,” a portfolio by experimental visual artist Jacqueline Hen, who creates innovative work in light and space. The issue is also filled with great works of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by Sharon L. Dean, Kevin Daniel Scheepers, Ann Levin, Nicholas Godec, Ayoung Kim, Lynn McGee, Annie Powell Stone, Barbara Krasner, Roberto Ontiveros, David Sapp, Rongili Biswas, Kurt Schmidt, John Ronan, Jeanne-Marie Fleming, David Lightfoot, Bernard Martoia, Ken Wuetcher, as well as Danijela Trajković’s book review of On Rapture And Death by Stella Vinitchi Radulescu.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Apple Valley Review – Spring 2026

The Spring 2026 issue of the Apple Valley Review is now available to read open-access online and features a short story by Mary Luna; flash fiction by Lisa Beech Hartz, Wendy Elizabeth Wallace, Jon Acheson, and Kimmy Chang; a memoir by John Picard; and poetry by Julia Lisella, Jackson Burgess, Joshua Tilton, John Minczeski, Sambhunath Chattopadhyay (translated from the Bengali by Kingshuk Sarkar), Renee Emerson, and Igor Monsellato. The cover photograph is Peacock Close Up by Tim Mossholder.

Apple Valley Review is a semiannual international literary journal showcasing short fiction, poetry, personal essays, and translations. Founded in 2005, it is edited by Leah Browning.

New Lit on the Block :: VOLTA

Writers: If you are looking for that push to get you to write more, Volta might be just the motivation you seek, especially if you are in search of something out of the ordinary. “We gravitate towards literature that reimagines ordinary experiences and is so beautifully reckless in its pursuit that it becomes irresistible,” claims Editor-in-chief Charlotte Ungar. “Like authenticity, people instinctually search for meaning, but I think it would be fair to say that, at Volta, we stray away from overly logical craft. What is exciting, in a myriad of competent voices? For us it’s the literature that embraces balancing cruelty and truth, a sort of brave bending of what is familiar, to know how much to reveal to reveal more of yourself, and that’s what I know to be style. If we have an aesthetic, it’s highly idiosyncratic.”

Fittingly, then, the word ‘volta’ comes from the Italian meaning “turn,” such as a dramatic shift in tone, argument, or focus or a change in perspective, a resolution, or a thematic pivot, adding complexity (Academy of American Poets). Volta most certainly offers this change and added complexity to the literary community, publishing fiction, nonfiction, poetry, translations, and visual art twice annually, open access online.

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: VOLTA”

Magazine Stand :: The Fiddlehead – Spring 2026

The Fiddlehead Issue 307 (Spring 2026) features poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and reviews written by some of the best new and established writers. The issue includes Melanie Power’s winning poem of The Fiddlehead‘s 35th annual Ralph Gustafson Prize For Best Poem, new work from Liz Howard and Abhimanyu Acharya, and a new essay co-authored by Summer Schenk Andrus and Nicole Breit. Visit The Fiddlehead website to see a full list of contributors, read excerpts from selected works, and order a copy of Issue 307 or subscribe for home delivery. The cover art is Lilas, 2023 by Raymond Martin.

New Lit on the Block :: Marmalade Lit

Marmalade is made from condensing fruits into their core qualities of zest and sugar, while still preserving their flavor palette. In this same way, Marmalade Lit seeks creative work that embodies these characteristics – poignant, but honest. Curating works from youth around the globe, these diverse perspectives join together to embody the modern youth experience. In doing so, Marmalade Lit gives hope to young people that they can one day see their work published. “Of course,” comment founding editors Sierra Elman and Lucile Orr, “marmalade is also a spread, so as writers, we couldn’t resist seeing it as a metaphor for spreading voices as well.”

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Marmalade Lit”

Magazine Stand :: Brilliant Flash Fiction – March 2026

For over twenty years, Brilliant Flash Fiction has been publishing vibrant stories from around the world, illustrated with dazzling photography. The March 2026 issues continues this legacy, with stories about two academics seeking literary inspiration through a drunken wilderness adventure (“Camp Hemingway” by Robert L. Penick), a sibling rivalries (“A Jarring Point of View” by Steven Whitaker and “Glass Sister” by Christy Hartman), women who desire belonging (“Cracks” by Elodie A. Roy), develop a new sense of self (“DOLLS AND ACTION FIGURES” by Danielle Ellis), and disconnect from their past as their memories fade (“Reunion” by Terrye Turpin), and more works by David Waters, Gareth Vieira, John Francis Istel, and Katrina Megson, with photographic illustrations by Laurie Scavo. Brilliant Flash Fiction is free to read online.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – April 2026

The April 2026 issue of The Lake is now online featuring new poetry by Zhu Xiao Di, Precious Ejim, David I. Hughes, Todd Mercer, Joanne Monte, Howard Osbourne, Amrita Palaparti, Clare Starling, Gopu M. Sunil, Shelley Twitchin. Reviews of newly published collections of poetry include Patrick Lodge’s There You Are reviewed by David Mark Williams, and David Trinidad’s Hollywood Cemetery reviewed by Charles Rammelkamp. One Poem Reviews, which invites authors to send a poem from a recently published collection, spotlights poems from Lorraine Caputo, Jordan Francis, Alan Price, Michael Simms, and J. R. Solonche.

Magazine Stand :: The MacGuffin – November 2025

Revving up and shifting into top gear, The MacGuffin  takes the first lap of volume 41 (November 2025) with the asemic art of Gregory Stump, whose artwork, Lackman Motor Grader, is featured on the cover. Poet Liz Marlow returns to the pages of The MacGuffin via different terrain with “Rosa Leaves Kyiv on a Riverboat,” and after riding with Andrew Collard’s “Coffee Truck,” readers get out on a hike with Dixie Partridge. Intimated by Tina Tocco’s narrative recipe “Results May Vary,” this issue’s prose selections mix together disparate characters into a rich minestrone served up by head chefs Andrew Nickerson, Angie Curneal Palsak, and Alina Zollfrank, with a hearty slice of the bread of life from Ryan Bender-Murphy.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

New Lit on the Block :: Brown Hound Press

Imagine finding a prestigious publishing platform that respects authors, pays them well, and treats them like we would want to be treated. According to Founder and Editor Josh Boldt. “Brown Hound Press is well on our way to that goal.” Brown Hound Press favors offbeat mystery, dark humor, southern gothic, and literary fiction, publishing one story every Thursday for readers to enjoy open access online with free subscriptions for email delivery to look forward to each week.

“We’re new,” Boldt says, “but our weekly stories already reach thousands of readers, including best-selling and award-winning authors, editors, publishers, and literary agents.”

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Brown Hound Press”

Magazine Stand :: The Shore – Issue 29

The Shore Issue 29 has emerged just in time for spring! It is bursting with poems navigating life’s tangles and finding beauty in the weeds. The issue is popping with new poems from Amorak Huey, Avriel Mejrah, Kelly Grace Thomas, Jacqueline Berger, Thia Bian, Elena Zhang, Bridget Brush, Jenny Chu, Cayla Garman, Patrick Meeds, Brian Czyzyk, Ronda Piszk Broatch, Lea Marshall, Fiona Jin, Catherine Weiss, Morgan Matchuny, Jessica Zhao, Meggie Royer, Janice Northerns, Fez Avery, Aaron Tyler Hand, Morgan Moriarty, Oladejo Abdullah Feranmi, H G Dierdorff, Heidi Seaborn, Becki Hawkes, Tara Ballard, H R Webster, Gareth Adams,Chris Cocca, Nathan Fako, Bridget Kriner, Finaly Worrallo, Özge Lena, Mary Buchinger, Lisa Raatikainen, Nathaniel Julien Brame, Kaitlin Tan, Katie Kemple, Nancy Mitchell, Dennis Hirichsen, Elinor Ann Walker, Daniel Elias Bliss and Nora Sun. It also features an explosion of art by Adam Benedict.

Magazine Stand :: Southern Humanities Review – 59.1

Founded in 1967 at Auburn University, Southern Humanities Review publishes fiction, poetry, essays, earning recognition and consideration for major literary awards. The newest issue (59.1) features nonfiction by Sarah Gorham and Annelise Richardson, fiction by Fernanda Coutinho Teixeira, Reyumeh Ejue, Imogen Osborne, and Don Zancanella, and poetry by Emma Aylor, Zanice Bond, Elizabeth Rose Bruce, Grant Clauser, Cara Dees, Regan Green, Diane K. Martin, Josh Martin, Lana Reeves, Mk Smith Despres, Jayasri Sridhar, Mehrnoosh Torbatnejad, Adam Vines, and Angelica Whitehorne. The cover art is Bird’s Nest and Ferns by Fidelia Bridges (1834-1923).


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Magazine Stand :: Bennington Review – Issue 15

Bennington Review Issue 15 is themed “The Secret History” issue and invites readers in with the startling, unsettling cover photograph by Jonathan Kline, and goes on to include work by seventy-one poets, seven fiction writers, and eleven nonfiction writers, as well as a conversation poet Camille Guthrie conducts with the poet and translator Donna Stonecipher.

On the theme of “The Secret History,” the editors in their introductory note write that this issue’s, “various poems, short stories, flash fictions, and essays are interested in public and private histories, shared and individual traumas that consume us as we try to bury them, the intersections between the personal and the global, ancient violence and the well-worn path from Babylon and the Old Kingdom of Egypt . . . to the 20th and 21st century Ages of Exhaust and Exhaustion.”

Contributors to this issue include Stephanie Ellis Schlaifer, Chris Stroffolino, Rob Schlegel, Adam Clay, Matthew Gellman, Katharine Whitcomb, Mary Jo Salter, H. M. Cotton, Bob Hicok, Madilyne Igleheart, Elizabeth Robinson, Genevieve Kaplan, Nicholas Montemarano, Gilad Jaffe, John Gallaher, Orlando Ricardo Menes, James Kelly Quigley, Mark Nowak, Jehanne Dubrow, Nikola Champlin, Margaret Yapp, Malachi Black, Michael Chang, Elise Thi Tran, Sean Thomas Dougherty, Donna Stonecipher, Laura Bandy, Julie Hanson, Allan Peterson, Dana Isokawa, Sara Rose Nordgren, Kami Enzie, Stella Wong, Lynn Pedersen, Daniel Bouchard, Phillip B. Williams, Aimee Bender, Amelia Gray, Keith Pilapil Lesmeister, Jin Zhao, Laura Eve Engel, Philip Metres, Germain Lee, Tiffany Troy, Su-Yee Lin, and Carrie Cogan among many more.

Magazine Stand :: Blink-Ink – #63

Blink-Ink #63 asked writers to send their best stories of approximately 50 words on the topic of “Lost Civilizations / The Silurian Hypothesis.” The editors set the stage: “Extreme geological forces of nature make our Earth something like a gigantic trash compactor. Physical evidence of anything at all doesn’t last long. This and the great age of the planet might imply that civilizations as advanced or even more advanced than our own have come and gone. Civilizations that are completely lost to us today. Or are they?”

Contributors include Alisa Golden, David Galef, Merle Mayes, Scott M. Brents, He.E. Ross, Caryl Scroggins, Janel Cameau, Marla Krauss, Eileen Tynion, and many more, with cover art by IrinaTall Navikova.


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Magazine Stand :: The Courship of Winds – Winter 2026

The Courtship of Winds online literary journal’s Winter 2026 issue opens with Editor William Ray’s commentary, which welcome readers to a wide range of content subject and themes: “the tension in individuals’ quests to find a spiritual home, inside or outside the mainstream church; reflections on the conflict between corporate and social values; the nuances and challenges of personal relationships; the damage brought by war; poetic pictures of natural landscapes and of quiet moments; and writing that takes writing and art as subjects.”

Readers can enjoy reading poetry by George Freek, Austin Allen James, Erren Geraud Kelly, Anne Whitehouse, Petra Francesca Bagnardi, Ace Boggess, William Miller, Clyde Kessler, Paul Connolly, Jeffery Allen Tobin, Douglas G. Campbell, Doug Tanoury, Jean Howard, Paul Rabinowitz, Mark J. Mitchell, Allison Carroll, Holly Day, Richard Granvold, Tamar Brooks, Annie Przypyszny, Caroline Maun, Glenn Wright, Frederick Pollack, James Croal Jackson, JS Choi, M. M. Adjarian, Lucien R. Starchild; essays by Gary DeCoker, David Sapp; fiction byTITOXZ, Emma Kohut, Guerguan Tsenov, Angela Tang, Debra Lee; drama by Sarah Daly, and artwork by Nuala McEvoy.

Magazine Stand :: Chestnut Review – Winter 2026

Publishing poetry, prose, and art online, Chestnut Review pledges respect for artists through ethical financial policies, selecting outstanding work and promoting it widely, as well as celebrating contributors’ achievements. Chestnut Review acknowledges that artists must show a stubborn resilience. Just like the chestnut tree, surviving blight by sending out new shoots, artists persistently create despite rejection, hardship, and life’s demands, sustained by stubborn belief in their work.

Those stubborn artists contributing to the Winter 2026 issue include Daniel Abukuri, Hajer Requiq, Jen Feroze, Lauren Saxon, Marvellous Igwe, Michael Okafor, Sam Aureli, Shei Sanchez, Sodïq Oyèkànmí, Chelsea Lebron, Chris Negri, Claudia Owusu, Nicholas Hilbourn, Nora Wagner, Ellen McMahill, Jack Bordnick, Jeff Mann, Joyce Melander, and Lisa Rigge.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: New England Review – 47.1

New England Review Issue 47.1 offers readers contemporary poetry, fiction, and nonfiction alongside translations translations from the German and Spanish, and “rediscoveries” of previously published work.

Contributors to this newest issue explore themes of grief, identity, technology, family, failure, and memory through poetry by Catherine Goldhammer, Alissa M. Barr, Sandra Lim, Ama Codjoe, Chelsea Christine Hill, Lauren Eggert-Crowe, Randall Mann, Traci Brimhall, Patricia Lockwood, Abdulkareem Abdulkareem, Oscar Oswald; fiction by Emily Lyons Flamm, Lauren Acampora, Kyle Francis Williams, Elizabeth Lee Ayce, David Hansen, José Orduña; nonfiction by Lindsay Starck, Hasanthika Sirisena, Robin Hemley, Ranbir Sidhu, David Staudt.

Translations include work by Mely Kiyak translated by William Pierce, by Liliana Ponce translated by Michael Martin Shea, and by Clementina Suárez translated by J. P. Allen. “Rediscoveries” brings back work by Edmund Burke, “From Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents.”

Cover art: Shower Scene by Robin Crookall

Magazine Stand :: Still Point Arts Quarterly – Spring 2026

Still Point Arts Quarterly is a visually striking literary and arts journal published four times a yea with each themed issue featuring historical and contemporary art, fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. The Spring 2026 issue is themed “Crafting a Life” and opens with Editor Christine Brooks Cote’s commentary exploring art, craft, and industry, closely examining the distinction between craft and industry.

“There is nothing certain about life. Every moment of every day involves risk — not knowing how to proceed, trying something to see if it will work, sometimes having to undo past efforts and try another way, hoping it all works out in the end — and possibly suffering the consequences of our actions. By accepting and living with the risks, we craft our lives. […] Just as we improve and progress in our craft as we do it, we learn how to live a better life as we do it, and often the lessons learned are interchangeable: patience, perseverance, problem-solving, a sense of curiosity, the importance of mental and physical stimulation, and so many more. Crafting a well-lived life is not without risk and uncertainty, but if we seek certainty, we miss the point.”‘

Contributing poets and artists who offer readers the opportunity to enjoy their craft include Christopher Wiley-Smith, Gloria Heffernan, Renee Dionne Mies, Sheri Reda, Lilace Mellin Guignard, Fendy Tulodo, Elise Chadwick, Gail Tyson, David Anson Lee, Joyce Lewis-Andrews, Lisa Timpf, Mary E. Berg, Robin Michel, Kathryn DeZur, Katherine Simmons, David M. Stern, Kimberly Beckham, and Sarah Kilch Gaffney.

The Fool’s World :: Zine Alive Archive

What becomes of a literary magazine once it ceases publication? One long-standing option has been the University of Wisconsin’s Little Magazine Collection, a non-circulating collection of print publications, along with their Introduction to Little Magazines Learning Module, their work is integral to the preservation of this aspect of literary history.

Another, perhaps more accessible option, is the new and growing Zine Alive Archive at The Fool’s World. Zine Alive Archive is open to house literary works from magazines and blogzines that have ceased publication, for whatever reason.

For those publications, Zine Alive Archive is here to house the published works that are now offline. In this space, Zine Alive shares active links as well as highlights or full issues of those magazines for free.

If you’d like your magazine issues listed, visit The Fool’ World Zine Alive Archive for more info.

Magazine Stand :: The Sunlight Press – March 2026

The Sunlight Press is a nonprofit digital literary journal publishing new and established voices in creative nonfiction, fiction, poetry, reviews, photography, and craft reflections. Focused on light, hope, and human resilience, The Sunlight Press explores moments of insight found in everyday and extraordinary experiences. New work appears Mondays and Wednesdays, with occasional additional features and announcements.

Recent featured works include photography by Russell Nichols, poetry by Thehara S.U. and Claire Lynch, essays by Lee Bernstein, Yiyao Li, and Ron Clinton Smith, and fiction by Kathryn Silver-Hajo.

Currently closed to fiction and poetry, submissions are open for personal essays, reviews, “Artists on Craft Series” (interviews/reflections by artists on their process of the art of choice) and photography.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Superpresent – Winter 2026

Themed “echo,” the Winter 2026 issue of Superpresent opens with the editors commentary, “This go-round, Superpresent asked contributors to think of echo in their own ways. We didn’t receive the photo of a bat promised by one 14 year old niece when told the theme (‘echo location,’ she smugly nodded). We did, however, receive work that reminded us of Emerson’s letter to Whitman on first reading Leaves of Grass: ‘I greet you at the beginning of a great career, which yet must have had a long foreground somewhere, for such a start.’ Some of the contributors this issue are gifted beginners while others are seasoned (weathered?) makers.”

Publishing quarterly since 2020, Superpresent was created with a few simple goals: to present striking visual art and writing without favoring one over the other; to be available both online and in print; to be free (free to download or view online and free to submit work to); and to produce an affordable, high quality print version for those who still like touching paper and ink.


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Magazine Stand :: swamp pink – February 2026

Formerly known as Crazyhorse, swamp pink publishes fiction, poetry, and nonfiction online twice a month. The journal is dedicated to showcasing exceptional work by writers at all stages of their careers, with a particular interest in voices from writers of color and other marginalized or underrepresented communities. The February 2026 issue (no. 24) features fiction by Brian Ma, Skyler Melnick, Abeje Zora Schnake; poetry by Elisa Luna Ady, Ben Cooper, Sam Dickerson, Leila Farjami, Mckendy Fils-Aimé, John T. Howard, L. S. Klatt, Yunkyo Moon-Kim, samodH Porawagamage, February Spikener, Mary Zhou, Flash Fiction, KJ Nakazawa-Kern, Sarah Therio; and nonfiction by Philip Metres and Amber Flora Thomas.


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Magazine Stand :: Cholla Needles – 111

Cholla Needles is a nonprofit supported by private donations that publishes a monthly literary magazine and books by desert-inspired writers. Cholla Needles hosts literary events, offers mentoring and workshops for writers of all ages, provides free access to its poetry, prose, and art library by appointment, and partners with community organizations to promote the arts.

Their monthly print publication focuses on the work of ten poets as well as accompanying photography and/or artwork. Contributors to the newest issue (111) include James Marvelle, Bonnie Bostrom, Rick Adang, Sarah Marie, Duane Anderson, Arvilla Fee, Patty Prewitt, Francene Kaplan, Barry Kritzberg, and J. Malcolm Garcia, with cover and inside photos by Kim Martin.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Brilliant Flash Fiction – January 2026

Established in 2014, Brilliant Flash Fiction is a nonprofit literary journal dedicated to sharing striking short fiction from writers around the globe. Each story appears alongside vivid photography, creating a visually engaging reading experience. The journal also hosts writing contests and shares craft advice through social media, all without charging any fees. Committed to showcasing distinctive international voices, Brilliant Flash Fiction invites submissions from writers at every stage of their careers. Recent contributors include Dirk Kortz, Alethea Paul, Hannah Wyatt, Tracy Royce, David L. Updike, Samuel Cromwell, Jonathan Worlde, Bethany Bruno, Benjamin Brindise, Pravy Jha, and Mandira Pattnaik.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Terrain.org – February 2026

Terrain.org is a pioneering place-based online journal publishing high-quality literature, art, science, and activism addressing social and environmental issues. Featuring renowned writers like Wendell Berry and Joy Harjo alongside emerging voices, Terrain.org offers multimedia work, interviews, podcasts, and community case studies while fostering an inclusive, advertisement-free literary community. Recent articles include “Built on Dry Ground: The Water Reckoning in the West” by Joe Whitworth, “Why We Tell Stories” by Rob Carney, “Learning Resilience: Writing Washington State Lands” by Lis McLoughlin, “From Birds to Whales to Birthdays” by Rob Carney, “Letter to America: What do we tell the water now?” by Lisbeth White, “Satellites Show, Stories Tell” by Elise Arellano-Thompson, “Also, the Universe Purrs” by Rob Carney, as well as recent episodes in their podcast series, “In the Circle of Ancient Trees” and “The Gift of Animals. Terrain.org also publishes poetry, fiction, interviews, reviews, and visual features “ARTerrain” and “Upsprawl.”


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.