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Archive for January, 2024

POETRY SUBMISSIONS CALENDAR
Update January 29, 2024
Do you ever hop out of bed and tell yourself, “I’m going to send a poem to an editor today and see if they’ll publish it!” And then do you fire up your computer, open email, and discover a form letter from the journal you sent poems to six months ago that begins, “Thank you for the opportunity to read your work, but . . .”
O creative one, O seeker of inspiration and truth, take heart. There’s got to be a perfect fit for your lines somewhere if only you can discover it. Continue to cast more of your babies out into the storm and, if you’re fortunate, perhaps someday you will receive a word of encouragement like this one. This editor had rejected my submission but his message seemed personal rather than rote, so I dared to ask if any of my poems came near the mark:
You certainly meet the mark, Bill. That is, you’re a fine writer. As are most of Innisfree’s submitters. Who knows what causes a poem to leap out and insist on its acceptance to the reader. That happens about 2 percent of the time. I look forward to seeing more of your work in the future. [Greg McBride, editor, Innisfree Poetry Journal, December 2023]
So I will hop out of bed on some more mornings and be glad to tie myself to the railroad tracks of submission (such a fraught word). Hmm, let’s see . . . who is open to submissions today?
One way to answer that question is to scroll through this calendar I’ve prepared for you:
Here’s how I use this calendar:
It’s arranged by month – look down the column to see what journals and sources are open for submissions right now!
Each row includes the web address – be sure to check before you submit, because requirements are always changing!
The row also includes other information such as:
Is this an online publication only?
Should my submission be a single document?
What file formats do they accept?
There are more instructions on the table itself. Feel free to print it out. The table currently (29 Jan 2024) contains 316 listings, including journals on hold or defunct (to save wild goose chases). At the end are some random references I’ve collected, a table of winners and losers on promptness of reply, and a few journals accepting art & photography. I would really appreciate it if you notify me of any errors or suggested changes!
If you have journals you’d like me to add to the table please do send me the particulars! I will try to post an updated table once or twice a year and whenever I have made significant additions and corrections to the table.
Enjoy!
And if you find this useful or discover errors please send me a comment, correction or suggestions for additional journal entries at:
comments@griffinpoetry.com
BILL GRIFFIN — January 29, 2024
Oh, and here’s the origin story: In 2015 I posted the prototype of this table as I was developing a tool to keep track of when and where to submit poems for publication. As the second of a two-part muse on why oh why we place ourselves at the mercy of all powerful editors, here’s the original post with description:

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 . 
[with 3 poems by Debra Kaufman]
 . 
Walking Westerly, My Shadow Precedes Me
 . 
She does not hear a warning
in the wren’s song,
+++++++++ as I do,
or see the ghost moon as an omen.
 . 
She appears to have a jauntier step,
wilder hair, longer, slimmer limbs.
 . 
Perhaps she is the me
I once was –
waitress, dancer, diary keeper.
 . 
Nothing bad
has happened yet.
+++++++++ Soon
 . 
she will trail a dangerous
fragrance, be sniffed out,
tracked, pinned down.
 . 
Wind trembles the beech leaves.
The wren calls again.
 . 
I step toward the past,
she into the future
 . 
Debra Kaufman
from Outwalking the Shadow, Redhawk Press, Hickory, NC; © 2023.
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
If you believe that everything is connected;
if you believe that matter and energy are conserved (not to mention angular momentum);
if you believe that the breath you’ve just taken into your body, its oxygen reddening your corpuscles, worked its way up the hill from the great red oak not tumbled in last spring’s tornado, and that when you release it a second from now it will begin to wisp its way back down to wait for the asters you’ve sowed on wind-scoured earth;
if you believe that your body is stardust, its phosphorus and calcium and that fleck of selenium, every element which is heavier than air;
if you believe that no distance is too far and no time too long a thread to tie everything together and extend the connection,
++++++++++ then believe this:
 . 
when that wisp of a woman sitting on the couch beside your father and his baby sister, white-haired tiny flit of a woman no more substance than moonbeam, when she smiles it will light up the string of a million smiles stretching back so far that every smile since must take its cue, all the way back to the very first smile twenty-five years (less thirteen days) before you were born.
 . 
Recall those smiles you can and hold onto them — you dancing while she plays Mozart on the piano and laughs; she holding the cake while you take a deep breath to blow; beaches and playgrounds, jokes and canasta, weddings and first smiles of your own babies shared with her. Most smiles have flown to continue their cycle, petal of a flower she will notice, bug she’ll try to pick up from the carpet, a noise or a vision in some other creature’s thread of existence . . .
 . 
. . . but some precious few smiles are preserved in silver. Layers of atoms on glossy paper. Here’s one that her niece, your cousin, has just handed you, holding its connection to the others over seven decades in the bottom of a carton waiting for your gathering today. You hold it close for her to see and she smiles again.
 . 
Look! Today’s smile! When you see it, recognize its provenance, its taxonomy, its lineage and inheritance from all that have preceded it. Accept its assurance. So much lost, so much consigned to this or that flimsy drawer in the cupboard of memory (yours) and so many keys to so many drawers misplaced (hers), but still firmly by that long and winding thread as tenuous as breath connected. Every wisp connected.
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
The last time my mother
 . 
spoke words I heard
I saw her see me in a flash:
You’re my daughter!
We walked the hall,
a circumference
around the single rooms.
Round and round.
Each time we passed
the common room
she’d point to the Christmas lights.
 . 
On her bed lay a book
of her wedding photos.
I named the names, some small comfort.
I sang “Jacob’s Ladder”
and she smiled in that puzzled way.
 . 
I meant to rub lotion on her legs –
her skin dry, tissue-paper thin –
but they were calling her
for supper. I kissed her cheek.
She kissed my hand,
did not want to let it go.
 . 
I hoped we’d see a few sparrows
out her window, but
dark coming early, I saw only
our ghostly selves reflected there.
 . 
Debra Kaufman
from Outwalking the Shadow, Redhawk Press, Hickory, NC; © 2023.
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Yet if we do not stare despair in its face
(I hear you say) how will we recognize
 . 
the silver sliver of moon
when it hangs suspended like a dream?
 . 
++++++++++ from Bearing / Witness
 . 
Moonrise this past Monday was 2:37 PM in Elkin, North Carolina, USA. Waxing gibbous, we spot her on the one clear afternoon without rain. We won’t have to worry about finding our way through the darkened house at bedtime. Light will precede us, follow us, attend us. We can’t summon the moon or assign her course; we can only watch and trust she will return. We can only recognize and be grateful.
 . 
I didn’t want to get out of bed that Monday morning. All the motivations and machinations of the preceding week – phone calls, site visits, family conferences – had cooled and dissipated. Who says energy is conserved? I sat at my desk, the to-do list accruing and scrolling in my head, not knowing how to begin. And then there was Debra Kaufman’s new book waiting patiently at the top of the pile. I opened to the first poem. The clamp on my innards released and breath returned.
 .  . 
Moon, and of course shadow, are recurring images in Outwalking the Shadow. It is no coincidence that metaphor and metamorph are nearly homologues. Images may shift their shapes and meanings, may stand in for any number of times and spaces, but moon and shadow link arms, weave a net, cast it out and draw us in. Debra does more than create contrasts. Her poems are not satisfied to simply cast light into the dark umbra of grief. Enter her lines and welcome the shadow, relive it, discover how and who it has made you. Recognize that light blinds when it glares but enlightens when it glimmers, slivers, almost ephemeral as dream.
 . 
Recognize that each of us lives with our shadow, and that even moonlight may cast one. Debra’s book is dedicated to her mother, Kathleen, and many of the poems explore her life, their life together, her final days, thereafter. Debra’s poems encompass much, much more than grieving, however. In many of her lines, I hear her speaking the very phrases I have needed to speak to my own heart. Perhaps you, too, have had mornings when you found it a burden to take even one step, when you felt empty and powerless and alone. These poems admit that. We are human and we carry our shadows. But these poems surprise themselves with sudden flashes and connections – a summoning of crows, a lesson learned, a visitation by spirits. Every time I turn another page, I discover more of what I need. Come, let us walk out together. There may still be joy if we open ourselves.
 . 
 . 
More about Debra Kaufman, Outwalking the Shadow from Redhawk Press, and how to purchase HERE
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Let my heart swing open
 . 
like French doors to a garden of blowsy flowers,
saloon doors where Kitty serves shots of rye,
a screen door with a farm wife waving you in,
 . 
or let my heart be a picture window
through which I see everyone I have ever loved,
my breath steaming the glass, come in,
 . 
we’ll turn up the party lights,
show all the passersby we’re dancing,
or better yet, let’s all spill out into the street,
 . 
my heart a village music festival –
welcome teachers, firefighters, cashiers, nurses,
shysters and spinsters, salsa dancers a skateboarders,
 . 
cat lovers, detasselers, twirlers and high-steppers,
come in you scuffed shoes, rhinestones, flannels,
I’ll be a mirror reflecting all y’all’s kindness,
 . 
your clumsy moves and broken bits,
your sad patience and patient wildness,
your generosity, crankiness, haunted dreams –
 . 
I’ll be the hostess sprinkling blessings like petals,
saying, The universe is here and so are we – 
champagne for everyone!
 . 
Debra Kaufman
from Outwalking the Shadow, Redhawk Press, Hickory, NC; © 2023.
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
2016-10-17a Doughton Park Tree

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 . 
[with 3 poems by David Radavich]
 . 
Offering
From one day
to the next
seems a difference
 . 
between drought
and flood,
 . 
corporations
and the poor.
 . 
Should we pack
our suitcase
for the future?
 . 
We bend over
gardenias
in the back yard,
 . 
salvia, rosemary,
daylilies jut now
blazing
 . 
wondering if nature
can withstand
our age,
 . 
sun fighting
with wind and rain,
 . 
wars consuming
everything
 . 
we believe.
 . 
Time to visit
the cemetery, bring
 . 
the pure lilies
we picked
this morning
 . 
as our offering
to the dead,
 . 
We owe them
our knees
and this stab at
 . 
continuing
 . 
paying homage
to names
 . 
and all
that’s green.
 . 
David Radavich
from Here’s Plenty, Červená Barva Press, W. Somerville, MA; © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
“These are monsters migrating.” Thus the boy explains the drawing he’s brought home from kindergarten. Three big ones fly south, dragon-winged, pterodactylloid, gallinaceous. A mighty bruiser gallops on great feet bound to raise dust and thunder, heavy tail thrashing. But here’s one down in the corner foreground, not imposing, non-scary, looking me straight in the eye. Most monsters speed away, thank goodness, but some are willing to stay and make friends.
 . 
Monsters sneak into my head at 3 AM when I return from the bathroom. In the old days, before I retired from medicine, they called me from the ICU or Labor & Delivery and I knew it was time to pull up my pants and find the car keys. Now they spring up when I call them – damn! – and poke me with their spines and cold stiff claws each time my breath attempts to settle. Does anyone escape? Doesn’t everyone with parent, child, grandchild harbor a squirm of worry underneath the bed, ready to pop awake and crawl up between the sheets?
 . 
Monsters seem to be drawn to the idle mind like migrating bats to open, dark caverns. Their scales and markings may vary but they all belong to Class, Order, and Family of What If? Once their migration might have lasted just hours – what if I can’t get his blood pressure up? what if her baby’s head is transverse? – but now they don’t seem to have any finite lifespan. The infinite multiverse fans out from its monstrous 3 AM nidus into a crashing storm of uncertainty. Calm yourself. Smooth those waves of rapid breathing. Wrap the turbulence and darkness until they become a comforting cloak. What . . .
 . 
. . . if you sit down with me here and tell me about these monsters? The boy has a name for each one. He knows their powers and their weaknesses. Far from being fearful, these are friends, some to each other and all of them to him. You wouldn’t want to sit on one – they’re sharp, and they might break! – but it’s amazing to watch them fly and run. In fact, they are all related to each other. They are monster family.
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Crux
for Shelby
 . 
This is where
boy meets man:
 . 
a space
always alone
 . 
between
water and land,
 . 
fishing
or hiking,
 . 
gathering crayfish,
skipping stones,
 . 
another boss
is another tyrant,
 . 
pay not enough
to make ends meet,
 . 
mouths to feed
at the table,
 . 
gills in the water
needing your lure
 . 
and just the right
throw to home
 . 
sliding in
or head-long,
 . 
swinging high over
that creek
 . 
never knowing
if the vine will hold,
 . 
that’s what being
adult means:
 . 
learning
not to trust,
 . 
pulling everything
you’ve got,
 . 
keeping a sharp eye on
what’s moving
 . 
and then
grab it for grace,
 . 
feed that family
and don’t apologize.
 . 
David Radavich
from Here’s Plenty, Červená Barva Press, W. Somerville, MA; © 2023
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
What if my name, instead of “Bill,” were “Boy?” What is the thing against the idea of the thing? And words on a page, are they the one or are they the other? David Radavich, in Here’s Plenty, doesn’t open his palm and hold out to you the answer to such queries, but he leaves plenty of answers scattered among the lilies or still hanging from branches, reddening fruit for us readers to discover. Can the idea of a thing become itself when we bite into it, when we take it into ourselves?
 . 
This is one task and one blessing of poetry – not to be a textbook, lining out chapter and verse; not to be gospel; but to be spell, cast into the world and opening like the petalled layers of a peony. Perhaps we return day by day to discover its transformation, perhaps we grab and thrust our nose deep into the blossom’s perfume and scatter petals all around us. Either way we engage, yes with the words but even more so with ourselves. The real poetry is what we write within while reading what is without.
 . 
David Radavich lives in the world. So apples, seed and stem, peel and core and crisp. Edens and crags. Harsh sharp divisions and tender comings together. Nothing ignored or unnoticed, nothing left out. Everything invited in. You and me, too. Come – there’s plenty.
 . 
 . 
Here’s Plenty is David Radavich’s tenth collection of poetry. He has also published many plays as well as scholarly and informal essays in many countries. The book is available HERE
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
Going Home
 . 
Forget about it.
 . 
The old one wasn’t
worth much
anyway.
 . 
You can do better
tossing a coin
or consulting
some astrologer.
 . 
Choose
where or what
you want to be
 . 
and go there
to take your place
among the yet
to arrive.
 . 
Wave your white
flag to the past
 . 
and make your new
garden bloom
 . 
as if
you had been
 . 
there all along
incognito
 . 
among many
creatures
you don’t know
names for,
 . 
your enemies
forgotten
 . 
and a sky
just as much
your own
 . 
as a new skin.
 . 
David Radavich
from Here’s Plenty, Červená Barva Press, W. Somerville, MA; © 2023
 . 
 . 
❦ ❦ ❦
 . 
2020-06-11a Doughton Park Tree
 . 

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