So fruit flower myself inside out
My poem "Persephone in Hel" is now online at Stone Telling #3. The theme is Whimsy; I think it might be their best issue yet. I love the illustrations. Make sure to check out the roundtable, with bonus poem by Jo Walton. I'd include the usual note about the poem's origins here, but they're part of the discussion.
I am failing to fight off yet another cold. Asklepios is fired.
I am failing to fight off yet another cold. Asklepios is fired.

no subject
And then there was the week they published Robert Pinsky's "Last Robot Song," Susan Stewart's "First Idyll," and Cavafy's "It Must Have Been the Spirits," so who knows.
no subject
no subject
I keep trying . . .
no subject
I tried them twice so far (once with poetry, and once with prose).
no subject
Twice, which I thought was a good sign. I should send them something again.
I tried them twice so far (once with poetry, and once with prose).
So you should, too!
no subject
I get discouraged easily and have no self-confidence... maybe in the future.
no subject
"Despite its evident merit." I thought that was a good sign.
I get discouraged easily and have no self-confidence... maybe in the future.
Dunno: you appear to be on a roll now. Might as well take advantage of it.
no subject
I am on a breadroll!
(as one of my students wrote in a recent paper, "the Enlightenment gave women a new roll").
I sent "13 Principles of Faith" (the one I just sold to Apex) to a Jewish-themed magazine, and they held it for almost a year, after which they wrote back to say that the magazine changed directions. :P This is a poem I know is good (which happens to me very rarely), and is the closest to mainstream I've ever come, so I don't even know.
no subject
I didn't know, actually. Neat.
I sent "13 Principles of Faith" (the one I just sold to Apex) to a Jewish-themed magazine, and they held it for almost a year, after which they wrote back to say that the magazine changed directions.
*headdesk*
This is a poem I know is good (which happens to me very rarely), and is the closest to mainstream I've ever come, so I don't even know.
I look forward to reading it.