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NewPages Blog :: Magazines

Find the latest news from literary and alternative magazines including new issues, editorial openings, and much more.

Magazine Stand :: Topical Poetry – No. 27

Topical Poetry literary magazine cover image

Such a cool concept – Topical Poetry “aims to create a safe and encouraging space for global poets to show their reactions to recent events and news.” Poems from the most recent issue include “The Direction of Home” by Laurel Benjamin, “While I imagine his demise, I wonder what Putin’s mother might be thinking” by Rebecca Surmont, “Shackleton’s ship is discovered, March 2022” by Mark Blayney, “What We Need Beyond the Pale” by Jay Yair Brodbar, “Ukrainian Woman Offers Seeds” by Julene Waffle, “The Stratigraphy of War” by Sheila DC Robertson, “J’accuse” by Howard Richard Debs, “Last Normal Outing” by Sharon Mast and many more. Subscribe to get a weblink to the latest issue. This is definitely one to follow.

Magazine Stand :: Sheila-Na-Gig – 6.3

The Spring 2022 issue of Sheila-Na-Gig online poetry journal is chock-full of great writing, starting with Editor’s Choice Award: Rebecca Brock [pictured], followed by Natalli Amato, Cynthia Anderson, Gary Beaumier, Rose Mary Boehm, Alan Cohen, Joe Cottonwood, Steven Deutsch, Michael Estabrook, Laura Foley, George Franklin, Robbie Gamble, John Grey, Mark Hammerschick, Candice Kelsey, James Kimbrell, Gary Leising, Tamara Madison, Robert L. Penick, Greg Rappleye, Seth Rosenbloom, Stan Sanvel Rubin, Michael Salcman, Lynne Schmidt, Haylee Schwenk, Marc Swan, Gordon Taylor, Eileen Trauth, and Carter Vance. The journal also includes the section “Under Age 30” curated by Jessica Higgins, and features Megha Anne, Andy Chapolini, Leonardo Chung, Anastasia Helena Fenald, Larissa Larson, Sara Long, Ernest Ògúnyẹmí, Jeddie Sophronius, Natalie Welber, and Anna Young.

Magazine Stand :: Plume – #127

Plume literary magazine cover image

There’s still time to catch the Plume: A Journal of Contemporary Poetry March 2022 online issue featuring works by Jules Jacob and Sonja Johnson, Ron Smith, Martha Rhodes, Carol Moldow, Shao Wei, Elena Shvarts, Adélia Prado (with audio), David Wojahn, Radu Vancu, Sandy Solomon, Betsy Sholl, Alan Shapiro, and Marina Ivanovna Tsvetaeva. The issue also includes an interview with Dana Levin about her new book, Do You Know Where You Are, along with an audio recording of her discussing and reading the title poem and another, “For the Poets.” So sweet to hear her voice and laughter.

Magazine Stand :: Cutleaf – 2.5

Cutleaf literary magazine cover image

The newest issue of Cutleaf online literary journal features poetry by Zeina Azzam, revealing an emigrant’s special vocabulary in two poems beginning with “A Grammar for Fleeing.” April Darcy writes of spending her twenties in slow motion, and all the ways she learned to move again, in “The Anatomy of Desire.” And, in “Finding Funerals,” Erica Williams shares the story of a bored, though not boring, human resources specialist who completes all of her work in the morning so she can tirelessly search for strangers’ funerals to observe online in the afternoon. This issue also features W. W. Denslow’s illustrations for L. Frank Baum’s The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the first book in what became a fourteen-volume series.

Magazine Stand :: The Woven Tale Press – X #2

The Woven Tale Press literary magazine cover image

The Woven Tale Press publishes “an eclectic mix of literary and visual arts” in an online magazine format, and the newest issue features works by Jeff Corwin, Richard Hoffman, Joseph Hurka, Greg St. John, Joshua Jones, Joe Klaus, Sydney Lea, Mike Maggio, Irmari Nacht, Nina Tichava, Vinci Weng, and Pam Wolfson. The artwork is reproduced in a high-quality, full-color format, with paintings, book art, digital composite photographs, mixed media, and photography. Pages and pages of reading and imagery to get lost in. Or, perhaps, found.

Magazine Stand :: Catamaran – 10.2

Catamaran literary magazine cover image

Catamaran Literary Reader remains one of the most gorgeous (and weighty), large-format, full-color literary-art magazines on the market. Editors welcome readers to this new issue featuring a variety of work from both established authors, poets and artists and those on the rise. It includes five creative nonfiction pieces, five literary short stories, fifteen poems, a short story by renowned author João Melo, the first time this story has been translated into English from Portuguese, and an interview with author Jonathan Franzen discussing life in Santa Cruz and his latest novel, Crossroads. This issue also features poetry from Andrew Schwartz, a short story by Debra M. Fox, and a piece of nonfiction by Teresa H. Jansen. Visit the Catamaran website to read more.

Magazine Stand :: Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review – 47

Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review literary magazine cover image

Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review Editor Nathaniel Perry invites readers to “imagine pouring yourself a cup of bad coffee out of that carafe on the cover and start reading. The coffee’s probably not very hot, but it will do.” Indeed, the contents of this issue will more than make you forget any bad cup of joe, with works from Ellen Kaufman, John Koethe, Dylan Carpenter, Will Brewbaker, Tao Qian, Jonathan Cannon, Tiffany Hsieh, Michael Dechane, Hilary Sio, Paul Nemser, Brandon Thurman, Valencia Robin, and many more. There is also a yearly feature I love called “4X4” – four contributors answering the same four questions. The questions are long-framed and take up a page, then are followed by responses from Shane McCrae, Lauren Hilger, Michael O’Leary, and Amaranth Borsuk & Terri Witek (who contributed a co-authored piece). Visit the Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review website to learn more.

Magazine Stand :: Black Warrior Review – Fall/Winter 2021

Black Warrior Review 48.1 literary magazine cover image

Notably “severely delayed,” the Fall/Winter 2021 issue of Black Warrior Review begins with a farewell from the 2021 editorial team, looking back over the past year: “Despite all the hardship, it’s because of you all that we were able to keep going and be reminded of the importance of literature and storytelling.” The issue features works by Neon Mashurov, KT Herr, Jim Whiteside, Sarah Lao, Emily Holland, Timi Sanni, Jo Hahn-Socolofsky, Bernardo Wade, Georgie Fehringer, Megan Kakimoto, Ellie Black, Ariana Benson, Sanam Sheriff, Olivia Muenz, Jacqui Zeng, Yasmine Ameli, Theresa Sylvester, Kien Lam, Justin Wymer, Lyn Gao Cox, and many more. Included is also a chapbook by JinJin Xu and a section on Queer Ekphrasis with an introduction by Guest Editors Anaïs Duplan and Nikki Gamboa.

Magazine Stand :: Raleigh Review – 12.1

Raleigh Review 12.1 literary magazine cover image

The Spring 2022 Issue of Raleigh Review includes 2022 Raleigh Review Flas Fiction Prize Winner “Blood” by Keith S. Wilson and Honorable Mentions “Good on Paper” by Vandana Khanna and “All Rise” by Rita Ciresi, as well as three works by Allison Blevins who earned Honorable Mention in the 2022 Geri Digiorno Prize. The cover art is “Snapshot” by Christine Kouwenhoven, Winner of the 2022 Geri Digiorno Prize. Co-editor Landon Houle offers a note that encourages catching a glimpse of hope around us, perhaps “in the stories, the poems, the art we love and have collected to share with you,” and Publisher Rob Greene shares his harrowing experience when he “went down with a heart attack last December” and expresses his gratitude to “poets, writers, artists, friends, family, and members of our community of neighbors around the world who do care enough to support this small, though mighty magazine.”

Magazine Stand :: Colorado Review – 49.1

Colorado Review Spring 2022 literary magazine cover image

I love Colorado Review Editor Stephanie G’Schwind’s commentary to introduce this issue: “These are disorienting times: we are learning to adjust to a new normal, to observe ever-shifting boundaries between what is safe and not safe, to live in the now but have hope for the then. In the meantime, we can ground ourselves in story, in poetry, in these pages. Welcome to the spring issue.” Reader’s can get a sampling of content on the Colorado Review website with works by Jen Stewart Fueston, Bern Mulvey, Catherine Kyle, Maggie Pahos, and Helena de Bres.

Magazine Stand :: The Wallace Stevens Journal – 46.1

The Wallace Stevens Journal Spring 2022 literary magazine cover image

The Wallace Stevens Journal is devoted to all aspects of the poetry and life of American modernist poet Wallace Stevens and has been publishing scholarly articles, poems, book reviews, news, and bibliographies since 1977. The Spring 2022 issue features essays by Justin Quinn, Stephanie Burt, K. Narayana Chandran, Lisa Goldfarb, Tony Sharpe, Hannah Simpson, Sidney Feshbach, and poetry by Peggy Aylsworth, David M. Eberly, R. S. Stewart, Millicent Borges Accardi, Robert Hammond Dorsett, John Surowiecki, and James Tropp.

Magazine Stand :: Agni – Dispatches from Ukraine

AGNI literary magazine cover image

From the publication: “AGNI was founded fifty years ago, in 1972, by a Ukrainian-American writer and a group of his fellow writers at Antioch College. During Askold Melnyczuk’s thirty years at the helm, he infused the magazine with an abiding commitment to the work of Ukrainian writers and translators. Now, in response to the Russian invasion—and with Askold’s coordinating help—we will publish Ukrainian dispatches as we receive them.” In conjunction with this, AGNI has created an index of every publication written by Ukrainians and Ukrainian Americans. The list extends from AGNI 3 in 1974 to the upcoming AGNI 95. All linked titles are available to read online, and they will gradually be digitizing more of these.

New Lit On the Block :: The Prose Train

The Prose Train is a unique online publication that is more than just a place to find great reading, it is also a place for young writers to engage in the writing process with other writers. The concept is in the name, according to Founder and Executive Director Irene Tsen, “’Prose’ refers to the short stories we create, and ‘Train’ refers to the collaborative aspect of how writers add sentences sequentially. Our slogan, ‘train your prose,’ is a rearrangement of our name, encapsulating how writers who join The Prose Train improve their skills with a different type of writing.”

Continue reading “New Lit On the Block :: The Prose Train”

Magazine Stand :: Rogue Agent – March 2022

Rogue Agent literary magazine logo

“What is it like to live in your body? We want work that answers this question,” say the editors of Rogue Agent, an online publication of poetry and artwork with an interest “in amplifying voices that are traditionally marginalized, including queer, POC, and dis/abled voices.” The March 2022 issue features works by Michelle Seaman, Yanita Georgieva, Lorrie Ness, Barbara Daniels, Sherine Gilmour, H. Lee Coakley, Wendy Drexler, Brett Elizabeth Jenkins, Camille Lebel, and Jennifer Schomburg Kanke in an easy to navigate and read format.

Magazine Stand :: The RavensPerch – March 2022

RavensPerch literary magazine logo

Publishing international literary and visual arts online, The RavensPerch looks for “writing that makes us react – all the way from calmly to boisterously.” Fulfilling that promise are poems by R. Olaf Erich, Anshu Yedavelli, J.T. Whitehead; non-fiction by Wendy Jones, Patty Somlo, Aida Bode, Cyndi Cresswell Cook; fiction by Oso Jones, Bill Richter, Beate Sigriddaughter, Philip Goldberg; and artwork by Carmen Germain and Jamie Bullock.

Magazine Stand :: Radar Poetry – Issue 32

Radar Poetry literary magazine cover image

Publishing two open issues and one prize issue online each year, Radar Poetry is a sensory delight. Each poem is accompanied by visual artwork, and several of the works include high-quality audio of the author reading their works in a clean, easy-to-navigate format. Issue 32 includes poetry by Glen Armstrong, Luke Johnson, Kizzíah Burton, Jenny Grassl, L.J. Sysko, Laurel Anderson, Rachel Nelson, Ellen Kombiyil, Debbie Benson, Sharon Kennedy-Nolle, Michael Mark, Megan Pinto, Leigh Sugar, Krystal Anali Vazquez, Janine Certo, D.S. Waldman, and Kelly Houle, and artwork by Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier, Cyril Caine, Karen Boissonneault-Gauthier, Sarah Walko, and Katie Wolff.

Magazine Stand :: Posit – #29

Posit literary magazine cover image

There’s still time to read the newest issue of Posit online journal of poetry, prose and visual art, and Editors Susan Lewis, Carol Ciavonne, and Bernd Sauermann begin with a welcome that provides an insightful overview of the published works, which they consider “a salutary and substantive alternative to doom-scrolling and despair.” Content includes poetry and prose by Glen Armstrong, Dennis Barone, Barbara Henning, Elise Houcek, Jill Khoury, Burt Kimmelman, Richard Peabody, Maureen Seaton, Patty Seyburn, Jared Stanley, Rodrigo Toscano; text + image by Adrian Lürssen; and visual art by Al Wong, Holly Wong, and Tamar Zinn.

Magazine Stand :: Months to Years – Winter 2022

Months to Years literary magazine cover image

Months to Years is an online literary journal for nonfiction, poetry, photography, and art that explores grief, death, and dying. “The arc of grief is long,” writes Editor and Co-Founder Renata Louwers, “but it does bend toward healing.” The newest issue features works by Nicole M. Wolverton, Kara Knickerbocker, Janina Karpinska, Betty Naegele Gundred, Lise Kunkel, Tiffany Amoakohene, Lawrence Bridges, Meg Freer, Aaron Sandberg, Tracey Dean Widelitz, and more. Months to Years can be read online, via visual magazine mode, and can also be purchased in print.

Magazine Stand :: Okay Donkey – March 2022

Okay Donkey literary magazine logo

Okay Donkey, with an eye for “emerging authors with a unique, fresh perspective that conveys strange and compelling narratives through short, compact flash fiction and poetry collections,” publishes one new poem every Monday and one new flash fiction every Friday. Recent contributions include “How to Take a Vacation: A Guide for Medieval Women” by Maria Poulatha, “Our Place” by Yanita Georgieva, “Azaleas” by Rachel Hoiles Farrell, “blue jeans | blue beard” by Danielle Roberts, “A Girl Builds a Snowman” by Ruth Joffre, and “The Parched Queen” by Corinna Schulenburg. With fresh content weekly, stopping by often is a must!

Magazine Stand :: Mayday Magazine March Madness

Mayday Magazine March Madness Contest logo

Mayday Magazine has selected the top 16 entries for their March Madness Flash Fiction Contest, and starting March 14, popular vote will whittle the list down to the Final Four prize winners whose works will be published. Visit the Mayday Magazine website for more information about this as well as to read some of the newest submissions to their online magazine from contributors Will Russo, Abigail Chang, C. Kubasta, Lucian Mattison, and works by Cho Ji Hoon translated from Korean by Sekyo Nam Haines.

Magazine Stand :: Marrow Magazine – Issue 1

Marrow literary magazine logo

Committed to publishing work that “explores dark spaces,” Marrow Magazine accepts submissions on a rolling basis and adds works online weekly to complete quarterly issues. Issue 1 is being “fed” weekly, but currently features poetry by Eran Eads, C.L. Liedekev, Alicia Hoffman, Jen Frantz, Kristina McDonald, fiction by Martyn Sullivan, Julie A. Hersh, Katie Jordan, Hattie Jean Hayes, BJ Hollars, Jacquelyn White, Michael Brockley, Venus Fultz, and a hybrid image/word piece by Maggie Rosen.

Magazine Stand :: The Lascaux Review – March 2022

The Lascaux Review literary magazine logo

The Lascaux Review publishes fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction as well as essays on the craft and business of writing, on a rolling basis, so it’s best to visit regularly. Recent contributions include poetry by Roy Bentley, creative nonfiction by Anna Hundert, Christiana Louisa Langenberg, April Ford, and Wilson MacConnachie, and fiction by Laurel Miram. Stephen Parrish offers readers a craft essay, which begins, “The day my heart broke was the day I decided to become a writer.” Read more by visiting The Lascaux Review website – regularly!

Magazine Stand :: Kissing Dynamite – March 2022

Kissing Dynamite literary magazine logo

Number 39 of Kissing Dynamite: A Journal of Poetry is themed “Collage,” in which the editors note “our contributing poets examine the layers of our existence.” This issue includes work by Jessica Dionne (the featured poet for March), Madeline Docherty, Makenna Dykstra, Kimberly Glanzman, Fiona Lu, Alix Perry, Zoe Reay-Ellers, Nicole Sellew, and Mikhaela Woodward. Jared Beloff is featured in the “Baker’s Dozen” spot with “The World is a Burning Haibun We Sing to Ourselves,” utilizing erasure with accompanying commentary. Kissing Dynamite is free to read online and also as an accessible PDF via Natural Reader.

Magazine Stand :: Hole In The Head Review – Issue 3.1

Hole In The Head Review cover image

When I first visited Hole In The Head Review, I have to admit, it was the fifty-second “video cover” on this newest issue that captivated me and made me want to dig in deeper, and I’m glad I did. I was rightly rewarded with Lisa Zimmerman’s beautiful video reading of several “winter poems,” just as we are finishing out our season here. The free, online publication goes on to present works by nearly three dozen contributors, poetry and artwork, often provided several works by a single author. Love that. Among those featured in this issue: Jo Richardson, Hope Jordan, Kevin Ridgeway, S Stephanie, Mary Carroll-Hackett, Kevin McIlvoy, Richard Baldasty, Marc Frazier, E. D. Watson, Matthew Flamm, Jennifer Sheridan, Kevin Adam Flores, Katrinka Moore, Yvonne Amey, Christine Penney, C.W. Bigelow, Chris Bullard, Robin Young, Hilary Sideris, and lots more.

Magazine Stand :: Hippocampus – March/April 2022

Hippocampus literary magazine logo

Hippocampus Magazine, with a three-fold mission to “entertain, educate, and engage writers and readers of creative nonfiction,” strikes again with its newest issue, featuring works by Charlotte Adamis, Diane Simmons, Charlotte Maya, Christian Harrington, Mikaela Osler, Laura Stanfill, Sophie Ezzell, Deborah Sherman, Danielle Joffe, and Celeste Hawkins. Also included are interviews with Mary Laura Philpott, Andrea Thatcher, “Imagine You Are Ophelia in Hamlet’s Castle, and Other Craft Ideas Borrowed From Acting” by Lori Yeghiayan Friedman, and a Writing Life feature with Brian Watson. All free and open access – check them out today!

Magazine Stand :: Fiction Southeast – March 2022

Fiction Southeast logo

Fiction Southeast is an online literary publication dedicated to publishing flash fiction from promising writers in a format that allows readers to quickly and easily access quality writing using their personal e-devices. Currently featured fiction includes “Bone on Bone” by Sean Hammer, “Deck a Bitch” by Tierney Harris, “That Day I Traveled ‘Round the World and Found Myself at Home” by Art Bell, “Tornado Weather” by Kara Oakleaf, “The Massacre of Greenwood” by Jerome Newsome, and “Moving Day” by Shelby Wardlaw,” as well as an interview with Tim Dorsey. The site also includes a Flash Audio series, “The Story Behind the Story” articles, Ask an Agent series, and Fiction Craft. Lots for readers to enjoy even amid their busy lives.

Magazine Stand :: Green Mountains Review – Laureate Series #1

Green Mountains Review literary magazine cover image

Published by Green Mountains Review, the first of five editions devoted to American Poet Laureates is now available. This gorgeous folio-sized publication is a celebration of “the beauty of the diverse voices that make up our country,” and features the first ten Laureates: Rhode Island’s Tina Cane; Virginia’s Luisa A. Igloria; Oregon’s Anis MojganiNew Hampshire’s Alexandria Peary; North Carolina’s Jaki Shelton Green; Maryland’s Grace Cavalieri; Louisiana’s Julie Kane; Kansas’s Huascar Medina; Wisconsin’s Dasha Kelly Hamilton; New York’s Alicia Ostriker. Solidarity of Unbridled Labour provided the layout and design, and with the addition of artwork throughout, this is going to be a collectible. Don’t miss getting your copy today!

Magazine Stand :: New Ohio Review – Issue 30

New Ohio Review literary magazine cover image

New Ohio Review generously publishes multiple works by individual poets as well as many quality single pieces in the Winter 2022 issue, including fiction by Max Bell, Anne Coopestone, A.J. Rodriguez, Tanya Bomsta, Sarah Cypher; nonfiction by Faith Shearin, Lisa K. Buchanan; “When We Talk About Mountains, We Talk About Memories,” a conversation with Ohio Poet Laureate Kari Gunter-Seymour; and gobs of poetry, including works by Marcia LeBeau, Lisa Alletson, Benjamin Grimes, Katie Condon, Michael Derrick Hudson, Peter O’Donovan, Peter Maeck, Linda K. Sienkiewicz, Shelly Stewart Cato, Ted Kooser, Allison Funk, Nancy Miller Gomez, Emily Wheeler, and so so many more, you just have to read it to believe it!

Magazine Stand :: Able Muse – Winter 2021/2022

Able Muse literary magazine cover image

The Winter 2020/2021 issue, Number 29 of Able Muse includes the winning and finalist stories and poems from the 2021 Able Muse contest (Able Muse Write Prize). This issue’s featured poet is Rhina P. Espaillat and includes an interview by Deborah Warren. There is also fiction by Amina Lolita Gautier, Randy Nelson, Jonathan Starke; essays by Michelle Cacho-Negrete, Chidiebube onye Okohia, Mark Pearce, Joachim Stanley, N.S. Thompson; and poetry by Liz Ahl, Leo Aylen, Lee Harlin Bahan, Bruce Bennett, Hilary Biehl, John J. Brugaletta, Dan Campion, Sarah Carleton, Ted Charnley, Gregory Emilio, Nicole Caruso Garcia, Stephen Gibson, D. R. Goodman, Susan McLean, Angela Alaimo O’Donnell, Francesco Petrarca, Estill Pollock, Erica Reid, Mary Romero, Kelly Rowe, Leona Sevick, Michael Spence, Ann M. Thompson, Will Toedtman, Toni Treadway, E. D. Watson, Gail White, Steven Withrow, as well as art on “A Distance Theme.”

Magazine Stand :: Southern Poetry Review – Issue 59.2

Southern Poetry Review cover image

After focusing a previous issue on the “long poem,” Southern Poetry Review Editor James Smith tells readers he was prompted to “review our archive of the last decade or so for short poems.” Thus, this issue is a companion publication, “celebrating an opposite impulse in making poems that serve their subject, brevity.” Included in this anthology are poets Abby Rosenthal, Sarah Rolph, Marsh Muirhead, Majorie power, Patricia Hooper, Jason Tandon, Robert West, Eric Pankey, James Scrutton, John Harris, Michael Chitwood, David Tagnani, Joe Wilkens, and many more.

Magazine Stand :: Mississippi Review – Issue 49.3

Mississippi Review cover image

This Winter 2022 Mississippi Review issue celebrates fifty years of publication with poetry from Rae Armantrout, Mary Jo Bang, Kwame Dawes, Bob Hicok, Bin Ramke, Tomaž Šalamun, Natalie Shapero, and Bronwen Tate; non-fiction by Kazim Ali, Emily Pittinos, Moly Rideout, and Brandon Shimoda; and fiction by Yu-Mei Balasingamchow, Nicole Callihan, Suzanne Greenberg, Mary Miller, Rick Moody, and Ernie Wang, all wrapped in a luxurious royal blue with gold imprint. So lovely!

Magazine Stand :: Smoky Blue Literary and Arts Magazine – Spring/Summer 2022

The newest bi-annual online issue of Smoky Blue Literary and Arts Magazine is available to read online via Issuu and features works by Sandeep Kumar Mishra, Babk Movahed, Pam Munter, Shari Brand Ray, Bill Bernon, Dmitry Blizniuk, Leslie Hodge, Al Maginnes, Ron Riekki, Noah Harrell, Marietta Modl, and many more. Originally founded to encourage submissions from seniors, SBLAAM judges all works on the criteria of quality that “enrich our experience.”

Magazine Stand :: Tint Journal – No. 7

Tint Journal, an online journal for those who write in English as their second/non-native language (ESL writers), publishes fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by ESL writers. They also publish book reviews, interviews, and author profiles from ALL writers year-round and pay 25€ per piece. The Spring 2022 issue features works by Brianna Colmenares, Wil-Lian Guzmanos, Maliha Khan, Laetitia Lesieure Desbrière Batista, Margit Marenich, Angela Regius, Ines Rodrigues, Yulia Tseytlin, and Lorna Ye.

Magazine Stand :: The Dillydoun Review – No. 14

The Dillydoun Review cover image

The March 2022 (#14) issues of The Dillydoun Review is chock full of good reading, available free online. With short stories by Phil Cummins, Bill Garwin, David Santiago; flash fiction by Andrew Calderone, Anthony M. DeGennaro, E.S. Oliver; poetry by Roy Bentley, Ace Boggess, Kyle Heger, J.B. Hill, Stephen Jackson, Kimilee Norman-Goins, Ankit Raj; prose poetry by David Capps, Jack B. Bedell, Nidhi Agrawal, Sherrie Fernandez-Williams, Elaine Zimmerman; nonfiction by Rick Brown, Danielle Hayden, Manol Roussev. and flash nonfiction by Maria DeGuzman, Carisa Showden, Matthew Kerr, Ashley McCurry, Hemali Shah. Publishing monthly, there is a lot to keep readers coming back for more!

Magazine Stand :: Waterwheel Review – Issue 16

Waterwheel Review header logo

The March 2022 (#16) issue of Waterwheel Review is available to view and read on their homepage. Using a unique online presentation, Waterwheel Review publishes three pieces of writing each month, September through May, with accompanying companion pieces selected or solicited by the editors. Subtitled “Literature Without Labels,” the editors “hope authors will take advantage of our refusal to define what we publish, and send us un-name-able bits and pieces.” See for yourself by visiting the Waterwheel Review website.

Magazine Stand :: The Wrath-Bearing Tree – March 2022

The Wrath Bearing Tree logo

The March 2022 additions to The Wrath-Bearing Tree are online and ready to be enjoyed! Nonfiction: @RobBokkon with “Last of the Gonzo Boys: P.J. O’Rourke, War, and the Evolution of a Political Mind” and Mark Hummel on American paranoia in “Underground.” Poetry: Ricardo Moran, Kevin Norwood, Michael Carson. Fiction: Steven Kiernan’s narrator carries Dick Cheney’s shotgun in “War Ensemble” and Jillian Danback-McGhan’s narrator dances with a war criminal in “Allied.” The Wrath-Bearing Tree also features contributors on their YouTube channel. Check them out today!

Magazine Stand :: The 2River View – Spring 2022

The 2River View cover image

The Spring 2022 issue of The 2River View is now available, with new poems by Simon Anton Niño Diego Baena, Devon Brock, T. Clear, Lenny DellaRocca, Sara Eddy, Michael Estabrook, Tim Gavin, William A. Greenfield, Gail Lukasik, Rachel Mallalieu, and Amy Speace. And 2River is now reading for the 26.4 (Summer 2022) issue of 2RV. Published online quarterly, The 2River View is available to read free online and can also be downloaded as a PDF or in a “Make the Mag” format that can be reproduced for traditional print reading – great for classroom use, teachers!

Magazine Stand :: Kenyon Review – March/April 2022

Kenyon Review cover image

In September 2021, Kenyon Review invited writers to contemplate the subject of work, leaving the invitation open wide to interpretation. The texts represented in this issue, culled from the 1,408 submissions they received, ask readers to interrogate definitions of work and the value we ascribe to different kinds of work. These poems and narratives also require that readers be attentive to labor often uncredited as work. In their way of bearing witness, in their generosity and urgency, the pieces in this issue consider the ways work engages both public and private selves, and the ways it holds us, if only temporarily, to particular circumstances, geography, and each other. Read more on the Kenyon Review website.

Notre Dame Review – No. 52

Notre Dame Review cover image

The Summer/Fall 2021 issue of Notre Dame Review is subtitled “New Life” and offers stellar prose and poetry from Adam Byko, Natalie Storey, and John Vanderslice, as well as poetry from Mary Gilliland, David Moolten, and Honora Ankong, among many others. As a companion to the print issue, the website includes additional content such as author commentary on their published work, weblinks, expanded bios, links to other works, and related interviews. The publication also provides a “web extra” from the print edition to read in full. For this issue, William O’Rourke’s A Covid-19 Journal: Intermittent is available. Stop by the Notre Dame Review website for all this and more.

Magazine Stand :: The American Poetry Review – March/April 2022

American Poetry Review cover image

The newest issue of The American Poetry Review (51.2) is one many fans will want to get their hand on. Featuring new poems by numerous poets, including Sharon Olds, Kazim Ali, Sharon Olds, Edgar Kunz, Emily Lee Luan, KB Brookins, and a conversation, “Jennifers of the 1970s” between Jen Karetnick, Jennifer L. Knox, and Jennifer K. Sweeney. Visit The American Poetry Review website to read some of the publication’s content online.

Kestrel – Issue 46

Kestral literary magazine cover image

In the Winter 2021-2022 issue of Kestral: A Journal of Art and Literature, the editors comment that “A theme emerged organically” around food, hunger, and thirst: “We not only spend time thinking about food; we have deep feelings about it, hard thumbs up for our favorites or thumbs down for disgusting foods we’d rather start than eat. Food can provide solace and sustain us with its memory. It’s mythic and essential, political and also a point of conflict.” Visit the Kestral website to read select content by Patricia Caspers, Mark Crimmins, Hayley Harvey. Lily Lauver, Jory Mickelson, Jane C. Miller, and Rose Strode.

Rivanna Review – Issue 3

Rivanna Review cover image

The March 2022 issue of Rivanna Review (#3) includes stories by Lynne Barrett, Harris Coverley, Maija Haavisto, and Mitchell Toews, essays by Maxim Matusevich, Brother Boncoeur, Brent Howe, and Muriel Gudgeon, art by Jim Ross, Lia Mageira, and Norm Melichar, as well as a feature called “Notices” which includes three historical essays about “Little Blue Books,” “The Sorcerer,” which examines “the writer as sorcerer […] and none more adept than Marcel Proust,” and “La Scarzuola,” the Franciscan monastery. Visit Rivanna Review for more information.

Magazine Stand :: Poetry – March 2022

Poetry cover image

Srikanth Reddy’s Editor’s Note to Poetry Magzine begins by describing a photo included in the March issue, identifying a woman in the image, “Overlooked in her lifetime and ours, Margaret Esse Danner (1915–1984) made an art of looking intently at the world around her. As the first Black woman on Poetry’s editorial staff, she routinely sought out other overlooked writers to publish under the magazine’s ‘Open Door’ policy during her workday at the office.” She boldly states, “This issue of Poetry seeks to address an overlooked poet.” with Reddy’s admission, “I’m not sure how many times I’ve overlooked her.” Read more in the full issue content on the Poetry website.

Salamander – No. 53

Salamander cover image

Published at Suffolk University, this new issue of Salamander includes 2021 Fiction Contest First Prize Winner, “Lucky, Lucky, Lucky” by Nicole Simonsen, and Second Prize Winner “Panzanalia” by Justina Elias, along with creative nonfiction by Sarah Cedeño, and poetry by Anindita Sengupta, Christopher DeWeese, Sara Elkamel, Inez Tan, Kathleen Winter, Minadora Macheret, Katie Marya, Seth Leeper, Lynn Gao Cox, Aneska Tan, Leigh Chadwick, Alejandro Lucero, and more.

Allegro Poetry – No. 28

Allegro Logo

The March 2022 issue of online literary magazine Allegro Poetry Magazine features poetry by Christopher Southgate, Elizabeth Barrett, Anna Saunders, Tim Love, Jane Angué, John Grey, Tony Beyer, Gareth Roberts, Robin Helweg-Larsen, Jane Simpson, Rod Whitworth, Stephen Cramer, Marjory Woodfield, Simon Smith, Richard Cecil, Peter J. Donnelly, Ed Ahern, Tim Dwyer, Alwyn Marriage, Hélène Demetriades, D A Prince, Phil Wood, Julie Mullen, and Caroline Maldonado.

Read the issue online at Allegro Poetry Magazine‘s website.

Magazine Stand :: The Gettysburg Review – 33:4

The Gettysburg Review cover image

The Gettysburg Review 33:4 features paintings by Erik Weisenburger, fiction by Jackson Saul, Benjamin Ehrlich, and Sofia Ergas Groopman; essays by Molly Gallentine, Alexis Richland, Cassandra J. Bruner, Stephen Corey, and James McKean; poetry by Kathryn Cowles, Janice N. Harrington, Colin Pope, Alice Friman, Albert Goldbarth, Christopher Howell, Margaret Gibson, Bruce Snider, Floyd Collins, Sherod Santos, Jaswinder Bolina, Nicholas Friedman, and Sydney Lea.

Magazine Stand :: Bomb – Spring 2022

Bomb magazine cover image

In Bomb literary magazine Spring 2022, Issue 159, John Darnielle examines the “weird primordial chaos” of the creative process with Carmen Maria Machado, Jennifer Sirey sculpts bacteria into living architecture, Neema Githere and Ethel Tawe explore how Afropresentism can propel diasporic artists into the future, and Emily Raboteau looks back to the 2020 New York City exodus. Plus, theater and protests in Paris, a dance score inspired by the natural world, and an essay on how comics can spur environmental justice.