Ash Freeman is a junior at Sarah Lawrence College. They are originally from Miami, Florida but mostly write about their time spent in Michigan and the queer pastoral. They are the Editor-in-Chief of Love & Squalor. Their submission encapsulates their writing as a whole: honest, obsessed with love, and almost grotesque.
Frequently Asked Questions: A Checklist
Sharon Mesmer's most recent poetry collection, Greetings From My Girlie Leisure Place, was voted "Best of 2015" by Entropy. She's the author of several other poetry books, as well as three fiction collections including Ma Vie à Yonago, in French translation from Hachette. Four of her poems appear in Postmodern American Poetry: A Norton Anthology (second edition). Her essays have appeared in the New York Times, New York Magazine/The Cut, the Paris Review, and the American Poetry Review. Her current manuscript-in-progress, Even Living Makes Me Die, contains poems dedicated to 37 "under-known" women poets of the Americans, from Canada to Chile, from the 19th century to the present. She teaches creative writing at NYU and the New School.
Excerpts from "I Could Never Have a Name"
Not Sure Where To Spend Your Summer Weekend at The New York City Poetry Festival? Let the Tarot Decide!
Not Sure Where To Spend Your Summer Weekend at the NYC PoFest? Let the Tarot Decide! | Clickbait is a blog designed to shamelessly attract attention to poetry. Using devices typically reserved for online “clickbait” like listicles, how-to’s, trending topics, SEO, hashtags, hyperlinks, hyperbole, sensationalism, puff, and fluff, the poets at The Poetry Society of New York are having a little fun.
What would a poetry vying for attention look like?
Halim Madi is a queer Arab poet. He grew up in Beirut, Lebanon, left at 17 to study in Paris and Toronto and worked in London and Sao Paulo. He now lives in San Francisco. Halim is a TED speaker, a product manager at Oculus working on the future of virtual reality, and a poet. In 2019, he asked his friends for crowdfunding support and wrote "Flight of the Jaguar". The story of what happened during these 14 years. The space between being a poet and becoming a poet. The leap of a cat. In 2020, also with friends’ support, he wrote and published "In the Name of Scandal", a collection of poems about sluthood, the immigrant identity, queerness and plants that make you see colors.
Gratis Versus
Raised on the rural and once-rainy Oregon coast, James Joaquin Brewer now shelters in place in Connecticut while defying the uncloudy but unclear skies of gray above to spark his imagination. A recent publication about his early life in Oregon may be found at the following link: https://thewritelaunch.com/author/james-brewer/ .
I just don't invite him.
Dominque Carrieri wrote the collection of poetry the before & the after to capture the shifts in life before and after the loss of a parent. The poems were compiled after the death of her father, who passed in 2016 to Pancreatic Cancer. When he passed, she recognized a shift in her writing. She no longer related to her work written prior to his death. Years later, she watched her work transform into longing to eventually a fixation with mortality. She knew this collection could not flourish without showcasing both her trauma and the bliss of life before it. So, she chose to let it exist as one stunning experience. The full manuscript has only just begun its submission process to publishers.
To Remember You in a Smile
Yasin Ertas is a second-year MFA student at The New School, Creative Writing/Poetry. Yasin has been living in NYC for 6 years, and previously studied International Trade in Turkey, Hungary, and Belgium with the Erasmus Program, as well as published a book in Turkey. Yasin’s articles appear in well-known newspapers Milliyet and Radika (one of them is banned because of Yasin’s political beliefs); Yasin’s poems appear in famous magazines Dil ve Edebiyat, KafkaOkur, Ot Dergisi, Kirpi Edebiyat in Turkey.
Rembrandt's Eyes
Grace Maselli studied in New York City at the Writers Studio founded by American poet and author, Philip Schultz. Her work has appeared in Cleaver Magazine, Poydras Review, Streetlight Magazine and The Penmen Review. Her poem, “Queen of African Violets,” was the 2019 first-place winner in the Jacaranda Poetry Contest sponsored by the Pasco Fine Arts Council and the Cannon Memorial Library at Saint Leo University, St. Leo, FL. Grace lives in the Tampa Bay Area with Sophia, Jackson, Francis, Olive, and Lexilu. Her poem, “What the Hair is Going On?” was published as a mini chapbook by Phfours Press, Ottowa, Canada.
10 Cats We Think Host the Reincarnated Souls of Dead Poets
lack of translation
Kayan Tara is an Indian poet and author living in the United States. Kayan’s work touches on the struggles and contradictions of growing up in Mumbai, India, as well as its political and social landscape. During this turbulent time in the United States, Kayan has written about the realization that even in times of division we have more in common than apart.
Top Ten Taylor Swift Lyrics that Should Put Her in the Running for U.S. Poet Laureate
Painted Flowers
Mollie Gordon (she/her/hers) is a queer writer, educator, and theatre-maker based in Brooklyn, NY. Her prose and poetry have been published by Multiplicity Magazine and Love & Squalor, and her plays have been produced by The Bechdel Group and Sarah Lawrence College. She uses her writing to freely explore gender and the natural world, while also analyzing and reimagining the classics. She will graduate next year with a B.A. from Sarah Lawrence.
Clickbait Review: Joshua Beckman's "Animal Days" + The Thud Thud Thud Resounding
How fragile is the word “human”? In Joshua Beckman’s new collection, Animal Days , it appears more vulnerable than we would like to admit. Animal Days, published this year by Wave Books, breaks down the syntax through which we compose ourselves as creatures set apart. Branching distinctions, recited by habit, between subject and object, human and inhuman, are all scraped and shorn away from the text, allowing us to reach into the darkness beneath words and encounter a strangeness buried deep in our bodies. Porous, silent, damp—a movement barely sensed: the parts of life from which we’d normally recoil enter our awareness, like the pulse rushing in our wrist—a foreign feeling, always present, but suddenly recognized. Winding along the roots of our grammar like a speckled rot, Beckman’s poems moisten and decay our assumptions, revealing what we are when we are no longer ourselves.
The Many Facades of Love: A Handpicked Collection of Love Poems
The Ideal Object for You, Based on Your Zodiac Sign
Holiday Gift Guide For Art-Lovers
Clickbait Review: Valzhyna Mort's Collected Body
Belarusian poet Valzhyna Mort’s first collection written in English, Collected Body, is a complex tapestry of characters and their familial stories. In the collection, readers are constantly threatened by a sense of imminent death. Yet, instead of an end, death here becomes a means of union.
Clickbait Review: Nathan Jurgenson's The Social Photo: On Photography and Social Media
By now it is no novel question to ask what the humanities owe the sciences, or indeed the sciences the humanities. The specture of the automaton is as old as the golem, which is to say as ancient as monotheism: this social anxiety regarding the essence of our humanity and its relationship to technology predates our modern conceptions of science. However, the meteoric rise in the social, political, and economic influence of technology companies such as Google, Apple, and Facebook demands that we continue reforming not only our answers to this question but our material responses to it. Social media theorist, editor emeritus of The New Inquiry, and sociologist at Snap Inc., Nathan Jurgenson addresses these disciplines via cyborg hybridity in his book The Social Photo: On Photography and Social Media.