

“Poem for the Resistance,” States of the Union, ed.

“History (n.),” Best American Poetry 2017, eds. Bianca Lynne Spriggs and Katerina Stoykova Klemer. “Kentucky, September.” Undead: A Poetry Anthology of Ghouls, Ghosts, and More. “Chthonic,” “History (n.),” “Metamorphoses,” “Poem Around Which Everything Is Structured,” “The Milk Hours,” “Years I’ve Slept Right Through,” Aeolian Harp, Vol. When we read submissions, we seek poems that give us a little shiver, poems that catch the light. Washington Square: “Against Dominion,” Summer/Fall 2011ĭIAGRAM: “Kentucky, September,” 10.5, 2010 Hayden’s Ferry Review: “Schadenfreude (Your Mouth Burning Too),” Fall/Winter 2013Ĭopper Nickel: “Story with a Shriveled Nipple” and “The Scarecrow,” Winter/Spring 2013 Gulf Coast: “Schadenfreude (Memory)” and “Schadenfreude (Rest),” Spring 2014Ĭolorado Review: “Famous Tombs,” Spring 2014 I earned my BA in English from SUNY New Paltz with. Hunger Mountain: “Small Version of a Long Story,” Summer 2015 298 followers 298 connections Join to view profile Comic Book Resources The New School About Im a writer, editor and poet from Long Island. Prelude: “Birthday, Weltschmerz,” June 2015 Massachusetts Review: “Other Adam,” Spring 2015 Tupelo Quarterly: “April, Andromeda” and “Torschlusspanik (Already the Sun),” Summer 2015 Meridian: “Poem Around Which Everything Is Structured,” Fall 2015 Louisville Review: “The Milk Hours,” Spring 2016 (Reprinted at )Ĭalifornia Journal of Poetics: “Forget the Song,” Issue 2, 2016 West Branch: “Klee’s Painting,” Spring 2016 The Kenyon Review: “History (n.),” Sept./Oct. Tinderbox Poetry Journal: “Erosion,” Fall 2017īerkeley Poetry Review: “Mountain Song,” Spring 2017 Palimpsest: Yale Graduate Literary & Art Magazine: “Materia” and “Spaghetti Western,” Fall 2017 (“Spaghetti Western” reprinted at Split This Rock) George MacDonald, a Scottish author and Christ ian minister, wrote various poems, sermo ns, and. Essay 2- Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe and the Princess and the Goblin Assignment 1 vs2. Although founded in Minnesota, three of the current editors have ties to the DC region: Majda Gama, Randon Billings Noble, and Sarah Ann Winn. Essay 1 - Why Hans Christian Andersons Tinderbox follows tradition folk story telling. Poetry Northwest: “Poem for the Nation, 2016,” Spring 2018 Tinderbox Poetry Journal publishes poems, interviews, and reviews in 6 online issues per year. The Missouri Review: “Le Moribond,” “At Assateague,” and “End,” Fall 2018īoston Review: “Metamorphoses,” March 2018 Western Humanities Review: “Catalogue Beginning with a Line by Plato,” Spring 2019 Jet Fuel Review: “Glossolalia,” November 2019 Prelude: “Wet Hands in the Sun” and “Epigenesis,” January 2020 Iterant: “The Recent Past,” “Still Life,” and “From a Plane,” Issue 4, Spring 2021 Tupelo Quarterly: “Pastoral,” “What Hallows,” “Everything Must Happen But to Whom It Doesn’t Matter,” and “Circles,” folio with interview, Fall 2022Ĭolumbia: A Journal of Literature and Art: “The Delusion of Being Absolute,” Spring 2021 (reprinted at ) Academy of American Poets’s Poem-a-Day: “Echo of Origin,” forthcoming November 2022īennington Review: “Into the Green” and “The Problem of the Real,” forthcoming Fall 2022 I Offer Kitty Genovese Fake Fruit, Tinderbox Poetry Journal, Issue 4. If you would like to learn more or submit to Tinderbox, please visit their website at. Corinthians 13:11, Academy of American Poets, Poem a Day. They do not accept previously published work, and they do not accept multiple submissions. They accept simultaneous submissions, but ask that authors immediately withdraw work published elsewhere. Tinderbox accepts submissions online, not via post or email. They view the cover letter not as a formality, but an important introduction to the poet, a context within which to read the work. The editors at Tinderbox encourage poets to include a cover letter with their submission. Submissions should be six pages or fewer. Poets may submit three to four pieces of any kind of poetry. Submitting poets can expect a response within about three months. They accept a wide range of submissions-free verse and formal poetry, lyric essays, flash forms, sequences of fragments, lyric dramas, and more. While they only publish poetry, Tinderbox seeks to expand our idea of what a poem can be. Tinderbox is published monthly, and each issue features work by around fifteen poets. To get a sense of their style, you can read past issues online. They prefer profundity that arises out of nitty-gritty life itself, poetry that is lived and living. Tinderbox publishes poetry in all forms and styles, and they showcase a broad range of voices and experiences. To promote the writers they publish, they nominate poets for the Pushcart Prize, Best New Poets, and Best of the Net Anthology. Tinderbox Poetry Journal, an online journal that’s fee-free in the months the seasons change-March, June, September, and December-is seeking poetry from both emerging and established writers.
