Hanging Loose Young Writers
Hanging Loose, published by Hanging Loose Press since 1966, includes the section “Writers of High School Age” in each issue. Featured in issue 108 are two young poets who contribute several works each.
Elizabeth Girdharry writes of math and sciences with “Filling Empty Spaces,” including the lines “Mathematical formulas, / on how to stay tangent to the line, / somehow slipped my mind,” and “There Was Geometry” begins: “There is geometry in my junk drawer.” And comes back around to, “More importantly, / there is geometry in my junk drawer. / Angles and tangents twist out of circles / the same way you smooth back flyaway wisps of baby hair / when you’re pondering a hard science theory.”
Elise Wing crafts strong imagery to draw her readers in. “The Microscope” begins “Dead diatom / Crisp as a leaf skeleton,” and “The Living That Terrifies” begins with the amusing but poignant, “Your ears are the trees for egrets to nest in,” and “Tomorrow, the Seagulls” starts, “The future is as frightening as a three-headed hyena.”
NewPages includes Hanging Loose in our Young Writers Guide where we list publications written by and for young writers and readers as well as a vetted, ad-free list of contests for young writers.