First Book Poets Talking

marc-di-saveriojulie-cameron-grayThe Boxcar Poetry Review Spring 2015 issue features “First Book Poets in Conversation: Marc Di Saverio & Julie Cameron Gray.” It’s an interesting concept, to see each poet discussing their own approaches to writing, then spinning that into a question to ask the other poet, back and forth.

At one point in the conversation, Di Saverio reveals how his manic-depression guides his writing, “You ask me to take you through a poem, start to finish. I find my manic-depression somewhat dictates how a poem will be written. Usually, in manic states, I am overcome with inner wilderness, and I essentially explode onto the page, often a filthy, incoherent mess. I leave this mess alone until I am calm enough to rationally formalize or structuralize my raw manic material.”

And later, Gray offers, “The themes of loneliness and isolation are all self-imposed, all the narrators are in situations of their own creation. It’s such a common moment in everyone’s life, at some point (or repetitively so), being lonely and liking it, reveling in it, keeping others at arm’s length because you just don’t want to deal with them right now; elements of self-sabotage.”

Real the full conversation here.

Beltway Quarterly Sonnet Issue

gushueBeltway Poetry Quarterly is an online literary journal and resource bank that showcases the literary community in Washington, DC and the surrounding Mid-Atlantic region. The Winter 2015 issue is The Sonnet Issue, guest co-edited by Michael Gushue (pictured).

The issue features sonnets by 67 authors, contemporary and historic, from DC, VA, WV, MD, and DE. The editors have selected from traditional Shakespearean and Petrarchan sonnets, variations on those forms (including envelope sonnets, hybrid sonnets, and nonce sonnets), and 14-line free verse poems that borrow from sonnet tradition.

In his introduction, Gushue tells that he has arranged the issue “into eight sections along loosely thematic lines, all representing aspects of the sonnet’s reach”: The Beloved, The Body, The Heart, The Body Politic, Pop Culture, Conservations With Myself, À La Recherche Du Temps Perdu, Outdoors, Art And Its Boundaries.

Barking Sycamores on Perceptions

barking-sycamoresBarking Sycamores is an online publication of poetry, artwork, and short fiction (beginning with Issue 3) by emerging and established neurodivergent writers (autistic, ADHD, bipolar, synesthesia, etc.) as well as essays on neurodiversity and literature. The magazines publishing cycle has a start date, and then publishes one piece every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday until the issue is complete.

For this most recent issue (#4), editors asked for submissions on the theme of “perceptions.” Editors N.I. Nicholson and V. Solomon Maday say they received and “amazing outpouring” of “poetry, artwork, and short fiction which interpreted our chosen theme as broadly or as narrowly as desired,” making the selection process quite challenging.

The inspiration for “perceptions,” the editors write, comes partly from William Blake’s well-known quote from “The Marriage of Heaven and Hell”: “If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite.” Also named as inspirations are Aldous Huxley and Jim Morrison, along with the other members of The Doors. The editors give their own perception on perceptions: “We considered the idea that humans are called to challenge their perceptions of life and sometimes reality itself. Psychological factors, our own opinions, prejudices, and mental filters can alter and severely cloud the way we see reality around us. It is up to each one of us to choose for ourselves how we see reality — and through what lenses.”

The issue features (so far) works by Michael Lee Johnson, Craig Kurtz, Heather Dorn, Jessica Goody, Barbara Ruth (including the cover art) and Mikey Allcock.

Barely South 2015 Craft Issue

old-dominion-universityBarely South Review 2015 Craft Issue online features interviews with artists, writers, and educators who participated in the Old Dominion University’s 37th Annual Literary Festival, October 2014. Managing Editor Michael Alessi writes, “The theme of this year’s festival was ‘The Hungry Heart is Telling You.’ Taken together, these interviews . . . form an expansive interrogation of what it means to devote yourself to a life in writing.”

The contents include:

The Making of a Writer/Chef: An Interview with Michael Ruhlman
Creative Eats: An Interview with Dr. Delores B. Philips
Those Who Stay and Those Who Roam: Annia Ciezadlo on Private Life and the Collision of War in the Middle East
Grappling with Seams: An Interview with Tarfia Faizullah
An Interview with Philip Raisor
An Interview with Playwright Brian Silberman
A Voice in Two Worlds: An Interview with Dr. Luisa Igloria
An Interview with Sasha Pimentel
Documenting Herstories: An Interview with Sarah Lightman
Food, Writing, and the Land of Zenobia: An Interview with Kate Christensen
Jane Hirshfield’s Poems Write Their OkCupid Profile
8 Questions, 2 Coffees, and 1 Voice: A Morning with Tara Shea Burke

The Southeast Review Contest Winners

The Southeast Review 33.1 is jam-packed with winning writing from the publication’s 2014 contests:

southeast-reviewWorld’s Best Short-Short Story Contest
Judged by Robert Olen Butler

Winner
Megan Kirby, “Knead”

Finalists
Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi, “An Ocean”
Mira Dougherty-Johnson, “All Fairy Tales Are Actual”
Laurel Ferejohn, “Bear”
Kristin LaCroix, “Big Tipper”
Michaella Thornton, “Donna”

SER Poetry Contest
Judged by Barbara Hamby

Winner
Catherine Moore, “Love Poem, Revisited”

Finalists
Annie Christain, “LAPD”
Jessica Durham, “Remember Body”
Shawn Fawson, “Love After Death”
Gabriel Leal, “King Mexican”
Andrea Witzke Slot, “Ring Out Wild Bells”

SER Narrative Nonfiction Contest
Judged by Mark Winegardner

Winner
Kate Angus, “My Catalog of Failures”

Finalists
Lisbeth Davidow, “Me and Jerry”
Kerstin Lieff, “A Boy Named Klaus”

Submissions are now being accepted for the 2015 SER contests, with Judges Robert Olen Butler (fiction), David Kirby (poetry), Bob Shacochis (nonfiction).

Pacifica Literary Review Poetry Contest Winners

PacificaPacifica Literary Review #5 includes the winning poems from their “first ever” Poetry Contest, judged by Linda Birds.

First Place
Radha Marcum, “Fission: 1938 (Duet for Otto Frisch and Lisa Meitner)”

Second Place
Caitlin Scarano, “After the Tour”

Honorable Mentions
Radha Marcum, “Dear Tel Aviv”
Kim Kent, “How To Kill A Dove As Taught To Me By A Man In This Bar”
Vanessa Gabb, “Summer”

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

cold-mountain-review

Cold Mountain Review (v43.1) features the photo “Baucho Festival” by Kobby Dagan. I like the mouth set on the young subject, who at first glance made me think of Tom Sawyer, a character sometimes depicted as having a similarly styled hat.

blotterature

“Aqua Globe” by Sheri Wright adorns the cover of the Winter 2015 issue of Blotterature Literary Magazine, an online (Issuu) publication of poetry, prose, and artwork, with an upcoming Ekphrastic! Issue (submission deadline April 15).

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

caketrain

This cover photo of Caketrain #12 is “Kingdom of Heaven” by Yonca Karakas Demirel, more of whose work can be found here on his tumblr site. And if you wonder if the cover is refelctive of the contents, you can find out for yourself in a generous 54-page exerpt of the print magazine offered online.

apt

I simply appreciated the simple senitiment on this cover of Apt issue #5. Apt publishes “continously” online, but also offers print publications – holding to their love of long fiction. This issue features only five stories on its 208 pages. There’s still enough winter left to sink into this one and enjoy it.

gigantic-sequins-cover

This cover art by Erkembode on Gigantic Sequins 6.1 just made me smile. Sometimes that’s all it takes.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

off-the-coast

I’m going for warm colors here, as once again it is snowing, blowing and below zero windchill outside. This front cover image of Off the Coast (Winter 2015) is “Indigo Meditation” by Iryna Lialko. The issue’s theme “Get You Some Wings” comes from a Clint Smith poem included within.

cutbank

I love this hypnotic design on the cover of CutBank #82. The image comes from vintageprintable.com with a bit of artistic manipulation by Art Editor Meghan O’Brien.

parcel

Parcel Fall/Winter 2014 features artwork by Juliana Romana, both on the cover (which opens to a full front/back of this oil painting to include one more young girl sitting at the foot of the bed) and within with several full-color images. Also included in this issue is a cool print by Giant Pancake, a screen print studio. The design looks a bit like the iconic reindeer sweater needlework, only with a skull and crossbones, tie fighter, and a hot air balloon “stitched” in.

Daniel Torday on The Monster Scale

daniel-tordayDaniel Torday, Director of Creative Writing at Bryn Mawr College, shares his insight on writing monsters: “A number of years ago I encountered a workshop where, all at once, every one of the very talented writers I was working with seemed to want to write only fantastical short stories about monsters. Story after story came into workshop containing not just monsters, but the most fantastical of monsters: vampires who could fly and suck blood and seduce. Wolfmen who were as hirsute as the hirsutest of all wolves. Dragons that breathed fire and stole princesses and encountered hobbits. It was in a moment of desperation that, together with the most self-searching writers in that group, finding their stories needed something—but what?—we came up with a tool we called “The Monster Scale.'”

Read the rest in Glimmer Train Bulletin #98, a free monthly of craft essays.

Sinister Wisdom 40th Anniversary Poster

sinister-wisdom-posterTo celebrate its upcoming 40th anniversary, Sinister Wisdom is offering a commemorative poster to donors. Sinister Wisdom is the multicultural lesbian literary and art journal founded in 1976 with Editors Harriet Ellenberger (aka Desmoines) and Catherine Nicholson. The poster reads, “We needed more to read on, feed on, more writing to satisfy our greedy maws.”

Current Editor Julie R. Enszer writes in the recent issue’s introduction: “When I first started as an editor of Sinister Wisdom, my sole focus was on keeping Sinister Wisdom alive. I wanted the journal to survive; I wanted the journal to live to carry the dreams and ideas of lesbians into the future. Today, almost five years later, I still am aware of the precarious nature of all lesbian-feminist projects (I do not think that we can ever believe our work and our institutions will last forever, that we can ever become complacent about the things that we value), but I feel more assured about the journal’s survival and about my role as editor.”

I couldn’t agree with Enszer more – that we need to stay actively engaged in those things we value. Supporting Sinister Wisdom through subscription and/or donation for the poster is a step away from that complacency. For forty years past and many more in the future.

New Lit on the Block :: Tahoma Literary Review

tahoma-literary-reviewNow in its second issue, Tahoma Literary Review is a publication of poetry, fiction and nonfiction based in the Puget Sound region of Washington State. Published three times per year, TLR is available in print, PDF, epub and Kindle formats. In addition to these print and electronic editions, TLR offers featured readings by contributors via Soundcloud.

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Tahoma Literary Review”

Glimmer Train December Fiction Open Winners :: 2015

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their December Fiction Open competition. This competition is held twice a year. Stories generally range from 2000-6000 words, though up to 20,000 is fine. The next Fiction Open will take place in June. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

Zeynep-Ozakat-credit-David-SamuelFirst place: Zeynep Ozakat of Istanbul, Turkey, wins $2500 for “Moving from Istanbul.” Her story will be published in Issue 96 of Glimmer Train Stories. This will be her first published story. [Photo credit: David Samuel]

Second place: David Szucs of New York, NY, wins $1000 for “Rhubarb and Pussy Willow.”

Third place: Jonathan Frith of Cold Spring, NY, wins $600 for “Meese’s Father.”

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

Deadline TODAY for the Short Story Award for New Writers: February 28. This competition is held quarterly and is open to all writers whose fiction has not appeared in a print publication with a circulation over 5000. No theme restrictions. Most submissions to this category run 1500-5000 words, but can go up to 12,000. First place prize is $1500. Second/third: $500/$300. Click here for complete guidelines.

Poetry Northwest Honors Carolyn Kizer

carolyn-kizerPoetry Northwest Winter & Spring 2015 issue is the first since founding editor Carolyn Kizer passed away October 9, 2014. The issue honors Kizer’s vision and legacy, as Editor Keven Craft writes in his introduction, in that “the majority of the poets in this issue are women. The majority of men herein write about (or through) a particular she. Or contend with otherness in other forms.” The publication is entirely devoted to poetry, “including a substantial section of poetry in translation, reflecting an important part of Kizer’s early attempts to internationalize Poetry Northwest.”

Dis- Phoebe’s Poetry Special Feature

lakesIssue 44.1 of George Mason University’s MFA-student-run Phoebe includes a special feature Poetry Editor Elizabeth Deanna Morris Lakes first starting mulling over as “disparity.”

She writes, “So many of the struggles in my life and the lives of people I see in the world seem to revolve around some sort of disparity: of place, of mind, of circumstance. After speaking with Qinglan Wang, my assistant editor, I realized I was less interested in the ‘parity’ and more interested in the ‘dis-‘ – in poems that explored disability, in poems that confronted things that dissatisfied or disappointed, and in poems that grappled with disaster.”

Authors contributing to this special dis- poetry feature include Catherine Pierce, Stacey Kidd, Richard Greenfield, Dorothea Lasky, Matt Bell, Martha Collins, and Adam Clay.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

grain

What’s not to adore about this image on the cover of Grain? The theme for the issue (42.2) became “Artist as Watcher / Writer as Witness” and was influenced by the featured artist Wilf Perreault. “Two Waiting Ladies” (1982) graces the cover.

angle2This cover image of the online poetry journal Angle mesmerized me. Though it’s from the Autumn/Winter 2014, Amy Wiseman’s photo, “Sunset Through Hag Stone on Cromer Beach,” warmed me through and has me looking forward to summer.

adroitThe online Adroit Journal regularly features cool cover art. The last several issues have a “floaty” theme about them. “Whirl” is an award-winning piece by Jedidiah Gist, a freshman at Clemson University.

SubTerrain Eating Meat & Lush Triumphant

subterrainIssue #69 of SubTerrain: Strong Words for a Polite Nation is the result of a call for submissions on the theme of Meat – animal flesh that is eaten for food. Editor Brian Kaufman opens with his editorial “Conflicted, in Carnivore Land,” in which he writes that wading “into the thorny debate on meat consumption” was not intended. Still, he understands there may be just such perceptions with consequences: “While this issue is not intended to be a celebration of meat consumption so much as an exploration into our relationship with meat, we leave ourselves open to the flood of responses from the vegetarians and vegans – please send your letters in!”

This issue also includes winning entries from the 2014 Lush Triumphant Literary Awards:

Fiction
Winner: Vickie Weaver (Hagerstown, IN) for “Suggestion”

Poetry
Winner: Matt Whiteman (Vancouver, BC) for “Do Good, You Go”

Creative Non-fiction
Winner: George Ilsley (Vancouver, BC) for “Storytelling”

Segurson on Travel and the Arts

I enjoy reading editor introductions to publications as much as the content itself sometimes. Readers and writers alike can be duly informed of the ‘sensibilities’ of a publication based on what they’ll find in those brief opening notes. In her opening letter to the Fall 2014 Catamaran Literary Reader, Founding Editor Catherine Segurson gives much to inform as well as contemplate:

catamaran“The freedome to move, to travel and explore, is core to our being. Pulling up roots and heading off to parts unknown frees us from our patterned lives and promotes growth. The journey can be both liberating and terrifying, filled with wonder and potential dangers, every step a lesson about the world and about ourselves – how we deal with the unexpected, how we cope with not knowing what the next turn in the road will bring.”
. . .
“We don’t have to travel halfway around the world or to distant planets to experience the wonder of what it means to be alive. As long as we are fully aware, even a walk around the block can inspire us; closely studying the structure of a primrose can add to our view of the world. These are lessons we learn from art and litearature as well. Writers, artists, and scientists are in the business of examining life and revealing what they’ve discovered – this, in turn, benefits us as readers and gallery visitors.”

Following these sentiments is much to support Segurson’s perspective, in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art (including photography, sculpture, paintings, mixed media, and more – all in full color!). Samples of the artwork and written works published in this issue can be read on the publication’s website.

[Cover art: Candy Tree by Michael Cutlip, 2011, mixed media on panel, 40 x 48 in]

Event Non-Fiction 2015 Contest Winners

Event: Poetry and Prose, the Douglas College Review, issue 43.3 features the winners of the 2014 Non-Fiction Contest judged by Deborah Campbell [pictured], author of A Disappearnce in Damascus (August 2015, Knopf Canada).

deborah-campbell“Vocational Rehabilitation” by Hilary Dean
Scarborough, ON

“Whatever It Is” by Zachary Hug
West Hollywood, CA, USA

“Twenty Miles Above the Limit” by Alessandra Naccarato
Toronto, ON

The other short-listed entries can be found here.

Malahat Review Contest Winners

malahat-reviewThe Malahat Review #189 includes winners of the 2014 Far Horizons Award for Poetry and the 2014 Constance Rooke Creative Nonfiction Prize.

Far Horizons Award for Poetry winner Laura Ritland’s poem “Vincent, in the Dream of Zundert” can be read on the publication’s website, along with an interview with her regarding the award.

“Venn Diagrams” the Constance Rooke Creative Nonfiction Prize winning piece by Rebecca Foust is only available in print, but the website includes an interview with Foust as well.

Whitefish Review: Encouraging Young Writers

whitefish-reviewWhitefish Review‘s most recent issue, themed “The Geography of Hope,” includes a feature entitled “Freeflow: Getting into the minds and hearts of Whitefish High School students.” The editors worked with WHS teachers Nikki Reed and Eric Sawtelle to gather students and “gain insight on their sense of place in the mountains and the work they do with Project FREEFLOW (Flathead River Educational Effort for Focused Learning in Our Watersheds).”

Coupling literary magazines with young activists to support their work, give them an audience, and create a bond with the printed arts is a great concept other publications could emulate. In addition, while Whitefish Review charges a nominal fee for submissions, there is no charge for writers high school age and younger, encouraging their participation.

This is especially good to know, considering the publication’s latest call for submissions for a themed issue: Mythic Beasts & Monsters. If THAT doesn’t encourage young writers, I don’t know what will!

Until March 15, 2015: “Whitefish Review wants you to dig into supernatural history: Nessie, Sasquatch, and cousin Yeti—the Brontosaurus still rumbling somewhere deep in the Congo’s swamps. Fairies, Trolls, Dragons, Gods ‘n’ Demons. Our own Flathead Lake Monster. What natural models are these beasts based on? What human hopes and fears? Why do we seem to wish that those creatures are really out there? How big and strange is creation anyway — the real pageant of creatures? What about all the bizzarro beasts that are stranger than any legend? (Thank you to Douglas H. Chadwick for the writing prompt.)”

Cincinnati Review: So Much to Recommend!

The most recent issue of Cincinnati Review is unique for a number of reasons. The issue comes with a separately printed, full-color graphic novel, Moth: The Play written by Declan Greene and illustrated by Gabe Ostley. Check out this sweet YouTube video The Making of Moth for a teaser.

The publication also received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts that allowed the editors to focus on longer forms. “In fiction, this includes several extended stories. In poetry, sequences and long poems lead off each section.” In total, this issue offers almost one hundred additional pages of fiction and poetry.

ellen-ruth-harrisonAnd finally, the magazine features a unique partnering of music and poetry. Award-winner composer of chamber works Ellen Ruth Harrison has created music to express three poems by Jakob Stein, originally printed in the Summer 2008 issue. The full score for “Sefiros” appears in this issue along with the reprinted poems and introduction by Poetry Editor Don Bogen. Additionally, the art-song will be performed in the Robert J. Werner Recital Hall at UC’s College-Conservatory of Music on Monday February 16, 2015 at 8 p.m. A podcast of the performance will be posted on the publication’s website following the event.

I think that’s quite enough to recommend, don’t you?

Special Issue :: New York School and Diaspora

valley-voicesThe newest issue of Valley Voices (Fall 2014, published by Mississippi Valley State University) is a special issue focused on New York School and Diaspora. Guest Editor Angela Ball writes in her introduction that she hosted a symposium on New York School Poetry and the South and extended the conversation of that gathering with this special issue, including the works of former U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins, Denise Duhamel, Barbara Hamby, David Kirby, and David Lehman, who had originally attended the symposium.

David Lehman agreed to join the project as Associate Editor, suggesting Angela Ball include blog entries she had written for Best American Poetry discussing the “big four poets of the New York School”: Frank O’Hara, Kenneth Koch, John Ashbery, and James Schuyler.

Also included in the issue are student essays and comments written as part of a seminar Ball was teaching at the time, “The Poetry of the New York School.” Ball writes that these “record what graduate students in poetry writing, fiction writing, and literature have to say about the special qualities of the New York School that make it a potent force for leavening and enlivening contemporary poetry in the South and elsewhere.”

What’s New KENYON Review?

kenyon-reviewIt was the change in format that first caught my eye with the new KENYON Review. Editor David H. Lynn comments on this altered physical appearance, but also a great deal more about how he and the staff and editors at Kenyon Review looked at the changing landscape of its readers to update the publication:

“I am delighted to present this first issue of a new volume year and with it the boldest revisions of design and frequency in the seventy-five-year trajectory of the Kenyon Review. Even that last ‘the’ has been challenged. More on that later. But note, please, that not only the look and feel of our magazine are dramatically new. It will now appear every two months, six times a year, rather than the quarterly iterations of many decades. All of this comes after two years of questions and debate and planning.”

Read Lynn’s full commentary here (and how he got cheeky with the “the”).

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

west-branch

Still in the bleak of Michigan winter, I’m going for color first this week. West Branch Winter 2015 features Wetlands at Dawn by Sophia Heymans (2012, acrylic, papter mache, oil on board).

a-cappella-zoo

Inappropriate Fear, mixed paints on canvas by Julian Kimmings is the feature image on the cover of A cappella Zoo. “Fear makes the wolf look bigger,” is the accompanying text, appropriate perhaps for this publication of magic realism and slipstream stories.

Encouraging Young Writers

Hanging Loose magazine, first published in 1966, includes a special section for “Writers of High School Age.” High school authors published receive the same fee as others selected for publication and two copies of the issue in which their work appears. “We feel a special responsibility to those young writers who look to us not only for possible publication but sometimes also for editorial advice,” write the editors, “which we are always happy to give when asked. Our work as editors is of course time-consuming, but we feel a strong commitment to give as much time and attention as possible to the work we receive from high school age writers.” Full guidelines for submissions can be found here.

NewPages also has a Young Authors Guide, a listing of publications written for and accepting submissions by young writers as well as contests for young writers. This is an ad-free space and all listings are vetted for ethical treatment of minors submitting writing for publication and contests. If you know of a publication or contest we could list here, please contact us. Encouraging young writers is essential!

SRPR Editors’ Prize Winners

Spoon River Poetry Review Editors’ Prize 2014 contest winner, runners up and honorable mentions, selected by Joshua Corey, are all featured in the winter 2014 issue of Spoon River Poetry Review. First place winner Emma Bolden received $1000, an introduction included in the publication written by Corey, and an invitation to read at this year’s annual SRPR Lucia Getsi Reading Series, to be held in Bloomington, Illinois, in April 2015.

Winner
Emma Bolden, “It was no more predictable”

First Runner Up
Jonathan Soen, “Fragments from a Book”

Second Runner Up
Lynne Knight, “The Gospel of Infinity”

Honorable Mentions
Emma Bolden, “My little apparition, my little ghost”
Kathryn A Hindenlang, “This is the Nature”
Tori Grant Welhouse, “mor/bid”
Carine Topal, “Bone Jar: The Oven {An Elegy}”
Lynne Knight, “Sex”

The SRPR Editors’ Prize is an annual contest in which one winning poem is awarded $1,000, two runners-up are awarded $100 each, and 3-5 honorable mentions will be selected. All winning poems, honorable mentions, and several finalists are published. The annual deadline is postmark April 15.

The End Is Nigh Contest Winners

Carolina Quarterly Winter 2014 issue features the winners of their “End Is Nigh” contest, in which the editors asked for “dispatches about anxious endings, anticipated apocalypses, doomsday prepping, or getting right with God and family before it all comes crashing down.” The pool of entries was so strong, contest Judge Jim Shepard selected two winners ($575 each + publication) and two runners up ($150 each + publication).

Grand Prize Winners
“When Trains Fall From Space” by Ian Bassingthwaighte
“Cold Snap” by Robin McLean

Runners Up
“Blood by Blood” by Dominic Russ-Combs
“A Brief Chronicle of Jeff and His Role in What is Colloquially Known as ‘The End of Civilization'” by Caitlin Campbell

The magazine originally announced that the winners and runners up would be published in separate issues, but all four appear in this issue (volume 64.2) along with commentary from Shepard on his selection, which can also be read here in the original announcement.

MR Novella Issue

mississippi-review-v42-n3-winter-2015The newest issue of Mississippi Review (42.3), besides having a pretty swank cover image, is The Novella Issue, featuring works by only four authors: Katie Chase (46pp), Kevin A. Gonzalez (62pp), Jaimy Gordon (28pp), and Paola Peroni (25pp). Rare to see this kind of page dedication to the long form in an entire issue, making this a great collection for the long read.

NER Welcomes New Poetry Editor

rick-barot-ner New England Review editor, Carolyn Kuebler, introduces the publication’s new poetry editor, Rick Barot, in her Editor’s Note (v35.4). Not new to the publication, Barot was published in its pages in the past, then became a submissions reader. Kuebler writes that Barot “has a penchant for asking the hard questions, the big questions: What is NER for? What is our role in current events and conversations? What makes a piece of writing last beyond its immediate publication date? Must it, will it, should it? Why is so much of what we select so dark?” He turns these questions into conversation, and Kuebler shares what he comes to when considering works for the pages of NER. The Editor’s Note can be read in full here.

Amiri Baraka Special Folio

amiri-barakaThe newest issue of Indiana Review includes a special folio, “Understanding Readiness,” which is “meant to present diverse explorations and meditations on the impact of the writing, the figure, and political influence of Amiri Baraka” Poetry Editor Nandi Comer and Editor Britt Ashley write, “The voices in this section share Baraka’s aesthetic bravery – one that grabs its audience, demanding we listen to issues concerning contemporary American life. It also must be noted that the diversity in aesthetic and background of these writers speaks to the span of Baraka’s reach.”

Writers contributing to this folio: francine j. harris, Patricia Smith, Roger Reeves, Tarfiah Faizullah, Toi Derricotte, Matthew Shenoda, and avery r. young. Included with the written works are Amiri Baraka’s original drawings curated from Indiana University’s Lily Library.

Conium Collectible

conium-reviewVolume 3 of Conium Review is one of the most unique collectible editions of a literary magazine I’ve seen to date. “This is a book for book lovers,” say the editors. The “container” is a hand-stamped wooden box, conditioned with linseed, mineral, and orange oils. Inside are eight new stories from Olivia Ciacci, Tom Howard, D. V. Klenak, Jan LaPerle, Zach Powers, Christine Texeira, and Meeah Williams. Each individual micro-chapbook, broadside, and booklet is printed on unique paper, including parchment, linen, and recylced stock. This volume is also available in the standard perfect bound book form for non-collectors simply looking for good reading. Both can be ordered from the publication’s website.

2014 Gulf Coast Prize Winners Featured

The Winter/Spring 2015 issue of Gulf Coast: A Journal of Literature and Fine Arts features the winners of the 2014 Gulf Coast Prizes:

gulf-coastPoetry
“Engagement Party, Georgia” by Raena Shirali
Selected by Rachel Zucker

Nonfiction
“Love Drones” by Noam Dorr
Selected by John D’Agata

Fiction
“Kansas, America, 1899” by Edward McPherson
Selected by Andrea Barrett

The deadline for this annual prize is March 22, 2015. This year’s judges are Sarah Shun-lien Bynum (Fiction), Maggie Nelson (Nonfiction), and Carl Phillips (Poetry). The contest awards publication and $1500 each to the best poem, essay, and short story, as well as $250 to two honorable mentions in each genre. The winners will appear in Gulf Coast 28.1, due out in Fall 2015, and all entries will be considered for paid publication on the Gulf Coast website as Online Exclusives. The reading fee includes a one-year subscription to Gulf Coast and submissions are accepted both online and via postal mail.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

new-letters

Staring out the window at leaf bare trees, snow and ice, and grey skies threatening more accumulation to come, the cover of New Letters brought some much needed warmth of color to my day. “The Books of Common Prayer” by Margaret Brommelsiek is a hand-pieced collage, digitally scanned for archival printing.

transference

Transference is the annual publication of the Department of World Languages and Literatures at Western Michigan University and is available in print and online for free downloading. This year’s cover features Leticia R. Bajuyo’s “Wow and Flutter: Noiseless” – an installment of player piano roll paper, typewriter, metal, and table (2012; photo by Darrell Kincer).

tlr

Stunning for its visual composition, The Literary Review (TLR) fall 2014 issue, “Women’s Studies: Not by the book,” features Achim Thode’s 1972 photograph of German visual artist Rebecca Horn, White Body Fan.

New Lit on the Block :: Bridge Eight

bridge-eightBased out of Jacksonville, Florida, the biannual print Bridge Eight Literary Magazine publishes literary fiction, poetry and creative non-fiction.

The magazine is published by Bridge Eight, a small independent press that seeks to build the literary culture of Northeast Florida, while publishing work from writers all over the world.

Publisher Jared Rypkema is based in Jacksonville, a city known for its seven bridges. He says, “Bridge Eight provides an ‘eighth bridge’ that will take readers to new imaginative destinations, connecting new voices and new readers, and venturing far beyond the boundaries of the city we call home.” Since its inception, Rypkema notes, Bridge Eight Literary Magazine has been wonderfully received both locally and regionally, earning the support of Jacksonville’s cultural council and arts community. Others working to make the publication happen include Managing Editor Coe Douglas, Senior Fiction Editor Melanie Webb, and Senior Poetry Editor Teri Youmans Grimm.

Bridge Eight started as a community-building organization that sought to connect Jacksonville-based writers and create a movement of literary culture within the city. After a year of hosting workshops and community events, the literary magazine concept was born in order to publish outside influences alongside those grown in Jacksonville, FL. Since there were no other independent literary magazines in Jacksonville, Bridge Eight became the only one of its kind when it published its first issue in November 2014.

Rypkema tells me, “As artists and writers first, publishers second, we carry a commitment to bring our readers the best writing we can, presented in the best way possible. We work with amazing artists for our design and the best printers in the country. For readers, this is a magazine that will not only be a great read, but feel and look amazing as well.”

Recent contributors include Mark Ari, editor of EAT Poems, Editorial Advisor to Fiction Fix, and author of The Shoemaker’s Tale; Teri Youmans Grimm, author of Dirt Eaters and Becoming Lyla Dore (forthcoming); and Lee Matalone, whose writing has recently appeared in the Noctua Review, Verbaleyze’s Young Writers Anthology, the Eunoia Review and the Stoneslide Corrective.

Bridge Eight continues to host workshops for Jacksonville-based writers and presents the semi-regular reading series, Abridged. Rypkema looks to the future of the publication: “As almost all other independent literary magazines, sustainability was key to our foundation. The decisions we’ve made and people we’ve worked with over the past year have set the magazine up for success in the years to come – where we hope to become a go-to for literary publishing in Northeast Florida. Bridge Eight Literary Magazine will always be on the lookout for excellent work that speaks to the very elements of humanity.”

Bridge Eight Literary Magazine accepts submissions on a rolling basis. Submissions received on or before February 15, 2015 will be considered for Issue 2 (Spring 2015).

My Top Three Reasons to Read This WLT

world-literature-todayI recommend reading World Literature Today cover-to-cover every issue, but if you need some extra incentive for the January-February 2015, here you go:

1. The article by J. Madison Davis: “The Idiotically Criminal Universe of the Brothers Cohen.”

2. The special section of flash nonfiction featuring works by Brian Doyle, Josey Foo, Lia Purpura, Vikram Kapur, and Dmitry Samarov.

3. The “Suite of Contempory Ethiopean Poetry” with Misrak Terefe, Abebaw Melaku, Mihret Kebede, Eric Ellingsen, and David Shook.

And my two runner-ups: “Storytelling, Fake Worlds, and the Internet” by Elif Shafak and “Ping-Pong: or, Writing Together” by Sergio Pitol. And everything else in between. But I did say I would pick three to number.

Does Art Matter?

robert-stewartNew Letters Editor Robert Stewart asks “Does art do much good?”

In his Editor’s Note, “Making What Matters,” Stewart shares, “In my home city recently, a 10-year-old girl named Machole and a 6-year-old girl named Angel, in separate events, were shot dead by gunfire. Machole was in her own living room when someone in a car shot several times into her house; Angel was walking out the door of a convenience store with her father. Other children continue to suffer abuse and violence, yes, but these two events, nine days apart, have caused many people here to examine the kind of landscape—city and country—we have shaped for our children.”

Go to the National Art Education Association News page on any given day, and you’ll see comment after comment from leaders across the nation proclaiming the importance of the arts in education, of turning and keeping the A in STEM for STEAM. It’s not a new struggle among cultures, among communiites, as Stewart notes the Trappist monk Thomas Merton “in a 1962 letter, where he confessed to being disheartened by evil in the world, despite his own writings and art. ‘Tell me,’ Merton wrote to his friend, “am I wasting my time?'”

It’s a question and concern that pervades and surfaces, resurfaces, confronts and confounds wirters, artists, educators, politician and policy makers. While Stewart answers the question in his commentary, an answer found through reading the works of authors in the journal and concluding on the worth and value of their efforts. A worth and value we need to retain and remind others of every chance we get.

Art :: Mequitta Ahuja

georgia-reviewIn addition to the cover image, the Winter 2014 issue of The Georgia Review features what Editor Stephen Corey rightly refers to as “the striking art portfolio by Mequitta Ahuja” and notes this is the publication’s “second-ever multi-panel foldout.” This is both a generous and gorgeous dedication to artwork for journal readers to enjoy. Corey also footnotes the artwork introduction with this: “Mequitta Ahuja’s Automythography marks The Georgia Review‘s first collaborative project with the University of Georgia’s Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries. Sponsored by the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts, Ahuja will be in residence at the school from late January to early February 2015, and an exhibit of her work will be on display at the Dodd Galleries.”

Salamander Contest Winners

salamander1Salamander #39 features the 2014 fiction prize winner judged by Jennifer Haigh: “Dimension” by Barrett Warner. Of his work, Haigh says it is a “coming-of-age tale turned inside out, the hit-and-run love story of an unlikely couple on the skids. Their ill-fated affair is sketched with marvelous economy, style , and verve. Wise, playful, startling in its insight, this is a story made of remarkable sentences laid end to end.’

 “When Desire Can’t Find Its Object” by Margaret Osburn earned an honorable mention. Haigh writes that this work “depicts a meeting between old friends: a young draft dodger on a vision quest, and Iris, his best friend’s mother, who is not long for this world. In supple, elastic prose, it telegraphs – in seven short pages – a curious love story, a brief interlude that illumines an entire life.”

[Cover Art: “WC4173, 2010” by Ann Ropp]

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

cimarron-review-cover

“100 Days of Summer” by poet and photographer Steve Lautermilch graces the cover of Cimarron Review‘s Fall 2014 issue. Images of summer are the perfect antidote to these remaining 100 days of winter.

fourteen-hillsBecause this cover made me look twice and then keep looking to really get the full sense of the image, Fourteen Hills 20.1-2015 makes the post. “Don Pepe” by Camilo Restrepo from the series Los Caprichos (2014) is ink, water-soluble wax pastel, tape, glue, newspaper clippings and saliva on paper. Yup. Saliva.

cahoodaloodalingFrom the online magazine, Cahoodaloodaling: “Our cover artist, Jenny Schukin, is a 20-year-old artist, born in Moscow, Russia, and currently residing in Israel. Mainly inspired by nature, mythology, and folk-tales, Jenny enjoys surreal, fantasy and animal themed artwork. Her preferred media is traditional and her tools of choice are watercolors, inks, and pencils. Jenny’s plans for the near future include attending an art academy in the field of illustration.” In a word: Gorgeous. More of her work is featured in the online issue.

Nerve Lantern Performance Literature

nerve-laternNerve Lantern: Axon of Performance Literature is a truly unique publication. Published by Pyriform Press and edited by Ellen Redbird, Nerve Lantern is “a journal of experimental performance texts and texts about performance, supporting a range of forms, including poets’ theatre and page-as-stage.” Some examples from Winter 2014 Issue 7: “Un/Conventional Chorus: A Spoken Choral Work for Ten Voices” by Mary Burger & Yedda Morrison; “A Song about the Moon in the Middle of the Night” by Hannah Rodabaugh; “Xylene Radiator Anxiety Mask: Experimental Sonnet Map for Five Voices” by Gary Sloboda; “Pig of Angels of the Americlypse: An anti-masque for four players” by Rodrigo Toscano.

Submissions for the publication are open, but the editorial advice is to understand why you want to be a part of the Nerve Lantern community and what you feel “akin” to or what “new” you will add to it before submitting. The community can be better understood not just by reading past issues of the publication, but viewing one of the many performance videos shot during the publication’s performance venue: “An Afternoon of Sparking Poetry.” The most recent of these have been hosted by the Medicine Show Theatre in New York.

Redbird offers further “Thoughts to Nerve Lantern Newcomers” on the submissions page, asking questions to have writers consider the performance aspects of their work, not only how it might be performed “on stage” but also on the page. A helpful guide for readers and writers alike to help in our understanding and appreciation for this literary form.

Kudos to Ellen Redbird and contributors to Nerve Lantern for providing, not just a place for this genre, but a community in which it can be fostered.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

image

This cover of the newest issue of Image (#83) features performance photography by Zhang Huan from his series Breath, 1999, in Miami, Florida. More of his performance and series work can be found on his website.

sugar-house-review

It must just be the time of year, with snow storms and wind chill temperatures in the negative double digits, that makes me appreciate the brightly colored covers. Sugar House Review #10 celebrates their five-year annivesary with this special double issue packed with poetry. I believe credit goes to Natalie Young, editor and graphic designer.

six-by-six

And then, after the talk of bright colors, I pick this one? For good reason. I love 6×6 for their design. Ugly Duckly Press has been putting this magazine out – six pages of poetry by six different poets – since 2000, using offset printing with lovely inks and tactile papers, and each folded and bound with a sturdy, color coordinated rubber band. It’s a production value that merits special appreciation in our digital age.

Contemporary Chinese Short Fiction

chinese-literature-todayModern short fiction highlights the newest issue of Chinese Literature Today (v4 n2). Four award-winning authors were selected to exemplify what editors note is a revival of the short form in Chinese literature: Ai Wei, Fan Xiaoqing, Dong Xi, and Li Shijiang. “Our selection covers different generations of contemporary Chinese writers, both male and female writers, and a wide spectrum of literary styles. The selected stories are some of the most representative pieces that showcase short fiction’s efficacy in re-narrating history and memory, capturing immediate social changes, and aestheticizing fragmented individual experiences.”

Special Issue :: Mediterraneans

marMediterraneans is the subject of The Massachusetts Review special issue for Winter 2014. In their introduction, Editors Anna Botta and Michel Moushabeck write of history of the area, of the many cultures that crisscrossed this busy commerce route, and of the language developed to be shared among them, called lingua franca.

“Another name for this Mediterranean vernacular was sabir,” say Botta and Moushabeck, “a noun that derives from the Latin root sapere, ‘to know.’ This special issue brings into conversation the different dialects, languages, vernaculars of the Mediterranean in order to create a sabir of poetic, fictive, and artistic imagination displaying the plurality of Mediterranean identities. The texts included in the pages that follow do not pretend ‘to know’ the Med, instead they trace the filigree of a sabir which can tell us only indirectly and vaguely what Mediterranean identity is.”

The full text of the introduction can be read on the TMR website along with several works from the issue.

Mid-American Review Celebrates

mid-american-reviewThe newest issue of Mid-American Review has much to celebrate. For its 35th Anniversary, Editor-in-Chief Abigail Cloud wanted to recognize the publication’s annual Fineline Competition, unique because it focuses on the short form in poetry and prose, and also because the magazine’s staff cross-read genres to choose the winners. This issue of MAR features 26 works from past Fineline winners in addition to the 2014 Fineline Competition selections: Allison Adair, Winner; Becky Hegenston, Runner-Up; Cherie Hunter Day and Nancy Hewitt, Editor’s Choices. A great issue for those looking to read winning works as well those who may want to enter future Fineline Competitions.

Natural Bridge Special Veterans Selections

john-daltonNatural Bridge Fall 2014 (#32) includes a special selection of veterans-themed poetry and fiction. Guest Editor John Dalton writes that though the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are said to be ending, “These wars, it turns out, have their own afterlife. Perhaps no one understand this better than the men and women who’ve returned to us as veterans.”

Dalton hopes that this feature will help others better understand the “strangeness” in the role of military service: “to be asked to travel across the world and fight and kill and die in a culture you only partially understand, and perhaps a stranger thing to come home and figure out who you are and just what your service has meant.” It is a conundrum with which we all continue to struggle, and for which we continue to turn to writing to help us navigate as individuals and as a society.

Writers featured for this selection: Marilyn Johnston, Wendy Dunmeyer, John Twobey, Jack Vian, Ty Burson, Nandini Dhar, and Arthur Davis.

Special Issue :: Skin

chattahoocheeSkin is the special focus of The Chattahoochee Review Fall/Winter 2014 double issue. Editor Anna Schachner writes that the call for submissions encouraged “literal and figurative explorations of the theme,” and that “the editorial staff couldn’t have predicted the original and varied responses” they would receive.

As with themed calls, there is both the promise and the dread that metaphor will take over, as the editors discovered, “There was race and disease and facade and sexuality and transformation and embodiment and disguise, among others. Who can fight metaphor? So we joined it, ultimately identifying three metaphors that would help us organize, even reinforce, the great work in the issue: Surface, Selves, and Symbiosis.”

Additionally, in her own exploration of the topic, Schachner focused on the idea of where skin and language meet: tattoo. Taking this connection further to the literal tattoo, Schachner interviews Eva Talmadge, co-author of The Word Made Flesh: Literary Tattoos from Bookworms Worldwide. The interview can also be found on The Hooch, TCR’s news and events page.

Ruminate Poetry & Art Prize Winners

ruminateRuminate Magazine Winter 2014-15 features poetry by the winners of the 2014 Janet B. McCabe Poetry Prize judged by Jeanne Murray Walker: First Place Emily Rose Cole; Second Place Charity Gingerich; Honorable Mention J. Scott Brownlee (whose poem “Pasture Ode” can be read here on Ruminate). Also featured are visual works in full color by the winners of the 2014 Kalos Visual Art Prize judged by Mary McCleary: First Place Hilary White, whose work is featured on the cover in addition to a portfolio within; Second Place Aaron Lee Benson; Honorable Mention Lisa Discepoli Line.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

pretty-owl-poetry

This colorfully fun, free flowing cover image for Pretty Owl Poetry Winter 2014, The Gift of Saturn, was created by featured artist Ernest Williamson III, accomplished and prolific poet as well as artist.

printers-devil-review

Printer’s Devil Review online literary and visual art magazine published by Black Key Press consistently has some of the most stunning visual art covers I’ve seen. This cover of their fall 2014 issue features Nicola Verlato’s Crash 5 (2012; Oil on canvas, 36 in. x 48 in.).

psychopomp

This cover of Psychopomp (Winter 2015) online journal of prose and visual art caught my eye because it reminded me of Heinz Edelmann, art director for the 1968 animated Beatles film Yellow Submarine. Good times. This piece, Cross Section of a Cloud, is by multi-talented artist Cate Anevski.