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NewPages Blog

At the NewPages Blog readers and writers can catch up with their favorite literary and alternative magazines, independent and university presses, creative writing programs, and writing and literary events. Find new books, new issue announcements, contest winners, and so much more!

Boulevard Celebrates 100!

jane smileyCongratulations to Boulevard on its 100th issue of fiction, poetry and essays. Special to this issue is a craft interview with Jane Smiley in which she discusses the “necessary ingredients” that went into the structure of her Last Hundred Years trilogy, what she was “obsessed with” when writing, and the impact of winning the Pulitzer. Also included is the Boulevard’s regular Symposium feature on the topic “Writing In the Donald Trump Age.” Contributors include Shara McCallum, Phong Nguyen, Daniel M. Mendoza, René Martínez, Meron Haredo, and Robert Zaller.

2018 William Van Dyke Short Story Prize Winners

Ruminate Fall 2018 (#48) features the 2018 William Van Dyke Short Story Prize recipients, as selected by judge Susan Woodring:

jason villemezFirst Place
“Coda” by Jason Villemez [pictured]

Second Place
“Terra Incognita” by Laura O’Gorman Schwartz

Honorable Mention
“The Pistachio Farmer’s Daughter” by Heather M. Surls

The next submission deadline for the short story contest is February 15, 2019. The contest is open to stories 5500 words or less with no limit on the number of entries (one per fee).  The winner receives $1500 and publication; $200 and publication for the runner-up.

 

Sheila-Na-Gig online – Fall 2018

sheila-na-gig-online-v3-n1-fall-2018.jpg

Sheila-Na-Gig and I share a couple things in common, I recently discovered. We both came into the world in 1990, and neither of us can get enough poetry. The journal has grown and adapted in the past twenty-eight years, now an online magazine with quarterly contests for poets. The latest issue of Sheila-Na-Gig online features two poems by the latest winner, Rebecca Dettorre, as well as work by eighteen additional poets.

Continue reading “Sheila-Na-Gig online – Fall 2018”

The Meadow – 2018

This month, I had the enjoyment of reading the 2018 issue of The Meadow, a literary and arts journal published by the Truckee Meadows Community College in Reno, Nevada. This annual publication pulls together poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and artwork to make a collection that really encompasses great stories and representations of life, both in Nevada and throughout America’s heartlands.

Continue reading “The Meadow – 2018”

Birmingham Poetry Review – Spring 2018

The spring issue of Birmingham Poetry Review (BPR) is an assemblage of numerous pieces to inspire and stimulate. Form and function bestow imagery and metaphor in new and distinctive ways. The issue contains sixty-eight poems plus seven from featured poet, Gerald Stern, in addition to essays, reviews, and an interview, so there is much to savor and revisit at every reading.

Continue reading “Birmingham Poetry Review – Spring 2018”

Sugar House Review – Fall/Winter 2017

There is something unusual about Sugar House Review. With its glossy paper and curious formatting, this magazine not only stands out among others but also delivers aesthetic pleasure to its readers. The Fall/Winter 2017 issue features simple yet bold design which, I am sure, will charm anyone holding it in their hands. In addition to its appealing design, Sugar House Review offers a great number of pieces that will excite attentive readers. This issue features poetry, “sugar astrology,” and an interview with Kevin McLellan whose poems appear on the earlier pages of the issue. Always curious to know about a poet’s process, I was delighted to see the inclusion of an interview that asks all of the indispensable questions giving a sneak peak into Kevin McLellan’s creative process.

Continue reading “Sugar House Review – Fall/Winter 2017”

The Aurorean – Spring/Summer 2018

The Aurorean is a powerhouse of poetry. Published biannually out of Farmington, Maine, the Spring/Summer 2018 issue is sixty-one pages packed with works by seventy poets. For this reason, I would never recommend anyone read this full volume in one sitting. Doing so would leave any reader in a state akin to post-marathon exhaustion. Instead, this slim journal should be carried along your daily journey as a companion to life, to refresh your perspective, renew your vision, and deepen the experience of your existence.

Continue reading “The Aurorean – Spring/Summer 2018”

Ninth Letter – Spring/Summer 2018

The Spring/Summer issue of Ninth Letter is flashy, streaked through with fluorescent orange, graphic illustrations, and altered photographs. A self-described “collaborative arts and literary project,” the journal, which is based out of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, connects art and design students with the MFA in Creative Writing program. The result is a fully-rounded version of the typically literature-dominated student-run journal.

Continue reading “Ninth Letter – Spring/Summer 2018”

The Cincinnati Review – Summer 2018

Not long ago, the food writer Jeffrey Steingarten asked an intern where she was from. Amused by her answer, he replied with his trademark sneer, “I didn’t think one could live in Cincinnati.” The Queen City has taken its lumps over the years, but despite chocolate in chili and the often-frustrating Bengals, Cincinnati is emerging as one of America’s great, underrated cities. The culinary scene is exploding, vibrant murals bring life to street corners, the city’s sweetheart soccer team has just snagged an expansion slot from Major League Soccer, and community revitalization efforts shift the focus back from gentrified hotspots to the neighborhoods that need it most. Somewhere in this swirl of cultural growth sits The Cincinnati Review, a product of the University of Cincinnati’s Department of English and Comparative Literature.

Continue reading “The Cincinnati Review – Summer 2018”

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

cut bank 88

There’s something just quintessentially summer about the Cut Bank 88 cover, with artwork by David Miles Lusk, “Beach Snack.” Indeed!

main street rag summer 2018

The Main Street Rag Summer 2018 cover continues the summer theme – at least for us here in Michigan, motorcycles are not year-round. Photo by Editor M. Scott Douglass.

able muse summer 2018

And, perhaps a farewell to summer, this beautiful photograph on the cover of the summer 2018 issue of Able Muse: A Review of Poetry, Prose & Art, “Young Dragon’s Flight” by Anja Osenberg, is just one of the works for this issue’s featured art, “A Flight Theme.”

Four Freedoms Reinterpreted

The Fall 2018 Still Point Arts Quarterly is a special issue titled “Four Freedoms Reinterpreted.” Editor Christine Brooks Cote writes in her introduction that the concept was inspired by Franklin Roosevelt’s 1941 speech in which he specifically identified freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. She explains:

still points fall 2018

“Two years later The Saturday Evening Post  published four paintings by Norman Rockwell, each devoted to one of the Four Freedoms. There were accompanying essays written by respected writers of the day. Now seventy-five years later, it seems appropriate to revisit these ‘essential’ freedoms and think about where we stand today. . . This special issue is filled with art and writing from people who have something to say about freedom. It is both a celebration of who we are as a country and a cry for attention to the ways in which the foundations of our country are threatened. I hope you will be moved by this outpouring of love for our country and concern for our future.”

Readers can view a generous sample of the publication here.

Resources for Young Readers and Writers

Teachers and mentors to young readers and writers, check out the NewPages Young Writers 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 and using the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act guidelines. If you know of a publication or contest we could list here, please contact us. Encourage young writers to read and submit their writing!

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

poetry cover sept 2018

I can’t look a the cover of the September 2018 issue of Poetry Magazine without the intro riff to “All Along the Watchtower” by Jimi Hendrix cuing up in my head. Sweetly enough, the inside front cover features a tribute quote from Donald Hall (1928-2018): “The world is everything and that is the case. / Now stop your blubbering and wash your face.” (Poetry, February 1979)

true story issue 20

Keeping with colors, I love how Issue 20 of True Story: 6’3″ Man with Doritos by Matthew Clark is actually the color the cheesy Doritos dust leaves stuck to your fingers long after eating them (illustration by Lucy Engelman). So, no problem munching on a bag while you read this issue!

missouri review

The Missouri Review Summer 2018 cover features the unique photography of Libby Oliver from the Soft Shells series. Visit her website, and check out the Sidewalk Series – slightly disturbing but mostly funny as hell.

American Life in Poetry :: David Mason

American Life in Poetry: Column 702
BY TED KOOSER, U.S. POET LAUREATE

David Mason is the former poet laureate of Colorado and a professor of literature and writing at Colorado College. His most recent book is The Sound: New and Selected Poems, from Red Hen press. I very much like the way in which the muddy boots both open and close this poem, in which not one but two biographies are offered to us in less than a hundred words.

The Mud Room

david masonHis muddy rubber boots
stood in the farmhouse mud room
while he sat in the kitchen,
unshaven, dealing solitaire.

His wife (we called her Auntie)
rolled out dough in the kitchen
for a pie, put up preserves
and tidied, clearing her throat.

They listened to the TV
at six, he with his fingers
fumbling the hearing aids,
she watching the kitchen clock.

Old age went on like that,
a vegetable patch, a horse
some neighbor kept in the barn,
the miles of grass and fences.

After he died his boots
stood muddy in the mud room
as if he’d gone in socks,
softly out to the meadow.

We do not accept unsolicited manuscripts. American Life in Poetry is made possible by The Poetry Foundation (www.poetryfoundation.org), publisher of Poetry magazine. It is also supported by the Department of English at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Poem copyright ©2017 by David Mason, “The Mud Room.” Poem reprinted by permission of David Mason. Introduction copyright ©2018 by The Poetry Foundation. The introduction’s author, Ted Kooser, served as United States Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress from 2004-2006.

Let the Whole Thundering World Come Home

The C-word. Cancer. I’m sure if you interviewed ten people and asked them what their top three fears are, this one would make the list. And in a time in which we’re all necessarily exposed to the environmental risks posed by advances in the manufacturing industry, big agribusiness, and global warming, this fear is heightened.

Continue reading “Let the Whole Thundering World Come Home”

Adult Teeth

Domesticity at its finest, or worse. Whatever it is, Jeremy T. Wilson makes sure that the reader has a nice, comfortable spot on the couch of these unhappy homes before bulldozing them. Adult Teeth is a book for any adult who has ever considered cheating on his or her spouse, a what-not-to-do guide for divorcees and potheads that wonder what being an alligator might feel like.

Continue reading “Adult Teeth”

Samuel Johnson’s Eternal Return

Samuel Johnson’s Eternal Return is the needle and thread that connects life and death, grumpy old man and flâneur. The story revolves around a fellow named Samuel Johnson who dies protecting his son from an armed lunatic. He then enters into the body of the lunatic as a passenger, watching the world like a TV show through the eyes of his own murderer. Eventually, the lunatic dies, and Samuel Johnson bounces from body to body, hoping to one day reunite with his son.

Continue reading “Samuel Johnson’s Eternal Return”

The Lake Michigan Mermaid

The Lake Michigan Mermaid is a beautiful and haunting collection of poems about a relationship between a young girl and a freshwater mermaid. The poems alternate between the voice of the girl and voice of the mermaid, with Anne-Marie Oomen writing the girl’s poems and Linda Nemec Foster writing the mermaid’s. And woven throughout the book are lovely watercolor illustrations by Meridith Ridl.

Continue reading “The Lake Michigan Mermaid”

Be Brave

Be Brave: An Unlikely Manual for Erasing Heartbreak is tremendous. I came upon this volume by sheer dumb luck—through a professional discussion board on which I was posting my first ever reply after lurking for years—to J.M. Farkas, who had written her first ever post to the group “looking to connect with teachers teaching Beowulf” who were open to unexpected ways of approaching the text. Yes, please! But, as I learned, Be Brave isn’t just about Beowulf. In fact, it’s hardly about Beowulf per say. It is a complex, layered work, starting with its origin.

Continue reading “Be Brave”

The Owl That Carries Us Away

When I think of fiction, I imagine literature that takes me far away from my own reality into other worlds. Anticipating Doug Ramspeck’s first fiction book The Owl That Carries Us Away, I almost envisioned a giant owl taking me to a brand-new world. To my surprise, however, I found myself, or rather lost myself, in worlds similar to my own. The familiar places and situations opened possibilities for me to relate to the characters and sympathize with them, while the carefully crafted language became the link offering connections to the author’s worlds.

Continue reading “The Owl That Carries Us Away”

Teaching with Broadsided Press

michael mcgriffBroadsided Press has recently added a section to their site: Teach. It’s a growing area of their work and will feature lesson plans for teachers interested in using broadsides in the classroom. It currently includes plans for Grades 6-8 and Adults/University: “Broadsides as Adventure and Architecture,” “Writing a Photographic Poem,” and “Graduate Poetry Workshop – 4 Weeks on Ekphrasis.” The content is appropriate for working in a structured educational setting or in a community center or other organization of writers. For teachers, Broadsided Press welcomes you to share your lesson plan/article for publication consideration.

Edify Fiction Seeks Themed Submissions

Edify Fiction is seeking submissions for two upcoming themed issues. For the December 2018 issue, they are accepting pieces surrounding the topics of Christmas, holiday, and winter. Their January 2019 issue looks at all things teen – from teen writers to bullying, peer pressure, emotions, first love, best friends – and more.

angela meekWhen I asked Edify Fiction Editor Angela Meek [pictured] about the teen-themed CFS, she replied, “I was inspired recently to make a themed issue about teen concerns because of a story we recently accepted that incorporated the author’s own experiences as a teen and how those challenges shaped him. As a mom with a teen who is starting to stretch those wings and find her way in the world, I thought it would be a good time to have a dedicated issue.”

The call is a broad one, and Meek says they want it that way: “We’re pretty open as long as it is has a teen flavor to it – growing up, relationships, bullying, sports, siblings, dealing with parents, dealing with living in a divorced family, acceptance, school – you name it. As long as it is related to teens in some manner, any topic is welcomed. We also would love to feature as many teen writers as possible – from never-been-published to those writers who know their way around the writing world.”

For more information, check out Edify Fiction on Facebook and Twitter. Their general submissions guidelines can be found here, which apply for the themed issues as well. Deadline for both these themed issues is October 31, 2018.

CutBank 2017 Big Sky Winners

allie marianoCutBank 88 features the winner and runners up of their annual Big Sky, Small Prose Flash Contest, as selected by Judge Zach VandeZande:

1st Place Winner
“Water” by Allie Mariano [pictured]

Read more about Allie Mariano and the judge’s comments here.

Runners Up

“A Posture of Grace” by Kim McCrea
“Holding His Fire” by Daryl Scroggins

Big Sky, Small Prose: Flash Contest 2018 is open until September 30. Read the full details here.

Photo Essay by Kathleen Galvin

terrain galvinI think most of us know some old home – a beautiful relic of an era long gone by that we believe holds family stories as well as secrets. And, sadly, we also watch many such structures rot away, lost in court battles or just cost of upkeep, often times being razed with whole histories erased with them. Georgia-based writer and documentary photographer Kathleen Galvin followed one such home for over a decade and tells the story of her attempts to salvage its history in Temptation to Trespass: A Photo Essay published in Terrain.org: A Journal of the Built + Natural Environments. Though the end result may not provide all the stories and secrets, such efforts give a last chance, perhaps a final story, to these great community structures.

Wordrunner eChapbooks

ovenbirds coverWordrunner eChapbooks publishes an annual themed anthology, taking submissions just prior to publication, but also then publishes two e-chapbooks of fiction each year. While they have a submission fee, they are also a paying market (with a better return than I’ve been getting for playing the lottery lately). “Our aim is to make high quality writing available free or at very low cost, much like the original chapbooks that were hawked in the streets of 18th and 19th century London for pennies,” the editors note. Yet web publishing opens up all kinds of new options for digital-aged readers: “In many issues, hyperlinks to photos, videos, background articles, maps, poetry, and artwork add new dimensions to the online reading experience.”

The current chapbook is Ovenbirds and Other Stories by Dorene O’Brien, with a full archive of previous e-chapbooks and anthologies going back to 2008. Submissions for the spring anthology will open January 1 with submissions for the e-chapbook fiction series running from May 1 – June 30. Lots of time to get your manuscripts ready!

Glimmer Train New Writers Winners

Glimmer Train has just chosen the winning stories for their May/June 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 start on September 1: Short Story Award for New Writers. Glimmer Train’s monthly submission calendar may be viewed here.

victoria alejandra garayalde1st place goes to Victoria Alejandra Garayalde of San Juan, Puerto Rico, who wins $2500 for “American Dream.” Her story will be published in Issue 104 of Glimmer Train Stories. This will be her first print publication. [Photo credit: Rebecca Titus]

2nd place goes to Jenzo DuQue of Brooklyn, NY, who wins $500 for “How to Harbor an Illegal.” His story will also be published in an upcoming issue, increasing his prize to $700. This will be his first print publication.

3rd place goes to Sena Moon of Ann Arbor, Michigan, who wins $300 for “Sugar.”

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

Deadlines soon approaching!

Fiction Open: August 31 (grace period extends through September 10)
Glimmer Train hosts this competition twice a year, and first place wins $3000 plus publication in the journal, and 10 copies of that issue. Second/third: $1000/$600 and consideration for publication. This category has been won by both beginning and veteran writers – all are welcome! There are no theme restrictions. Word count generally ranges from 3000 – 6000, though up to 28,000 is fine. Stories may have previously appeared online but not in print. Click here for complete guidelines.

Very Short Fiction Award: August 31 (grace period extends through September 10)
This competition is also held twice a year, with first place winning $2000 plus publication in the journal, and 10 copies of that issue. Second/third: $500/$300 and consideration for publication. It’s open to all writers, with no theme restrictions, and the word count range is 300 – 3000. Stories may have previously appeared online but not in print. Click here for complete guidelines.

New Lit on the Block :: Thriller Magazine

thriller magazine july 2018With a name like Thriller Magazine, there’s little room for mistaking the genre of this new online biannual publishing short stories and flash fiction under the umbrella of thriller/suspense/mystery. And with Editor in Chief Ammar Habib’s background, readers of this publication can expect to experience quality genre literature, while writers can expect that their work will be respectfully considered. Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Thriller Magazine”

The Carve Classroom Online

carve classroomCarve Magazine, which offers readers new “honest fiction,” poetry, nonfiction, illustrations, and interviews in its quarterly print publication has even more to offer in its online Carve Classroom.

For teachers, Carve can re-print bulk orders of back issues (most of which are sold out in single copy), and also provides free lesson plans for single stories online. The lesson plans are availabe to download as Word documents and include a link to the story, some of which feature audio readings. The plans include group activites, discussion prompts, and critical reading and writing exercises. Just in time for the new school year!

For writers, Carve offers online writing classes exploring elements of craft. Writers can choose a self-study or community platform option, with six weekly lessons composed of assigned readings, notes on a particular craft element, questions to apply to the assigned reading, and writing exercises to practice the craft. Self-study students receive guided feedback on the reading and writing assignments (NOT manuscript critiques). The community platform options utilizes Wet Ink for a full course interaction with peers.

Also available for writers is a manuscript critique service, and for readers and writers alike, there is a free sign-up for Carve Tips for Writers delivered weekly to your mailbox or using RSS Feed or Apple News.

Much to be discovered and enjoyed at Carve!

Books :: Press 53’s 2018 Short Fiction Winner for Preorder

early delights other apocalypses jen julianIf you’ve been itching to get your hands on copies of the 2018 Press 53 Award for Short Fiction winner, now you can. Readers may now preorder copies of Jen Julian’s Earthly Delights and Other Apocalypses which will ship early October and is available in both paperback and hardcover.

Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Kevin Morgan Watson says the collection:

held my interest while taking me on a variety of journeys, both real and surreal, from a paleontologist who spontaneously crumbles to dust during a lecture, to siblings dealing with their hoarder-father’s estate. These stories ranged widely in theme and style, and after finishing one story I looked forward to where I would be taken in the next.

While you’re waiting on your signed copy of Earthly Delights and Other Apocalypses, you can stop by TriQuarterly’s website for a taste of Julian’s writing with “Attachment,” published this past July.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

malahat review

“Regret” by Shary Boyle featured on the cover of The Malahat Review is a unique porcelain sculpture, china paint, horse and synthetic hair, and velvet (2015). See more of Boyle’s work here.

meadow truckee community college

I love the fairy tale aura of Wes Lee’s “Day 242” on the cover of 2018 issue of The Meadow from Truckee Meadows Community College, as well as the magazine’s new logo design.

macguffin

I’m a sucker for a good old-fashioned fisheye lens, and luckily, The MacGuffin‘s own nonfiction editor, Michael Dyke doubles as a photographer, providing this view of Belle Isle Aquarium, Detroit, Michigan for the Spring 2018 cover.

Here – 2017

“. . . poetry is no more or less important now than it ever has been,” writes Professor and Editor Daniel Donaghy in the inaugural issue of Here: a poetry journal. Published out of Eastern Connecticut State University, Here engages student readers and editors for its submissions process, and seeks “diverse, wide-ranging, and powerful responses in poetry to the essential and endless questions related to ‘being here’ that are implied by the journal’s title.” After reading this first issue, there is no doubt that Here has established a place for itself.

Continue reading “Here – 2017”

Lou Lit Review – 2018

Having traveled down south on numerous occasions, I have found there is much to love about North Carolina. Lou Lit Review adds to that adoration, a new international journal of fiction and poetry published at Louisburg College. While a slim inaugural installment, with solid mentorship from the editors of Raleigh Review, Lou Lit has established itself with resounding force. As Co-editors Tampathia Evans and Tommy Jenkins express in the Editors’ Note: “Lou Lit is still ‘becoming’ and we are not quite sure what we are as of yet. What we do know is that we will continue to publish writers whose work represents the complexity of the human condition and makes us want to read on.” Absolutely.

Continue reading “Lou Lit Review – 2018”

True Story – 2018

Each issue of True Story shines a spotlight on one nonfiction piece by one writer. As one of my favorite print magazines, I always look forward to finding out which each new issue’s story will be. This year’s issues have, among other stories, featured a neighborhood coming together to search for a missing woman with dementia (“Search Party” by Stewart Lawrence Sinclair), and a camp counselor reflecting on his treatment of a particular camper in the wake of a sex abuse scandal involving the camp where he was once a camper himself (“Unmolested” by Michael Lowenthal). Readers never really know what to expect with each issue, part of the beauty of the little, pocket-sized magazine.

Continue reading “True Story – 2018”

The Florida Review – Fall 2017

Before I get into discussion of interesting pieces, I want to stop for a moment and draw attention to The Florida Review’s commitment to the education of budding artists. In the Fall 2017 issue, The Florida Review gives a generous note about editorial interns, both graduate and undergraduate, who are “involved in reviewing and discussing submissions in a way that helps the senior editorial staff stay sharp and articulate [their] own reasons for [their] choices.” In addition, on the journal’s website, they outline their educational mission which helps interns to “thrive as writers and to appreciate the intense and collaborative nature of publications.” As a recent graduate, I greatly appreciate and support The Florida Review’s commitment to education which contributes to the literary world.

Continue reading “The Florida Review – Fall 2017”

Split Rock Review – Spring 2018

The image that greets readers at Split Rock Review’s Spring 2018 issue is a photograph of forest that takes up the entire computer screen. Leaves blanket the floor and climb up trees, a perfect visual companion for mid-summer reading. It’s the pieces that resonate with this image of nature that spoke to me the loudest this issue, fully immersing myself in the greens of summer.

Continue reading “Split Rock Review – Spring 2018”

Exciting News from Nimrod

nimrod blogLast week, Nimrod International Journal announced exciting news for writers: they are now a paying market. For work printed in the two upcoming 2019 issues, the editors will pay $10/page with a maximum of $200, visual artists will receive $10 per image used, and all contributors will continue to receive two copies of the issue in which their work appears.

Writers whose work is selected through the journal’s two annual contests (Nimrod Literary Awards and the Francine Ringold Awards for New Writers) will also receive the new payment, though the monetary prizes for winners will remain the same.

Learn more and submit your own work at Nimrod’s website.

Reflecting on Rejection

carve“Rejection doesn’t have to be the end of the line” according to Carve Magazine. To which end, they include the coolest column in each issue: Decline/Accept, with commentary from a writer whose work, originally declined by Carve, has been accepted elsewhere. The author writes about their rejection/revision/acceptance, a snippet of the original work is included with Carve editors’ comments as well the snippet revised (if applicable) along with editors’ comments from the publication that accepted the work.

The Summer 2018 issue features Kelly Hill, whose story “The Bearded Loon” was published in the July 2017 issue of Upstreet. Hill comments on the rejection and subsequent acceptance, “I’ve been doing this writing thing long enough to understand that the story I set out to tell is not always the story I write or the story that others ultimately read. I’m always thankful for good feedback from insightful readers, although any feedback can be useful if it helps you mentally justify your stylistic choices.”

Decline/Accept is a great craft component for readers and writers alike, and you can see a full listing with links out (when available) to the final published work here.

Gulf Coast 2017 Prize Winners

lisa carterThe Summer/Fall 2018 issue of Gulf Coast features several contest winners:

2017 Translation Prize
Chosen by John Keene
from Time to Be
by Camila Reimers
Translation by Lisa Carter [pictured]

2017 Barthelme Prize for Short Prose Winner
Chosen by Roxane Gay
Pedro” by D.J. Thielke

Honorable Mentions
The Things We Could Not Say” by Lishani Ramanayake
Sunscreen” by Eric Schlich

The Inaugural Toni Beauchamp Prize in Critical Art Writing
Chosen by Darby English
Dust Balls” by Brandon Brown

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

georgia review

Poet, teacher and visual artist Truong Tran’s works are featured in the Spring 2018 issue of The Georgia Review. In addition to a full color portfolio inside, “Lost Poem #3” is featured on the cover.

colorado review

The Colorado Review cover photo by Brian Holland is luscious, and even more so when viewed full spread with the entire night-lit bridge in the background.

michigan quarterly review

And a final splash of red and summer with “Picnic, Long Island, New York” by Ralph Gibson on the cover of the Summer 2018 issue of Michigan Quarterly Review.

New Lit on the Block :: Months To Years

months to years smallDeath. Dying. Terminal illness. Words – and experiences – we tend to avoid, not want to talk about and, most certainly, not want to experience. Yet, as Founding Editor Renata Khoshroo Louwers says, these are topics that touch everyone’s life at some point. Which is why she and her husband began Months To Years, the online quarterly of creative nonfiction, poetry, photography, and art, as a response to their own experiences with loss as well as a way to support others. Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Months To Years”

CNF :: Starting Over

That’s what writers do: we start over. For a writer, every day is a new day with a new beginning. Even if we are writing an essay or a book chapter we have been working on for days or months—or years!—we face our notebook or keyboard not really knowing what is going to happen to our work next. We may think and hope that we know, but we really don’t—at least until we are deep into the story. Even then, we are invariably surprised.

Lee Gutkind from his What’s the Story introduction to the 4th Annual Readers’ Choice Theme issue of Creative Nonfiction – Starting Over: Hitting the Reset Button

Get In Shape :: Writer’s Regimen

Perfect for the start of the new school year – whether or not you’re a student! The Southeast Review is offering its second Writer’s Regimen for poets, essayists, and fiction writers who would benefit from incorporating structure into their daily writing practice – or perhaps get a daily practice started! Editor Dorothy Chan explains:

ser wr kao kalia yangThis October, The Southeast Review 30-Day Writer’s Regimen returns with daily prompts, daily exercises, and daily quotes to cure your writer’s block and give you an endless source of creative inspiration! We’ve added daily themes, so get ready to immerse yourself into different worlds every day! We’re also proud to announce craft talks by esteemed writers Ching-In Chen, Kao Kalia Yang [pictured], Sam Herschel Wein, and Timothy Liu. Registration is open now. This October, write lots of short stories and poems you’ll be proud of. We hope you enjoy our regimen!

In addition to all the daily features, Writer’s Regimen offer flashback craft talks from previous WRs for “more writing heavyweights” as well as a free copy of The Southeast Review.

For a PDF sample of the first regimen day, click here. Chan says, “This summer we’ve decided to innovate the regimen by including themes, and you’ll notice the theme of Day 1 is ‘secrets.’ These themes will carry on for a few days and each day, subscribers will experience a variation of that theme. Other themes include translation, the body, Hollywood, and seduction.”

New Books of the Month Deals at Press 53

press 53 blog imageReaders, do you find yourself wanting to support small presses, while not wanting to break your bank? Look no further than Press 53. Each month, they’ll now offer up a selection of their titles at a discounted price. Visit their website to see the current titles in poetry and fiction, including Mary Akers linked story collection Bones of an Inland Sea, and Stacy R. Nigliazzo’s award-winning poetry collection Scissored Moon.

Lit Mag Covers :: Picks of the Week

american poetry review

Regular readers of The American Poetry Review will be exicted to see the new cover design starting with the July/August 2018 issue. We love it here at NewPages World Headquaters! Nicely done APR!

nimrod

Diversity and the Arts is the theme of the Spring/Summer 2018 issue of Nimrod International Journal, featuring “Tree of Life,” a gorgeous canvas, acrylic paint, composition leaf and embroidery piece by the Tulsa Girls Art School: “an afterschool, social service program that uses art as a vehicle to reach girls.” 

louisville review

“Cedar Waxwing,” a photo by AJ Reinhart, draws readers to this Spring 2018 issue of The Louisville Review. Check out more of his nature photography and artwork here.

Another Beautiful Broadside

song of extinctionsA while back, NewPages introduced Under a Warm Green Linden online poetry journal which had expanded its publication efforts to include environmental activism under its “Green Mission.” This mission promises to donate a portion of its proceeds to reforestation efforts (through the Arbor Day Foundation and the National Forest Foundation).

To date, Under a Warm Green Linden has funded the planting of 170 trees, and with the help of poetry lovers, hopes to continue this effort. One easy way to participate is by purchasing their limited edition broadsides which accompany each new journal issue. These are bea-u-ti-ful prints – I know because I have purchased every one of them! They are reproduced on high quality paper, full color, carefully packaged for safe shipping and, best of all, SIGNED by the authors. Pictured: “Song of Extinction” by David Axelrod.

Under a Warm Green Linden has also begun publishing chapbooks and has two available for purchase: Tempo Rubato  by Boyer Rickel, A Place Where One  by Barbara Cully, and bonehouse  by Erika Brumett (forthcoming).

August Broadsided and CFS

ghost mantisBroadsided Press art and poetry collaboration posters are available for free download and postering all about town as well as in PDF to share electronically.

August’s Broadsided collaboration with words by Marci Calabretta Cancio-Bello and art by Elizabeth Terhune resulted in “Ghost Mantis.”

In addition to their ongoing CFS, Broadsided is looking for “multilingual writing” for a special edition: “Many writers grow up in or become part of families and communities that speak more than one language, and at Broadsided Press, we think that’s worth celebrating. In this special ‘Broadsided Responds’ feature, we will offer a folio of work that speaks between and with multiple languages.”