P – Enchanted Garden Haiku Journal Seeking Submissions on the Theme of “Secret Santa”
Issue 5: Secret Santa. Theme: a gift you received or shared this year
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
Issue 5: Secret Santa. Theme: a gift you received or shared this year
We share work here representative of shared human values, however differently those values might be expressed in our various religions and cultures.
Ev0king the Question: What is your favorite artistic depiction (painting, mosaic, statue, et cetera) of a Deity or group of Deities? What is your favorite piece of music about a holy day or a Deity/Deities?
A quarterly mainstream e-zine whose mission is to bring a little more good poetry into the world
What symbols do we use to reference, reflect or find ourselves (and each other)?
If you wrote something that seems in some way like a correspondence, we'd like to see it.
Editor's tip: as the weather cools, warm up with a good book, don your favorite sweater, get comfortable, and relax.
Send us your list. Make the entries short, specific, to the point.
We explore intrepid culture: our stories feature danger elements, struggle, emotion, and OVERCOMING.
Our mission is to seek out, nurture, publish and promote the very best new writers and new writing.
We seek personal, political, precise, raw, lyrical, critical, and experimental work; the stuff only you can write.
We believe poetry deserves a carved-out space in the online world. It's certainly powerful enough to stand on its own.
What lies underneath the weight of regret?
To make a long story short: we want your stories!
The winner of the contest will be awarded $1,000.00 USD
Fiction and Poetry Writing Competition open to all Canadian authors with $700 in prizes and the chance to work with a professional editor and be published in an annual anthology!
There is no specific theme for the current contest, so let your imagination run wild.
We want your brave, your pain, your love, your teeth, your howling beast.
Heraclitus, a Greek philosopher, is quoted as saying “change is the only constant in life” - and he was right. And change comes in many shapes and forms, some planned but some unplanned and totally unexpected.
Events happen, often beyond our control, leading us to change our views. Of ourselves, of life, of others, irrevocably. Sometimes for the better. Sadly, sometimes for the worse. So, ‘change’ is a key word in everyday life.