This month we offer leftover sweetness, a triumph.
Next month we:
WITHHOLD
Submission guidelines can be found here.
Artists acknowledge the moments of transformation
In Conversation with Raquel Gutiérrez
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Raquel Gutiérrez is a critic, essayist, poet, performer, and educator. Gutiérrez’s first book Brown Neon (Coffee House Press) was named as one of the best books of 2022 by The New Yorker and listed in The Best Art Books of 2022 by Hyperallergic. Brown Neon was a Finalist for the Lambda Literary Prize for Best Lesbian Biography/Memoir, a Finalist for the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses’ Firework Award in Creative Nonfiction and Recipient of The Publishing Triangle Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction. A 2021 recipient of the Rabkin Prize in Arts Journalism, as well as a 2017 recipient of The Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, Gutiérrez teaches in the Oregon State University-Cascades Low Residency Creative Writing MFA Program, as well as for The Institute of American Indian Arts’s (IAIA) Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing program. Gutiérrez gets to call Tucson, Arizona home.
Nobody
Sam Moe is the recipient of a 2023 St. Joe Community Foundation Poetry Fellowship from Longleaf Writers Conference. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming from Whale Road Review, The Indianapolis Review, Sundog Lit, and others. Her first full-length collection, Heart Weeds, was published with Alien Buddha Press (Sept. ’22) and her second full-length collection Grief Birds was published with Bullshit Lit (Apr. ’23). Her third full-length Cicatrizing the Daughters is forthcoming from FlowerSong Press.
reminders for when:
the TV never turns off & the legs grow stiff from lack of use,
for when words cling to the back of your throat like a half-chewed wad of gum,
when the only syllables your tongue knows are stuck & choke & help
for when the pill doesn’t go down
for when you allow the pain to exist,
& it feels like punishment
for when it makes itself at home, overstays its welcome
for when you become indifferent to the grief,
when you are as far away from yourself as you can imagine
for when you call every phone number you know
& plead i need you here with me
for when the embarrassment of being held is the quilt that covers you,
your quivering lip a sign of pride & never hopelessness
for when you are the very worst version of yourself,
& forever unsatisfied with it
for when your breath is suspended, held tight, as if to exhale was a death sentence
for when you wait & wait & wait for the day to finally be over
for when you find new ways to describe loneliness
remember this, when you are under attack:
the fear of the fear of the fear loosens its grip when you learn
that to exhale is not the beginning of the end ––
to exhale, to repeat the process, is a triumph
Em Townsend (they/she) is a queer nonbinary writer and student from the Washington D.C. area. An English major and radio station nerd at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, Em enjoys watching ’80s teen movies, reading, and looking at trees. Their work is published in Fish Barrel Review, The Purposeful Mayo, Blue Marble Review, Club Plum Literary Journal, and HIKA magazine, and is forthcoming in West Trade Review. Em’s debut chapbook growing forwards / growing backwards is out now with Bottlecap Press. You can visit their website here.
This month we offer leftover sweetness, a triumph.
Next month we:
WITHHOLD
Submission guidelines can be found here.
Artists acknowledge the moments of transformation
In Conversation with Raquel Gutiérrez
Born and raised in Los Angeles, Raquel Gutiérrez is a critic, essayist, poet, performer, and educator. Gutiérrez’s first book Brown Neon (Coffee House Press) was named as one of the best books of 2022 by The New Yorker and listed in The Best Art Books of 2022 by Hyperallergic. Brown Neon was a Finalist for the Lambda Literary Prize for Best Lesbian Biography/Memoir, a Finalist for the Community of Literary Magazines and Presses’ Firework Award in Creative Nonfiction and Recipient of The Publishing Triangle Judy Grahn Award for Lesbian Nonfiction. A 2021 recipient of the Rabkin Prize in Arts Journalism, as well as a 2017 recipient of The Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, Gutiérrez teaches in the Oregon State University-Cascades Low Residency Creative Writing MFA Program, as well as for The Institute of American Indian Arts’s (IAIA) Low Residency MFA in Creative Writing program. Gutiérrez gets to call Tucson, Arizona home.
Nobody
Sam Moe is the recipient of a 2023 St. Joe Community Foundation Poetry Fellowship from Longleaf Writers Conference. Her work has appeared or is forthcoming from Whale Road Review, The Indianapolis Review, Sundog Lit, and others. Her first full-length collection, Heart Weeds, was published with Alien Buddha Press (Sept. ’22) and her second full-length collection Grief Birds was published with Bullshit Lit (Apr. ’23). Her third full-length Cicatrizing the Daughters is forthcoming from FlowerSong Press.
reminders for when:
the TV never turns off & the legs grow stiff from lack of use,
for when words cling to the back of your throat like a half-chewed wad of gum,
when the only syllables your tongue knows are stuck & choke & help
for when the pill doesn’t go down
for when you allow the pain to exist,
& it feels like punishment
for when it makes itself at home, overstays its welcome
for when you become indifferent to the grief,
when you are as far away from yourself as you can imagine
for when you call every phone number you know
& plead i need you here with me
for when the embarrassment of being held is the quilt that covers you,
your quivering lip a sign of pride & never hopelessness
for when you are the very worst version of yourself,
& forever unsatisfied with it
for when your breath is suspended, held tight, as if to exhale was a death sentence
for when you wait & wait & wait for the day to finally be over
for when you find new ways to describe loneliness
remember this, when you are under attack:
the fear of the fear of the fear loosens its grip when you learn
that to exhale is not the beginning of the end ––
to exhale, to repeat the process, is a triumph
Em Townsend (they/she) is a queer nonbinary writer and student from the Washington D.C. area. An English major and radio station nerd at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, Em enjoys watching ’80s teen movies, reading, and looking at trees. Their work is published in Fish Barrel Review, The Purposeful Mayo, Blue Marble Review, Club Plum Literary Journal, and HIKA magazine, and is forthcoming in West Trade Review. Em’s debut chapbook growing forwards / growing backwards is out now with Bottlecap Press. You can visit their website here.
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