PFN – Syncopation Literary Journal: The 1980s
Syncopation wants your poetry and prose that relates to the music of this colourful decade.
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
Syncopation wants your poetry and prose that relates to the music of this colourful decade.
From breaking down the stereotypes of toxic masculinity to embracing emotional vulnerability, this issue highlights the intersection of language, culture, and societal expectations surrounding what is deemed “masculine” and “feminine.”
THEMA Literary Journal examines how different writers respond to a single quirky theme.
This year’s Hurt & Healing Prize is about expressing our pain, but it’s also about celebrating all we have overcome. It is also a call to action—an invitation to support each other in the darkest times.
How does one qualify the robust wholesomeness of roads? Where does one locate its connections with life itself? How has it historically been depicted in literature and culture? The editorial team is interested in considering submissions that depict various aspects of road/roads.
The theme for Vernal Equinox Vol.1 is Renaissance. We hope our readers and artists delve into the timeless spirit of rebirth, revival, and reinvention; questioning, challenging, and celebrating what it means to them.
A swan song is a farewell, a declaration, a last sounding breath after a long silence. We invite you to share these final acts of resistance, joy, affirmation, confession, celebration, or consumption. How will you make yourself known to your shadow? What needs to be said?
Limited Demographic: Submissions are restricted to women.
We are interested in submissions that define community and care, and that consider how/why collaboration necessitates careful or care-full approaches to creating, re-vision relationships with art, artists, community, nature, and/or the divine.
By grief we mean not only the grief for a person/ for people, but also grief for animals, grief for a place, a home, a time, an idea, our health, the world, climate change. Ambiguous grief, anticipatory grief, collective grief, reflective grief, rituals of grief.
Silkworm is the annual publication of the Florence (MA) Poets Society.
Here we go, 2025
How's your glass?
These times of Ethics Cleansing enable some to think they are better than others, but if someone must be better, then let it be ourselves.
Two things become immediately better as one. We want your prose poems, your cross-genre work, and your all around experimental and unclassifiable writing.
If you had one last thing to give us, one last thing to say, one last thing part of yourself that needed a voice before the silence, what would it be? We want that.
We are open to interpretations on the theme: harmony, partnership, belonging; losing relations, discord, chaos; the complexity among ecosystems or among the human-made governing bodies. Send us your interpretation however literal or liberal.
What ideas does the word current evoke for you? Are you thinking about being hip, cool and up on “current” events or are you traveling on an air “current.” Where does the word take you?
Desiderium: an intense longing for something, especially something lost; from the Latin verb, desiderare, “to long for;” the great-grandfather of the word, desire.
For this contest, someone or something important to the story is not where it/they always have been, or where it/they would be expected to be located, or is in the process of changing their location from where it/they have always been. Whether this new location is an improvement or a problem is up to you.
We want to see work so raw and full of life that it practically bleeds – work so fresh and unique that it changes the way we read.