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delicious new poetry
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
Mar 28, 2026
'I will give you horses' — poetry by Johannes Göransson
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
Mar 28, 2026
'Darling, clean up your heart' — poetry by Lavinia Liang
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
Mar 28, 2026
'am I the lonely wicked one' — poetry by Lindsay Lusby
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
Mar 28, 2026
'flowers of hell, bonded in glitter' — poetry by Katie Doherty
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
Mar 28, 2026
'it is the scent of death and it is a wolfish girl' — poetry by Lena Kinder
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
Mar 28, 2026
'plotting like a diabolical orchid' — poetry by Laura Cronk
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
Mar 28, 2026
'even in wilds, it sins' — poetry by Ann DeVilbiss
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
Mar 28, 2026
'I birth my own being' — poetry by Nichole Turnbloom
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
Mar 28, 2026
'vespiaries brooding combs of quietness' — poetry by Susan Irvine
Mar 28, 2026
Mar 28, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
Mar 27, 2026
'What comes after happiness?' — poetry by Robert McDonald
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
Mar 27, 2026
‘the pale seam of spillage’ — poetry by Amanda Gaines
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
Mar 27, 2026
'an assailing miasma' — poetry by Sadee Bee
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
Mar 27, 2026
' ghost of cinnamon, wet dog & bog blood' — poetry by Trista Edwards
Mar 27, 2026
Mar 27, 2026
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
Mar 10, 2026
'Make of me a piecemeal mound' — poetry by Matthew Gustafson
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
Mar 10, 2026
'the fever always holds' — poetry by Abbie Allison
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
Mar 10, 2026
'those petty midnights' — poetry by Zoë Davis
Mar 10, 2026
Mar 10, 2026
'my dear vesuvius' — poetry by jp thorn
Mar 9, 2026
'my dear vesuvius' — poetry by jp thorn
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'In the doom tunnel' — poetry by Melissa Eleftherion
Mar 9, 2026
'In the doom tunnel' — poetry by Melissa Eleftherion
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'Love me as a wilderness' — Ruth Martinez
Mar 9, 2026
'Love me as a wilderness' — Ruth Martinez
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'lost in the  rapture of man' — poetry by Ian Berger
Mar 9, 2026
'lost in the rapture of man' — poetry by Ian Berger
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'Stop trying to write something beautiful' — poetry by Diana Whitney
Mar 9, 2026
'Stop trying to write something beautiful' — poetry by Diana Whitney
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'I am a devotee' — poetry by Patricia Grisafi
Mar 9, 2026
'I am a devotee' — poetry by Patricia Grisafi
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'come enflesh  our feast' — poetry by Haley Hodges
Mar 9, 2026
'come enflesh our feast' — poetry by Haley Hodges
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'noonday I dive' — poetry by Karen Earle
Mar 9, 2026
'noonday I dive' — poetry by Karen Earle
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
'To eat dying stars' — poetry by Juliet Cook
Mar 9, 2026
'To eat dying stars' — poetry by Juliet Cook
Mar 9, 2026
Mar 9, 2026
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
‘same spectral symphony’ — poetry by Julio César Villegas
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
'I think I know why I am looking at roses' — poetry by Stephanie Victoire
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
'All the trees are you' — poetry by Barbara Ungar
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis  of ancient  and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
'girl straddles the axis of ancient and eternal' — poetry by Grace Dignazio
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
'Talk light with me' — poetry by Catherine Graham
Jan 1, 2026
Jan 1, 2026

#TrumpTapes Erasure, Poetry by Meghann Plunkett

October 12, 2016

Meghann Plunkett is a poet, performer, coder and feminist.  Her work has appeared in national and international literary journals including Muzzle Magazine, The Paris-American, Simon & Schuster's anthology Chorus, and Southword. She teaches creative workshops at Omega Institute and co-directs a children's summer camp called Writers' Week Aboard the Black Dog Tall Ships in Martha's Vineyard. Currently, Meghann is an MFA candidate at Southern Illinois University. 

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In Poetry & Prose Tags meghann plunkett, poetry, Donald Trump
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Interview with Michael J. Seidlinger on GIFs, Gender & the Apocalypse

October 11, 2016

Everyone seems to know who Michael J. Seidlinger is, even if just by name. Seidlinger is a ghost — the kind of ghost who messes up you book case and reorders everything so you can't actually find what you're looking for. But then when you actually look back at all of the reordered books, you find something beautiful stuck in there that you hadn't seen before. 

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Michael J. Seidlinger, interviews, literature, books, fiction
1 Comment
El Yas

El Yas

Portrait of a Fat Girl

October 10, 2016

Sometimes, I feel sad when I look back through old photo albums. There are so few of me beyond the age of 12 that it is occasionally difficult to even remember what I was like then. What happens, because I am so undocumented, is that all I remember is being sad, fat, unhappy, uncomfortable. I know that’s not how I felt every day. Yet, it’s all I’m left with.  

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Fat-Shaming, Body Positivity, Body Image, Self-Love, Non Fiction
2 Comments

Interview with Sweta Srivastava Vikram

October 4, 2016

In 2013, Indian poet Sweta Srivastava Vikram published a collection of poems titled No Ocean Here. Published by Modern History Press, No Ocean Here documents the stories of oppressed women living in different parts of Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Following an itinerary made up of narrative poems, the reader travels to countries including Singapore, Bangladesh, and Cameroon, coming face-to-face with patriarchal tyranny. Vikram takes her readers on an emotional and geographical journey. She writes,

I walk humbly through cultures,
documenting stories

for women without a voice.
-"No Ocean Here"

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In Interviews, Poetry & Prose Tags Sweta Srivastava Vikram, Daria Popov, Emma Eden Ramos, Chapbook, Poetry, No Ocean Here, Oppression, Patriarchy
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Cole Patrick

Cole Patrick

The Spectator, Nonfiction by Carly Susser

September 29, 2016

I’m walking with Rob outside a little league field in Hoboken on a Saturday night when a groundskeeper drives up to the curb and disembarks. I trust his red jacket and white hair, his saunter up the grassy hill, and the way he already seems to know what I need.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags carly susser, nonfiction
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Ginette Brosseau

Ginette Brosseau

Poetry By Marina Carreira

September 28, 2016

Marina Carreira is a feminist Luso-American writer from Newark, NJ. She holds a MFA in Creative Writing from Rutgers University. Marina is curator and co-host of "Brick City Speaks," a monthly reading series held in the LIPS studio of the Gateway Project Spaces art gallery in Newark, NJ. Her work is featured or forthcoming in The Acentos Review, The Writing Disorder, Naugatuck River Review, Writers of the Portuguese Diaspora: An Anthology, The Fem, Paterson Literary Review, Rock and Sling, Bluestockings Magazine, Pittsburgh Poetry Review, and Pif Magazine, among others.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Marina Carreira, Poetry, Poet, Poems
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Via here.

Via here.

Poetry by Jennifer Maritza McCauley

September 27, 2016

Jennifer Maritza McCauley is a writer, teacher and Ph.D. candidate in creative writing at the University of Missouri. She is also an editorial assistant at The Missouri Review, a reviews editor at Fjords Review and an associate editor of Origins Literary Journal. Her most recent work appears or is forthcoming in editions of The Los Angeles Review, Jabberwock Review, Split this Rock's "Poem of the Week," Puerto del Sol, The Feminist Wire, New Delta Review, Rain Taxi, The Boiler, and Literary Orphans, among other outlets.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Jennifer Maritza McCauley, poetry
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5 Reasons You Should Join the Two Sylvias Press Online Poetry Retreat This Fall

September 22, 2016

This July, I participated in the Two Sylvias Press Online Retreat for four weeks, and it rocked my poem world.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags poetry, workshops
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4 Poetry Collections That Will Give You All the Feelings Ever

September 20, 2016

Reading is kind of my jam. It was the thing I did ever since I could remember, especially when I was feeling sad and lonely and needed to feel like the world was an OK place to be. These four collections have done just that for me, and for that, I'm ever grateful to the poets who wrote them and birthed them into the world.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags christopher soto, katie longofono, erin taylor, joshua jennifer, joshua jennifer espinoza, bottlecap press, ccm, sibling rivalry press, sundress publications
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Maren Klemp

Maren Klemp

On Trying to Understand My Mother's Recent Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis

September 20, 2016

And suddenly I realized, this is how it is for her. In her eyes, she is always under attack, she always has to fight, and if there isn’t anything to attack she must create it. Maybe she can’t feel strong on her own, there must always be an oppressor, she is the underdog, the caboose.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Sarah Allred, Fiction, Disabilities, Chronic Illness, Mental Health, Depression, Fibromyalgia
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 Руслан Гамзалиев

 

Руслан Гамзалиев

Poetry by Paul Hlava

September 19, 2016

Paul Hlava's poems have been published in Narrative, Gulf Coast, BOMB, the PEN Poetry Series, among other journals and newspapers and have been nominated for the Pushcart. He holds an MFA from New York University, and a BA from UC Riverside. 

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Paul Hlava, Poetry, Poet
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It Follows (2015)

It Follows (2015)

Give Me All Your Love, Prose Poem by Margaret Yapp

September 16, 2016

Margaret Yapp is a recent college grad working and living in Minneapolis. Her essays and poems have appeared in The Tishman Review, Midwestern Gothic, Driftward Press, and elsewhere.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Margaret Yapp, Poetry, Poet, Poem, Prose
1 Comment

Review of Margaret Bashaar's Some Other Stupid Fruit

September 15, 2016

BY JOANNA C. VALENTE

Margaret Bashaar is the real deal. She's a dedicated and brilliant poet, feminist, and social justice activist. Her latest collection "Some Other Stupid Fruit" was just published by Agape Editions (2016), and it is a ripe, conversational chapbook that explores gender presentation and performance, particularly for female-bodied humans. It's kind of a mean girls chapbook in the best of ways.

The collection starts of with the idea of the narrator being a thief, as the first poem "I Am a Thief" chronicles the speaker taking a spoon and a baby away from someone else. This display of both maternal ownership over the baby, spoon, man, and dog at once reverses the typical power dynamic that women and men face, but it also constructs a world where intimacy isn't gradually grown, but taken, where there divide between the real self and performed self is put on display. 

Then, the next poem, "The Seduction of Snakes," pulls us further into this bizarre, ultra-callous landscape where the speaker claims every woman has "a snake inside her" that is "twisting beneath the skin at her temple,/ouroborosing through the ventricles of her heart." I love this image, so violent in nature, because it paints a gruesome picture of a reversed motherhood, thus illustrating the real portrait of what being able to create life truly entails. Bashaar's chapbook paints a portrait of the female body as not just something "soft and frail and sweet" but acknowledging that there is a "violence in all of us," a side is nuanced and full of venom. 

What I love most about this collection is how conversational and relatable it is—Bashaar uses ordinary events and everyday musings to bring us into this world using the creation story and the iconic figure of Eve as a trope—as opposed to creating a dream world that we can't truly understand or grasp. The struggle between power and submission, insecurity and a cutting ego, is intriguing. For instance, in "Thinking for Yourself Is a Lost Art and Good Riddance," she writes: 

"I will tell you what color nail polish to wear,
which moisturizer is best beneath your eyes
and you will learn to paint your own French tips.

Remember the important things: pitch your center
of gravity forward in heels, do not skip leg day.
Clench your jaw until color bursts behind your eyes,
until you feel heat below your ear like a bleed."

The fearless speaker is godlike in this instance, using the performance of putting on makeup and adorning the body to control one's sexuality, dominance, and perceived place in their world, because this is often what women and female-bodied people are taught to do by the media as a whole. To use your body to control those around you, and yourself.

Instead of writing this chapbook in the third person to explore this perspective, and to offer a subjective criticism of our current culture, I love that Bashaar does the opposite. She uses the flawed first person approach to illustrate how easy it is to fall into this type of insecure-fueled thinking, and illustrates how "mean girls" are made. Really, whose fault is that? And how do we change this?

All in all, the collection aptly ends with the poem "There Really Is No Such Thing as Winning," which is a perfect end for such a collection. The last two words are "your cunt," which manifests the idea of female power and sexuality—and being at once owned by one's desires and gender, while also yearning to reject those constraints. 


Margaret Bashaar’s first book of poetry, Stationed Near the Gateway, was released by Sundress Publications in early 2015. She has chapbooks from Grey Book Press, Blood Pudding Press, and Tilt Press and her poetry has appeared in many literary journals and anthologies, including New South, Caketrain, The Southeast Review, Copper Nickel, and Menacing Hedge, among others. She lives in Pittsburgh, PA, where she edits Hyacinth Girl Press and encourages art anarchy.

Joanna C. Valente is a human who lives in Brooklyn, New York. She is the author of Sirs & Madams (Aldrich Press, 2014), The Gods Are Dead (Deadly Chaps Press, 2015), Marys of the Sea (forthcoming 2016, ELJ Publications) & Xenos (forthcoming 2017, Agape Editions). She received her MFA in writing at Sarah Lawrence College. She is also the founder of Yes, Poetry, as well as the managing editor for Luna Luna Magazine. Some of her writing has appeared in Prelude, The Atlas Review, The Feminist Wire, BUST, Pouch, and elsewhere. She also leads workshops at Brooklyn Poets.

 

In Poetry & Prose Tags poetry, chapbook, margaret bashaar
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via semisweetstudios

via semisweetstudios

Poetry by Suzannah Spaar

September 15, 2016

Suzannah Spaar is a poet living in Pittsburgh where she is an MFA candidate in poetry. Born and raised in Charlottesville, Virginia, she values a good ghost tour. Currently, she serves as a contributing editor for Aster(ix) Journal and teaches at the University of Pittsburgh.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags Suzannah Spaar, Poet, Poetry
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Kace Rodriguez

Kace Rodriguez

Poetry by Shannon Elizabeth Hardwick

September 13, 2016

Shannon Elizabeth Hardwick received her MFA from Sarah Lawrence College. Her first full-length book, Before Isadore, is forthcoming from Sundress Publications. She is an associate poetry editor for The Boiler Journal. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in the following: Salt Hill, Stirring, Versal, The Texas Observer, Devil's Lake, Four Way Review, among others. Hardwick also has chapbooks out with Thrush Press and Mouthfeel Press. She writes in the deserts of West Texas.

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In Poetry & Prose Tags poetry, shannon elizabeth hardwick
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