FN – Root Quarterly Seeking Submissions on the Theme of: Kith & Kin
Who do we consider family? Do non-human animals count? Do plants and insects? Will AI chatbots really replace human interaction?
Most events are installed on their deadline date, unless there is a long submission window or unless it's a rolling submission.
P=Poetry, N=Nonfiction, F=Fiction
Who do we consider family? Do non-human animals count? Do plants and insects? Will AI chatbots really replace human interaction?
Enchanted Garden is a haiku journal created for haiku lovers, beginners or experienced, is open and free to anyone to submit their work, in accordance with the haiku spirit.
Our Summer 2025 issue will be dedicated to poems about food.
Jimmy Carter saw one. So did Ronald Reagan. Harry Truman never saw one but worried about them and Bill Clinton never saw one but always wanted to. How about you?
Send us your genre-defying, liminal, non-human human. Send us your fringe and the shadows-in-the-corner-of-your-eye.
We invite you to explore what "In the Lost and Found" means to you, whether it's rediscovering a forgotten song, reclaiming a lost part of yourself, or finding meaning in the unexpected.
We’re looking for stories, essays, memoir and poetry on anything to do with the transition to adulthood: first love, hormonal angst, Saturday jobs, brushes with the law, experimentation, gaining independence, losing virginity.
We are particularly interested in work that relates to a sense of spiritual life, ecology, and community, but we welcome submissions of all kinds that reflect one's unique stories.
Reflection isn’t limited to one idea or image- it is where art begins. What have your reflections looked like?
We want to hear about the rituals that matter to you—whether they’re personal or communal, practical or spiritual. What rituals do you live by, reject, or reimagine?
If there’s one topic we can simultaneously talk about both too little and too much, it’s money. How do we decide on the best use of our financial resources?
Limited Demographic: Submissions are restricted to LGBTQ+ people.
Eye Contact is the literary and art Magazine of Seton Hill University, published by student staff members and advised by English faculty.
In the spirit of promoting global peace and contemplative artistic expression, Zen Peacemaker’s showcases three haiku a month on this page.
Send us your playful odes to community and interdependence, and essays (or manifestos!) written out of, or into, disabled joy.
We seek work of all genres by writers from the LGBTQIA community. We do not define or gatekeep what it means to be a queer writer: if you think your work belongs here, then it belongs here.
The competition theme is Finding the Words, representing the difficulty that any of us can face when trying to express our feelings.
Dog Stories We are thrilled to announce that we are now accepting stories for our dog topic that is to be released in 2025. Because of the popularity of this topic, we do a new dog book approximately every eighteen months so here is another chance for you to share a story or two about […]
Do you have a character who doesn’t believe in nuance? Have all the colors been arrested and imprisoned? Make up a story, apply your interpretation, and send it in.
In this issue, we delve into the lines that shape and limit the human experience, challenging and redefining them through the lens of prose and verse.