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Black Warrior Review 2016 Contest Winners

black warrior reviewIssue 43.2 (Spring/Summer 2017) of BWR features winners of their 2016 Contest:

Fiction judged by Sofia Samatar
“Videoteca Fin del Mundo” by Ava Tomasula y Garcia

Nonfiction judged by T Clutch Fleischmann
“Whatever” by Rocket Caleshu

Poetry judged by Hoa Nguyen
“The Autobiographical Subject ”Kirsten Ihns

Each winner received $1,000 and publication, and each runner-up received $100. For a full list of winners and runners-up as well as judge’s comments on each, visit the BWR website here.

Cover image: “The Art of Sealing Ends” by Nakeya Brown.

Copper Nickel Becomes Paying Market

copper nickelEditor Wayne Miller has announced several changes to Copper Nickel with its recent re-launch, including paying contributors: “starting with issue 24, we’ll be paying $30 per printed page. (We wish it could be more!)” Indeed, it is more than nothing, which is a great step for any literary publication to be able to take. Additionally, issue 24 of Copper Nickel includes a flash fiction portfolio featuring 22 works selected by Fiction Editors Teague Bohlen and Joanna Luloff. Cover image: “Tape Loops” by Eleanor King.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

sewanee review “This iteration of the Sewanee Review [Winter 2017], designed by Peter Mendelsund and Oliver Munday, signifies the first substantial redesign this magazine has undergone since Allen Tate’s commissioning of legendary printer P.J. Conkwright in autumn, 1944,” writes Managing Editor Robert Walker. He thanks the designers “for their beautiful, idiosyncratic vision, which so seamlessly incorporates the old into the new.” NewPages agrees.
gettysburg review spring 2017The Gettysburg Review Spring 2017 whimsical cover is a detail of “The Young Owl” by Kevin Sloan.
missouri review“Stress Test” by Eugenia Loli is the eye-catching cover art on The Missouri Review v39 n4 (2016)

2017 CutBank Prose Flash Contest Winners

Winners of the CutBank 2016 Big Sky, Small Prose: Flash Contest, judged by Chad Simpson, can be found in issue #86:

alysia0sawchynWinner
“Riverbanks and Honeysuckle” by Alysia Sawchyn [pictured]
[Sawchyn’s story is available to read online here.]

Runners-Up
“Planning to Be Amazed” by Daryl Scroggins
“At the Dog Park” by Derek Updegraff

Drunken Boat Black Panel Comics

nick potter db 24“It bears acknowledging that Drunken Boat 24 arrives in the wake of a substantial loss,” opens Nick Potter’s editorial to the comics section of the newest issue. “Amid the varied responses,” he writes, “I’ve noticed a subset of my friends on Facebook who have updated their profile pictures to a black square. In our increasingly globalized, increasingly visual culture, this act seems intuitive, marking absence, marking erasure, marking the digital equivalence of donning black in mourning, marking a kind of death. In comics, the filled-black panel has often been used as contextual shorthand for death—a kind of visual euphemism in the structural language of the form.”

Potter goes on to offer several panels of black squares, acknowledging the loss of famous people, those whose lives taken made news for their injustice, and for victims of the Pulse Nightclub Massacre, as well as a couple personal losses from Potter’s family. “And so,” he closes, “as we’ve endured so many black panels this year, it’s worth noting that, in comics, all panels, black or otherwise, are given meaning by the panels that surround them. And how we choose to fill those panels, as artists and patrons, comprises the politics with which we envision humanity.”

MR Music Issue

massachusetts review musicExecutive Editor Jim Hicks opens the newest issue of The Massachusetts Review: The Music Issue with this from his introduction: “For this particular quarterly, given that ‘public affairs’ is the kicker to our moniker, the first reaction of readers might well be, ‘Why?’ Certainly if you think of music as entertainment, as remedy or therapy, you might not see such a theme as urgent. And yet what social movement, what new political formation, hasn’t had its unforgettable soundtrack? Where, after all, do those in the struggle find the force and inspiration to keep moving forward, to get up, stand up, in this world full of tunnels and only occasional light? What brings them together, what lifts their voices, what beats the drum?”

The front cover features “The Music Issue, 2016” created for The Massachusetts Review  by Bianca Stone, and a full list of contributors with access to some of the works can be found here.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

boilerThe Boiler winter 2017 online quarterly of poetry, fiction, and nonfiction features this stunning scene “Horses in Winter” photograph by Ellumyne.
chargrin river reviewChagrin River Review online journal of fiction and poetry is edited by faculty at Lakeland Community College, outside of Cleveland, Ohio. The cover photo for their December 2016 issue, with its unique road reflections, is by Michael Kinkopf.
cleaverI’m pretty sure that’s a cockroach orchestra portrayed on the cover of Cleaver online lit mag #16: “The Maestro” by Orlando Saverino-Loeb.

2016 Kenyon Review Short Fiction Prize Winners

kenyon reviewThe 2016 Kenyon Review Short Fiction Contest as selected by final judge Jaimy Gordon are featured in the January/February 2017 issue of Kenyon Review. Included with an introduction by Associate Editor Kirsten Reach are First Prize Winner “Butter” by Eve Gleichman and Runners Up “Dance of the Old Century” by Dan Reiter and “The Babymoon” by Adam Soto. Information about the 2017 prize and a list of winners, including honorable mentions, can be read here, along with the full pieces as published in the print edition. Editor David H. Lynn comments on the history and philosophy behind this contest in his Editor’s Note: What Place Literary Contests?

Brevity January 2017 Craft Essays

Schrand BrandonBrevity: A Journal of Concise Literary Nonfiction January 2017 features three new craft essays: “The Essay and the Art of Equivocation” in which Brandon R. Schrand [pictured] considers our ability to equivocate artfully in the essay; “Truth & Delight: Resisting the Seduction of Surfaces” in which Peter Selgin examines the need to resist total seduction by sounds and surfaces; and  “Beyond ‘Craft for Craft’s Sake’: Nonfiction and Social Justice” with Rachel Tolliver and M. Sausun discussing nonfiction and social justice in the new political era. Brevity’s full content can be read online.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

carolina quarterlyAimee Bungard is the featured artist in the Winter 2017 issue of The Carolina Quarterly, with “Eyeris” on the cover and a portfolio of her work inside, in a style which she describes as “ecological expressionist.”
mud seasonMud Season Review publishes one story, one portfolio of poems, one essay or piece of narrative nonfiction, and visual art online monthly. The newest issue features artwork by Talal Alyan, who “renders loss into concise and vivid images that feel like an assault on the soul.”
positPosit online publishes “finely crafted, innovative, contemporary literature and visual art. Our tastes are broad, but we lean towards the experimental.” And the cover art of issue #12 is proof positive, featuring Steve DeFrank’s “Big Hairy Mess.”

Seneca Review Fall Issue :: Deborah Tall Poetry

seneca reviewThe fall 2016 issue of Seneca Review is a book of poems, Deborah Tall’s final collection, Afterings. “It is a remarkable volume by a poet and nonfiction writer at the peak of her powers. Eavan Boland has called it ‘an essential collection,’ and Mary Ruefle says the poems have ‘not what is to be expected – hints of cessation – but an overwhelming sense of blossoming.'” Deborah Tall edited Seneca Review  for twenty-five years, until 2006. This winter, Seneca Review  will include a copy of Deborah Tall’s final book of nonfiction, A Family of Strangers, with any new subscription to the journal.

NER Rediscovers Dickens

new england reviewIn its regular “Rediscoveries” section, the newest issue of Middlebury’s New England Review (v37 n4) features “Two City Sketches” by Charles Dickens. Editor at Large Stephen Donadio provides an introduction, noting that after the serial publication of The Pickwick Papers, “there was indeed popular demand for a second selection of sketches. . . The complete collection of some fifty-six pieces came out in 1839, by which time Dickens’s commanding presence on the scene had been securely established. In that 1839 volume, the pieces are grouped in four categories: ‘Seven Sketches from Our Parish,’ ‘Scenes,’ ‘Characters,’ and ‘Tales.’ The two city sketches presented here are the first two included under ‘Scenes’; they are taken from the illustrated Sketches by Boz in the Standard Library Edition of Dickens’s Complete Writings published in thirty-two volumes by Houghton Mifflin & Company (Boston and New York) in 1894.” NER  treats readers to several selections from its current print issue to read online, including these sketches by Dickens.

Books :: 2017 BOA Editions Spring Publications

gravity changes zach powersBOA Editions has announced spring publications of the winners of the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award, the BOA Short Fiction Prize, and the A. Poulin Jr. Poetry Prize.

Gravity Changes by Zach Powers was awarded the 2015 BOA Short Fiction Prize. The collection of fantastical, off-beat stories views the quotidian world through the lens of the absurd. The stories take wide steps outside of reality as they find new ways to illuminate truth.

Bye-Bye Land by Christian Barter, winner of the Isabella Gardner Poetry Award, “is a medley of voices in dialogue with each other [ . . . ] that represents a mind at work as it considers the destructiveness of human nature, the hypocrisy and artifice of the American dream.”

When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities by Chen Chen won the A. Poulin, Jr. Poetry Prize. In this debut, “Chen Chen investigates inherited forms of love and family [ . . . ] all from Asian American, immigrant, and queer perspectives.”

Stop by the BOA Editions website to learn more about the individual titles and pre-order copies.

Constance Rooke CNF 2016 Prize Winner

lynn eastonLynn Easton’s “The Equation,” winner of the 2016 Contance Rooke Creative Nonfiction Prize as selected by final judge Lee Maracle, is featured in the Winter 2016 issue of The Malahat Review. A conversation with Canadian editor and poet, Kate Kennedy and prize winner Lynn Easton (pictured) can be read on the Malahat website here. A full list of finalists can be read here.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

malahat reviewLawrence Paul Yuxweluptun ‘s “Christy Clark and the Kinder Morgan Go-Go Girls” draws readers to the Winter 2016 cover of The Malahat Review, with guest editors Philip Kevin Paul (poetry), Richard Van Camp (fiction), Leanne Betasamosake Simpson (CNF) making selections for the theme “Indigenous Perspectives.”
fiddlehead winter2017I was mesmerized by Ann Manuel’s “Blur I” on the Winter 2017 cover of The Fiddlehead, Atlantic Canada’s International Literary Journal.
salamander plainAnd just one more splash of color to brighten a winter’s day: “Gouache on Newspaper” by Elizabeth Doran on the cover of Suffolk University’s Salamander #43.

Able Muse New Imprint Press

sir gawainAble Muse Press publishes poetry and short story collections, and novels from emerging and established authors. Though not exclusively, their focus has been primarily formal poetry. They have just announced the launch of the imprint Word Galaxy Press, which Editor Alexander Pepple says “will be somewhat more inclusive, relative to Able Muse Press, toward poetic styles, and will lean especially toward fiction. Pictured: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight – a new Modern English translation by John Ridland.

Books :: Brick Road Poetry Contest Winner

lauren bacall shares limousine susan erickson blogWith the annual Brick Road Poetry Contest, Brick Road Poetry Press seeks a collection that fits their mission of publishing poetry that entertains, amuses, and edifies.

Winner Susan J. Erickson’s Lauren Bacall Shares a Limousine was published this past December. The collection explores the lives of women across centuries and continents, including narrators like Lady Godiva, Lucy Audubon, Janis Joplin, and Marilyn Monroe, and gives voice to the critical moments of women’s lives.

This is Erickson’s first full-length collection. Sample poems can be found at the publisher’s website.

Prime Number 53-Word Story Contest

prime number magazinePrime Number Magazine runs a free monthly contest for writers to flex their skill at length limits. Published by Press 53, Prime Number holds entries to 53 words and a monthly prompt. Winners are published on the Prime Number website and receive a free book from Press 53. For December, the prompt was to write a 53-word story about ‘chill,’ and the winner was “The Last” by Greg Hill. New judges are named for each month’s contest, and winning authors also get to submit a 53-word bio. The prompt for January is to “write a story about a penny” with the deadline being the final day of the month. Winning stories appear within a week of the contest end. Click here more information about the contest.

Books :: 2016 Autumn House Press Contest Winners

apocalypse mix jane satterfield blogIn February, Autumn House Press is scheduled to release the 2016 winners of their annual Autumn House Press Contests in Fiction, Nonfiction, and Poetry.

Nonfiction winner, Run Scream Unbury Save by Katherine McCord, offers brief meditations on family, language, art, and the act of writing.

In fiction, Heavy Metal by Andrew Bourelle took home the prize. This is Bourelle’s first novel and is set to the soundtrack of Metallica, Def Leppard, and Iron Maiden. Readers are pulled into the struggle of Danny, an adolescent dealing with extreme tragedy and the everyday conflicts of high school.

And in poetry, Jane Satterfield won with her debut collection Apocalypse Mix, which was selected by David St. John. Of his pick, St. John says, “these poems balance their raw psychological undercurrents with a calm and masterful stylistic authority.” The collection weaves the reader “into its fabric of individual and historical circumstances, as well within the dense foliation of personal experience.”

Check out the Autumn House Press website for more information about these titles, or stop by the contest page where submissions are now open.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

writing disorderThe Writing Disorder online quarterly literary journal continues to publish some of the most provocative artwork from emerging artists. Paintings by Cameron Bliss are featured on the Winter 2016-17 cover as well as within the issue.
superstition review 18 cover“My Beating Heart” by Rossitza Todorova welcomes readers to Superstition Review‘s issue 18, a fully accessible online literary magazine produced by creative writing and web design students at Arizona State University.

Books :: Lena-Miles Wever Todd Prize for Poetry

novena jacques rancourt blogNext month, readers can look forward to the publication of Novena by Jacques J. Rancourt, winner of the Lena-Miles Wever Todd Prize for Poetry. The poems are formed after the novena, a nine-day Catholic prayer seeking intercession from the Virgin Mary (recast as a drag queen in this collection). Rancourt invites “prayer not to symbols of dogmatic perfection but to those who are outcast or maligned, LGBTQ people, people in prison, people who resist, people who suffer and whose suffering has not been redeemed.”

Advance praise for Novena can be found at the Pleaides Press website, where copies can also be preordered. The Lena-Miles Wever Todd Prize for Poetry is currently open for submissions.

Able Muse 2016 Contest Winners Issue

Able Muse #22 (Winter 2016) features the following winning entries and runners up from their 2016 writing contests. Full shortlists and judges comments can be read here.

victoria mlyniecAble Muse Write Prize for Fiction
Final Judge Stuart Dybeck
Winner: “Passerthrough” by Victoria Mlyniec
[pictured]

Able Muse Write Prize for Poetry
Final Judge Patricia Smith
Winner: “Shamrock” by Scott Ruescher
Runner-up: “From the School of Hard Knocks” by Fran Markover
Honorable Mention: “Not” by Colleen Carias

March 15, 2017 is the deadline for the 2017 contest with Judges Annie Finch (poetry) and Jill Alexander Essbaum (fiction).

Books :: 2015 Robert C. Jones Short Prose Contest Winner

among other things robert long foreman blogPleaides Press annually holds the Robert C. Jones Short Prose Book Contest in honor of Robert C. Jones, a former professor of English at the University of Missouri.

In February, the 2015 winner, Among Other Things by Robert Long Foreman, will be released. The essay collection reveals the “depth and significance of mundane objects—a puzzle, a skillet, an antique cannon, an avocado sandwich” and the essays “trace the author’s fraught path from adolescence to adulthood, and contemplate the complexities of family and belonging.”

While Robert Long Foreman has seen his work published in magazines since 2006, Among Other Things is his first collection. Find out more information and pre-order copies from the Pleaides Press website.

[Quotes from publisher’s website.]

Books :: 2015 Cowles Poetry Book Prize Winner

everyone at this party brad aaron modlin blogDuring the tail end of 2016, Southeast Missouri State University Press released the winner of the 2015 Cowles Poetry Book Prize: Everyone at This Party Has Two Names by Brad Aaron Modlin. Advance praise dubs the collection “Poignant, quirky, troubled” (Larissa Szporluk), “[a]n impressive debut from a poet who is as interesting as he is unpredictable” (J. Allyn Rosser). While this is Modlin’s first collection, his poetry, fiction, and nonfiction have appeared in Denver Quarterly, The Florida Review, Indiana Review, and DIAGRAM, among others.

Read more about Everyone at This Party Has Two Names at the SEMO Press website, where you can also find more information about the Book Prize, which has an upcoming annual deadline of April 1st.

Hampden-Sydney Having Fun with Sonnets

nathaniel perryEditor Nathaniel Perry [pictured] of The Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review considers in the Winter 2016 Editor’s Note “that poetry is both a serious lifeblood and something seriously fun.” And further questions, “. . .how many poets are still willing to admint that it’s the fun of poetry that maybe primarily attracts us to the art? . . . why must we always take ourselves so seriously? What’s wrong with an occaion for poetry?” And so, Perry set out to creat both the occasion and the invitation to have fun. “I thought if an issue of the magazine could empahsize the fun of the moment, the pleasure in working out draft – it might be a tonic kind of enterprise and, who knows, soemtimes something bigger happens anyhow. In that spirit, this year’s issue was commissioned specifically for the magazine. Writers, both solicited and unsolicited, were told they could write on one of five themes – A Walk, Silence, Water, Frames and Containers. Each poet only had an hour to compose a poem . . . and ‘sonnet,’ formally, could be in interpreted in whatever way was useful to the writer.”

The contributions fill this annual issue of The Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review, including A.E. Stallings. Stephen Dunn, Jessica L. Wilkinson, Mira Rosenthal, Bob Perelman, Katrina Vandenberg, Jon Pineda, Laynie Browne, Rob Shapiro, Eamon Grennan, and many more.

Valley Voices Special Issue :: Mississippi Delta

valley voicesIt may not seem that far a stretch for a literary journal published at Mississippi Valley State College to theme an issue on the Mississippi Delta, but indeed, since its inauguration in 2000, Valley Voices has been a publication renown for presenting a global perspective of thought and voice. Past issues have focused on New York School and Diaspora, Michael Anania, Perspectives on African American Literature, Poetic Translation in a Global Context, and issues on southern writers. So, indeed, it is a ‘special issue’ of Valley Voices when the content is fully dedicated to the Mississippi Delta. Editor John Zheng writes in his introduction to issue 16.2, “The Mississippi Delta isn’t a region where tourists can easily seek out natural beauty as they do in Yellowstone or in the Smoky Mountains; its beauty remains to be discovered with a little exploration. . . . We run this special issue for literary or artistic expression, for doumenting the region, for people deeply rooted here or having moved elsewhere. It is hopeful that these voices, literary or visual, will tell interesting stories.” See a full list of the issue’s content here.

Arroyo Excerpts

arroyo excerpt blog screenshotArroyo Literary Review recently announced an exciting addition to their website. A new Excerpts page has arrived with selections from past issues now available as PDFs, and with more on the way. Read six pieces from the current Spring 2016 issue, or travel back in time a few years for Pushcart Prize nominees and other noteworthy work. Writers considering submitting to the magazine can now get an idea of what the editors are looking for without a physical copy. There’s a lot there to keep both readers and writers busy as more winter weather rolls in.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

zone threeThis week’s theme for covers seems to be ‘the fantastical from the literal.’ Philippe Pirrip‘s “Curved Plan” is featured on the cover of Zone 3 Fall 2016. Pripp describes his artistic approach as “a visual play of identities” and “a resistance to conform to literal figurations of what is and what has been depicted as being queer.”
southampton reviewOf the cover of Winter/Spring 2017 The Southampton Revi Editor-in-Chief Lou Ann Walker comments: “Because this issue’s theme is the muse, all of the art in this issue was chosen for its emphasis on story and the fantastical places imagination can go. Take, for example, the cover, ‘Stopping by Woods,’ created by Corinne Geertsen. How did that ballerina in her tutu come to be juxtaposed with that extraterrestrial spaceship?” Indeed.
chattahoochee reviewThe Chattahoochee Review Fall2016/Winter2017 cover art “War Bonnets: Never Out of Style for Long” by Lucy Julia Hale is representative of her artistic approach, which she describes: “I am drawn to see deeply into paper artifacts / mass-produced photographic images of our interiors and exteriors – / where we have lived.”

Returning to Greece :: Michigan Quarterly Review

michigan quarterly review“Why our continuing attraction to Greece?” writes Keith Taylor in his introduction to the newest issue of Michigan Quarterly Review. “There is something in that small country out there on the edge of Europe that doesn’t feel like the rest of the continent. Part of the attraction is certainly to the very different modern history, and to a landscape shaped by human use yet still oddly wild. . . . And, at the risk of belaboring the obvious, we continue to be drawn to Greece by the weight and presence of the classical tradition. We have tried to expand our canon and assume the influence of other traditions, but whether we like it or not, Western ideas continue to reflect the ideas first thought on those dry hills.”

Michigan Quarterly Review Fall 2016 presents Returning to Greece: A special section of poetry on Greece with work by Lauren K. Alleyne, Christopher Bakken, Natalie Bakopoulos, Nickole Brown, Jessica Jacobs, Adrianne Kalfopoulou, and Allison Wilkins.

Wallace Stevens Journal Celebrates 40

wallace stevens journalWith its Fall 2016 issue, The Wallace Stevens Journal celebrates 40 years of publishing scholarly articles, poems, book reviews, news, and bibliographies. In his Editor’s Column, “The Wallace Stevens Journal in the Age of Electronic Reproduction,” Eeckhout is able to quantify the popularity, and correlating usefulness, of the journal being made accessible via Project Muse five years ago. Sifting through massive amounts of data, Eeckhout is able to distill numerous points of meaning and their impact on the journal’s continuing success. What works have been most downloaded, from which institutions – and finding among the names Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda and North Hennepin Community College, which are the top-most universities downloading, the popularity of specific issues (often themed), full-issue download vs. table of contents only, and more. Eeckhout comments on the how this data provides insight into, not only the world’s continued interest in Stevens’s work, but in the impact of The Wallace Stevens Journal in providing a place for a community of like-minded people to share their interests, explore them, and perhaps discover them for the first time. Four decades of worthwile effort we hope to see continued long into the future.

Gulf Coast 30th Anniversary

gulf coastWith their Winter/Spring 2017 issue, Gulf Coast celebrates its 30th anniversary. “Preparing for this milesone issue,” write the editors, “we too tracked the past, interviewing Phillip Lopate and exploring the works of Donal Barthleme. We lingered over Barthelme’s collage. They are inventive and uncanny, encouraging you to look closer and see differently. In that spirit, Digital Editor, Michele Nereim, embarked on the project of creating the small art-pieces featured throuhout this issue, scouring the Library of Congress digital archives, combining and refashioning old images so they might say something new, connect to now. Like how the wedding of unfamiliar words can forge new ideas. Or bring to light what’s already there.” Readers can enjoy these contributions along with a full content of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, interviews – including a Q&A with Phillip Lopate – and the section “Art Lies: Art & Critical Art Writing.”

Books :: Thrice Publishing Debut Novella

our dolphin joel allegrettThrice Publishing, from the editors of literary magazine Thrice Fiction, have published their first book: Our Dolphin by Joel Allegretti. In an interview with Thrice Publishing’s Editor-at-Large RW Spryszak, Allegretti discusses the inspiration for the novella, naming it a tribute to a few of his literary obsessions, including the works of Gabriel García Marquez, Jorge Luis Borges, Paul Bowles, William S. Burroughs, and Fellini.

In Our Dolphin, Emilio saves a dolphin that’s trapped on the beach, an act of kindness the dolphin does not forget. To learn more, check out the Thrice Publishing website for the full interview and ways to pick up some copies of the debut collection.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

concho river reviewThe most recent issue of Concho River Review: Literature from Texas and Beyond features a photograph by Tim L. Vasquez, Ziva-Gato Impressions, that provides me with a ray of warmth during just the start of our coldest months of winter here in the north.
skidrow penthouseWith cover art by Ric Best, the color scheme of issue 19 of Skidrow Penthouse is another kind of warming image – one that invites readers into what Editors Stephanie Dickinson and Rob Cook consider “our best issue yet.”
crazyhorseThe reproduction can’t quite seem to do justice to the vibrancy of the blue, red, and orange hues on the Fall 2016 cover art of Crazyhorse. “City” by W. Case Jernigan provides a unique perspective, as does the content of this publication. A full list of contents for the current issue can be found here.

New Lit on the Block :: Under a Warm Green Linden

green lindenBuy a broadside; plant a tree.

I can’t imagine a more unique approach to both printing poetry to share with the world and planting trees to renew the planet. It is the creative genius of Under a Warm Green Linden, an online journal of poetry and poetics which publishes poetry (including audio recordings of poets reading their work), interviews with poets, reviews of poetry books, and poetry broadsides. Reviews and interviews are published throughout the year while the poetry journal featuring 24-30 poets is published twice a year, on summer and winter solstices.

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Under a Warm Green Linden”

Books :: February 2017 Sneak Peek

christopher kang blogNext month, readers can look forward to the publication of two award-winning books: Small Crimes by Andrea Jurjević and When He Sprang From His Bed, Staggered Backward, And Fell Dead, We Clung Together With Faint Hearts, And Mutely Questioned Each Other by Christopher Kang.

Andrea Jurjević won Anhinga Press’s 2015 Philip Levine Prize for Poetry with Small Crimes, which begins during the early 90s, the speaker living their adolescence during the Croatian War, and then moves on to post-war years and life in America. Judge C. G. Hanzlicek says the collection “is often dark but just as often beautiful” with language that “crackles with energy.” Learn more at the publisher’s website.

Christopher Kang’s When He Sprang From His Bed . . . is a daring book that challenges on every read. Made of 880 stories, the collection won the Green Mountains Review Book Prize, selected by Sarah Manguso. From the publisher: “Each story contains a world, tilted on its own axis, strange, remarkable and bursting with heart.” Read more about the book and Kang at SPD.

Mudfish Poetry Prize Winners

Mudish 19 features the winner and honorable mentions for their 12th Mudfish Poetry Prize judged by Edward Hirsch:

mudfishWinner
“Wallis-Wallace” by Myra Malkin

1st Honorable Mention
“Letteromancy” by Mark Wagenaar

2nd Honorable Mention
“Visiting Emily” by Michael Miller

A full list of finalists can be found here.

2016 Gulf Coast Prize Winners

The 2016 Gult Coast Prize winners can be found in the Winter/Spring 2017 issue of Gulf Coast:

cassidy thompsonFiction selected by selected by Ayana Mathis
“Destiny” by Mike Alberti

Nonfiction (Essay) selected by David Shields
“Witness Trees” by Cassidy Norvell Thompson
[pictured]

Poetry selected by Rick Barot
“Calisthenics” by Brandon Rushton

Winning author bios and a full list of honorable mentions can be read here.

Big Changes for Sewanee Review

george coreBeginning January 2017, you will no longer see the familiar blue cover of The Sewanee Review on your bookstore or library shelves or in the mail. The fall 2016 issue features an Homage to George Core [pictured], editor of The Sewanee Review since 1973, overseeing the continuation of one of the longest-continuously published periodicals in the United States – dating back to 1892. Robert Benson offers an introduction to the selection of essays and notes in honor of Core’s retirement, with contributing authors including Dawn Potter, Floyd Skloot, Donald Hall, Jayanta Mahapatra, Sam Pickering, Wendell Berry, B. H. Fairchild, Kathryn Starbuck, Gladys Swan, and many more.

sewanee reviewAuthor Adam Ross has assumed editorial responsibility for the publication and plans to roll out a number of changes beginning in 2017. These include moving away from the traditional blue-covered publication to a cover that will vary with each issue, photo content inside the publication, and more online content for subscribers and purchasers to supplement the print copy. The staff has also expanded from three to five, and submissions are now being accepted online via Submittable.

Readers can most certainly depend upon the quality of the publication to remain high end, with content enhanced from contributors with Sewanee connections – both graduates and writers affiliated with the School of Letters and Sewanee Writers’ Conference.

Glimmer Train 2016 Sept/Oct Short Story Award for New Writers

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their September/October Short Story Award for New Writers. This competition is held three times a year and is open to all writers whose fiction has not appeared in a print publication with a circulation greater than 5000. The next Short Story Award competition will take place in January: Short Story Award for New Writers. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

toby wallis1st place goes to Toby Wallis [pictured] of Haverhill in Suffolk, United Kingdom, who wins $2500 for “The Sudden End of Everything.” His story will be published in Issue 100 of Glimmer Train Stories. This will be his first publication.

2nd place goes to L. E. Rodia of Allston, Massachusetts, who wins $500 for “Always Arriving.”

3rd place goes to Josh Randall of Las Cruces, New Mexico, who wins $300 for “Pump Head.”

A PDF of the Top 25 winners can be found here.

Deadline soon approaching for Family Matters: January 2
Glimmer Train hosts this competition once a year, and first place has been increased to $2500 plus publication in the journal, and 10 copies of that issue. It’s open to all writers for stories about family of any configuration. Most submissions to this category run 1000-5000 words, but can go up to 12,000. Click here for complete guidelines.

2016 Cowles Poetry Book Prize Winner

james crews blog imageSoutheast Missouri State University Press announces the winner of the third annual Cowles Poetry Book Prize, held in honor of Vern Cowles: James Crews of Shaftsbury, VT with his winning manuscript Telling My Father.

Readers may recognize James Crews’s work which has appeared in Ploughshares, Raleigh Review, Crab Orchard Review and The New Republic, among other journals. No stranger to writing award-winning books, his first poetry collection The Book of What Stays won the 2010 Prairie Schooner Book Prize and received a Foreword Magazine Books of the Year Award. Telling My Father will be published by Southeast Missouri State Press.

2016 Raymond Carver Contest Winners

Winners of the 16th annual Carve Magazine Raymond Carver Contest can be found both in the Fall 2016 print issue of Carve as well as online here. Guest Judge Caitlin Horrocks selected the following works:

carveWinners of the 2016 Raymond Carver Contest

1st place
“And It Is My Fault” by Janet Towle

2nd place
“Come Down to the Water” by Emily Flamm

3rd place
“A Working Theory of Stellar Collapse” by Sam Miller Khaikin

Editor’s Choice
Selected by Anna Zumbahlen
“Mostly Sunny (With a Slight Chance of Rain)” by Chelsea Catherine

Editor’s Choice
Selected by Claire Schadler
“A Wave Breaking” by Phoebe Driscoll

Books :: Forthcoming from Mad River Books

dont come back lina maria ferreira cabeza vanegasOhio State University Press has announced Mad River Books, their new literary imprint. Mad River Books will publish diverse and creative literary writing that’s both artistic and daring as they push boundaries, explore uncharted areas, and generate new ideas.

One of the first books under this imprint is Don’t Come Back by Lina María Ferreira Cabeza-Vanegas, who won the 2016 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award. The collection of lyrical and narrative essays, experimental translations, and reinterpreted myths explores home, identity, family history, and belonging while examining what it means to feel familiarity but never really feel at home.

Copies of Don’t Come Back are available for pre-order at the Ohio State University Press website, or readers can sign up to be alerted when the book is published without pre-ordering. While at the website, readers can also check out the other books forthcoming from the Mad River Books imprint.

Books :: 2016 Rattle Chapbook Prize Runners-Up

kill the dogs heather bell blogBack in September, we let you know about Zeina Hashem Beck’s prize-winning chapbook 3arabi Song. Fans of Beck’s chapbook, chosen out of 1,720 entries to the 2016 Rattle Chapbook Prize, may also enjoy the chapbooks of the three runners-up: Kill the Dogs by Heather Bell, exploring an overarching metaphor of women fighting dog; Ligatures by Denise Miller, revealing the honesty and depth that is lost when the media reports on murders of black people by police; and Turn Left Before Morning by April Salzano, about the daily struggles when parenting a child with autism.

Subscribers to Rattle received 3arabi Song with their copy of the literary magazine earlier in the year, and then received one of the three runners-up with the latest issue, good motivation for subscribing to magazines.

Submissions to the 2017 Rattle Chapbook Prize are now open until January 15, so consider submitting while you’re picking up copies of last year’s four chosen chapbooks.

2016 Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers

kenyon reviewEncouraging sophomore- and junior-aged writers around the globe, the annual Kenyon Review’s Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers awards one writer publication and a full scholarship to the Kenyon Review Young Writers Workshop. Two runners-up receive publication. The Nov/Dec 2016 Kenyon Review features Winner Alyssa Mazzoli, “Death Uses a Lot of Laundry Detergent,” and Runners-Up: Carissa Chen, “Parable,” and “Annalise Lozier “f(x).” Editor at Large Natalie Shapero offers an introductory comments on the poems as well. Each of the works can be read on the Kenyon Review website along with past winning entries. The contest is open annually from Nov 1 – 30. There is no entry fee.

Rattle 2016 Poetry Prize Winner

The annual Rattle Poetry Prize is one of the best-known both for its prestige and for its prize. The winner recieves $10,000 plus publication, and ten finalists also receive publication and the chance to be selected by subscribers for the $2000 Reader’s Choice Award (voting takes place December 1, 2016 – February 15, 2017). The Winter 2016 issue of Rattle (#54) includes:

rattle2016 Rattle Poetry Prize Winner
Julie Price Pinkerton, “Veins”

Finalists
Noah Baldino
Ellen Bass
C. Wade Bentley
Rhina P. Espaillat
William Fargason
Ingrid Jendrzejewski
David Kirby
Craig Santos Perez
Emily Ransdell
Patrick Rosal

In addition, six other poets’ works were offered standard publication in future issue: Lillian-Yvonne Bertram, Leila Chatti, Chera Hammons, Liv Lansdale, Christine Potter, and Wendy Videlock.

Books :: December 2016 Award Publications

garage just torch it dylan debelis blogDylan D. Debelis’s poetry and vignette collection The Garage? Just Torch It. was published earlier this week from Vine Leaves Press. A semi-finalist in the Vine Leaves Annual Vignette Collection Award (submissions currently open until February 28), this collection is, according to the Vine Leaves website, a “rally cry for the healing power of wonder and the disarming catharsis of grief.” Debelis “balances themes of belonging, love, politics, illness, family and forgiveness with stunning imagery and an intense playfulness.” Paperback and e-book copies are available at the publisher’s website.

Published by BkMk earlier in the month was Bonnie Bolling’s The Red Hijab. The poetry collection won the John Ciardi Prize for Poetry, selected by H.L. Hix in 2015, and is written from the perspective of an American poet living in the Middle East. In his foreword to the collection, Hix says it “does not pretend divine perspective, and does not purport to have an answer to the conflicts reported in the news. It does, though, adopt an alternative form of attention and offer an alternative kind of account.” This results in a “more complex portrait than the news presents.” Stop by the publisher’s website to learn more about The Red Hijab.

New from CNF :: True Story

true storyNew from Creative Nonfiction is the monthly True Story, a pocket-sized (4.25×6.75) paperback featuring one long-from essay. Spotlighting one author per month, CNF aims to provide readers the widest possible variety of styles and content in their selections. Steven Kurutz’s Fruitland headlined Issue 1 (39pp; read excerpt here), and just out, Issue 2 delivers Steven Church’s Trip to the Zoo (25pp; read excerpt here). Available in one- and two-year subscriptions, this is a great holiday gift idea for the readers and writers on your list!

Terrain.org 2016 Contest Winners

terrain.orgThe 2016 Terrain.org contest winners and finalists have been awarded with comments from the judges on winning entries available here.

Fiction
Judged by Kate Bernhiemer
Winner: “Varya’s Black Suede Shoes” by Peter Justin Newall
Finalist: “Everest” by Scott Spires

Nonfiction
Judged by Lauret Savoy
Winner: “Geography of the Self” by Catherine Mauk
Finalists: “Life After Life” by DJ Lee and “The Fursuit of Happiness” by Meg Brown

Poetry
Judged by Eamon Grennan
Winner: “Boyhood Trapped Between Water and Blood”, a long poem by William Wright
Finalists: “Smoke and Miracles” by Kevin Miller, three poems by Cecily Parks, and three poems by Katie Prince

The next Terrain.org contest is open for submissions in January 2017. Winners receive $500, finalists $100.