NewPages Blog :: New Magazine Issues

Stop by the NewPages Magazine Stand to find the latest issues of your favorite online, print, and electronic literary magazines.

Magazine Stand :: Valley Voices – Spring 2025

The Spring 2025 issue of Valley Voices is a special issue themed “River and Land: The Mississippi Delta” and is dedicated to Dr. Jerry W. Ward, Jr. (July 31, 1943 — February 8, 2025) “respectful board member, scholar, and friend.”

In celebration of Dr. Jerry W. Ward’s legacy is an interview with Dr. Ward, poetry, literary theorist, editor, professor, and cultural activist, conducted by C Liegh McInnis on July 18, 2007, Charlie Braxton’s poem, “Doc,” and the essay “This is Not a Poem #1 (For Doc Ward)” by McInnis.

Opening the themed content “River and Land: The Mississippi Delta” are “Prim Notes” and “Hurricane Isabel 2003: True Story” by Hermine Pinson and “The Geography of Self: An Interview with Hermine Pinson” by Editor John Zheng. Also featured are poems by Claude Wilkinson, Sterling D. Plumpp, Larry D. Thomas, George Drew, Philip C. Kolin, CT Salazar, C Liegh McInnis, and Michelle McMillan-Holifield; art/photography by Claude Wilkinson (including cover art) and J. Guaner; fiction/nonfiction by Jack Crocker and Dick Daniels.

Criticism pieces include “From Trauma to Triumph: Endesha Ida Mae Holland’s From the Mississippi Delta: A Memoir” by John J. Han, and “Mississippi Masochism: Agentic Pain in Jesmyn Ward’s Where the Line Bleeds and Claude Wilkinson’s World Without End” by Allison Wiltshire.

Magazine Stand :: South Dakota Review – 59.2

Published quarterly at the University of South Dakota through the Department of English and under the sponsorship of the College of Arts and Sciences, this newest issue of South Dakota Review has much to offer readers, beginning with the captivating cover photo by Editor-in-Chief Lee Ann Roripaugh, expressing the disjointedness so many of us are feeling as of late.

In response, the content holds a salve for our weary selves: poetry by Mrityunjay Mohan, Tami Haaland, Grace Bauer, Francine Witte, Ellen June Wright, Isabelle Ylo, Josephine Gawtry, William Trowbridge, Brandon Krieg, Amorak Huey, Kalpita Pathak, Sarah Barber, Carl Watts, Judith Harris, Remi Recchia, and Jim Peterson; short stories by Tina Tocco, Michael Caleb Tasker, Alexandria Peary, Luke Rolfes, nat čermák, and Reuben Sanchez; essays by Gary Finke and Ellie Gomero, with a hybrid excerpt from Sutured Memorī, by Michelle Naka Pierce.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Midwest Quarterly – Spring 2025

The Midwest Quarterly: A Journal of Contemporary Thought Spring 2025 theme is “Library Issue(s)” with Guest Editor Sara DeCaro and includes the articles “The Options when DEI Initiatives in Libraries are Not Working or Nonexistent” by Casey Phillips, “Digital Commons and Accessibility” by Madison Price, “Mathematical Marvels in a Midwestern Library” by Cynthia Huffman, “The Rise and Fall of Wine Gardens in Kansas City 1880-1920” by Sara DeCaro, “From TV Screen to Family Scene: Bluey and the Art of Invitational Rhetoric” by Blayne Thorton, and “Unreconciled Visions of War: Japan and America in World War II (A Literature Review)” by David F. DiMeo, as well as a selection of new poems.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Main Street Rag – Spring 2025

The Main Street Rag Spring 2025 issue opens with an interview with Anna Pauscher Morawitz by Jessica K. Hylton, who recently moved Salina, Kansas, and ventured out to a showcase of the arts at a local theatre where the two met. Morawitz is a “triple threat,” a visual artist who works with the Salina Arts and Humanities Department and also plays with the band Enna and the Snapdragons.

This issue also includes ‘Stories & Such’ by David Bradley, Robert Earle, Tim Keppel, Mary Lewis, Robert Page, Joe Taylor, and R. Craig Sautter, as well as loads of new poetry by Bonnie Bishop, Jane Blanchard, Cameron Bushnell, Jim Carpenter, Ricks Carson, Alan Harawitz, Jim Daniels, Rupert Fike, Pamela Brothers Denyes, Alfred Fournier, Rachel Greenberg, Cleo Griffith, Leonore Hildebrandt, PMF Johnson, Jasmine Kumalah, Elizabeth Libbey, Joseph McGreevy, Michael Milburn, Frank C. Modica, Baruch November, Madeline Cohen Oakley, Marjorie Power, Phyllis Price, Patrick T. Reardon, David Sapp, Hannah Ringler, Mary Rohrer-Dun, Cecil Sayre, Susan Shea, Carol Shillibeer, Beate Sigriddaughter, Phillip Sterling, Diane Stone, L. Sweeney, Moira Walsh, Michael Demetria Tsouris, Richard Weaver, Warren Woessner, and Robert Wooten.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Greensboro Review – Spring 2025

The Greensboro Review Spring 2025 literary magazine cover image

If evil is the “absence of empathy,” as defined by G. M. Gilbert, the American psychologist known for his observational commentary during the Nuremberg trials, then Editor Terry L. Kennedy offers an antidote in the Spring 2025 Editor’s Note of The Greensboro Review when he writes that the “magic of literature” is “its ability to dissolve the boundaries that separate us, revealing the common threads of fear, hope, and longing that connects us all.”

This newest issue features much to help us connect, including the Robert Watson Literary Prize winners: Jeni O’Neal’s “Loving a Man and His Kids and His House” in poetry and Emily Harper Ellis’s “The Fairy Swap” in fiction, as well as new work by Miriam Akervall, Megan Blankenship, Alex Bullock, Flora Field, Abigail Ham, Max Kruger-Dull, Seth Leeper, Angela Ma, Elisabeth Murawski, Michael O’Ryan, Leslie Pietrzyk, Caroline Porter, Lindsay Stewart, Zach Swiss, David Thoreen, Amber Train, and Andy Young.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Malahat Review – 230

The Malahat Review 230 features winners of the 2025 Open Season Awards as well as interviews with the authors. Creative Nonfiction Winner: “Singularity Packet” by Tanis MacDonald; Poetry Winner: “Anxiety Attack” by Georgio Russell; Fiction Winner “Bubble Bath and the Ecstasy of Diminishing” by Catherine St. Denis.

Also included in this issue is new poetry by Lucas Crawford, Jannie Stafford Edwards, Jonathan Focht, Michael Goodfellow, Grace, Patrick Grace, Umma Habiba, Danielle Hubbard, PW Jarungpiterah, Barbara Bruhin Kenney, Timothy Liu, Rebecca Lawrence Lynch, Sadie McCarney, Gerald Arthur Moore, Jonathan Moskaluk, Maureen Paxton, Hannah Polinski, Emily Riddle, Jay Ritchie, Spenser Smith, Gordon Taylor, Claudia Yang; fiction by H Felix Chau Bradley, Olga Campofreda, K. S. M.; and creative nonfiction by Alana Friend Lettner, and Sina Queyras.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: AGNI – 101

AGNI 101 is inhabited by gravity and grace in counterpoise, from the cover and art feature by Palestinian painter Malak Mattar to the essays, poems, and stories, the inescapable world finds its match in soaring gestures of imagination. In fiction, the characters of Silja Liv Kelleris, Alp Türkol, and Haytham el-Wardany (trans. Katharine Halls) give terrible circumstances a powerful second shape. Speakers in poems by Kazim Ali, CooXooEii Black, Amy Beeder, Hera Naguib, and Robert Pinsky gaze unflinchingly to counter the sturdiest myths. And in essays, Graison Gill, Brandi Bird, and Angela Pelster — among many others — invite readers into truths more complicated than the surface suggests. Available for purchase in single issue and subscription, AGNI also publishes unique online content readers can access for free.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Baltimore Review – Spring 2025

The Spring 2025 issue of Baltimore Review is now available online for readers to enjoy, with creative nonfiction, fiction, and poetry by Hannah Keziah Agustin, Stephanie J. Andersen, Nicholas Barnes, Merrill Oliver Douglas, Jake Bienvenue, Kimberly Gibson-Tran, Erik Harper Klass, Andrea Lewis, Ron MacLean, Hila Ratzabi, Jemma Leigh Roe, Daniel J. Rortvedt, L. Soviero, Kelly Terwilliger, and Qiwen Xiao.

Published since 1996 as print journal and re-launched as an online, quarterly journal in 2012, work accepted for online publication in Baltimore Review is also collected for annual print issues. The journal features the work of Baltimore-area writers, as well as writers from around the world.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – May 2025

The May 2025 issue of The Lake, journal of poetry and poetics, is now online featuring Aman Alam, Nick Allen, Emma Atkins, Melanie Branton, Marianne Brems, C. B. Crenshaw, Craig Dobson, Kaily Dorfman, Sameen Ejaz, Annette Gagliardi, Judith Taylor, Kim Waters. Readers can also dig into Charles Rammelkamp’s review of Helen Ivory’s new full-length poetry collection, Constructing a Witch, and a review of J. R. Solonche’s Old by David Mark Williams. The Lake also has the unique feature “One Poem Reviews,” in which authors share a poem from a recently published collection. The May 2025 feature spotlights works by Alex Barr, Dennis Maulsby, and M. Kelly Peach.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Wordrunner eChapbook – Issue 54

Announcing Wordrunner eChapbooks‘ 15th anniversary issue: Disturbances is available to read online or as a downloadable printable PDF. Wordrunner eChapbooks is a hybrid of online literary journal and chapbook collections. Their 2025 anthology and 54th issue issue marks the 15th anniversary of their opening this journal to public submission. Although no theme was announced for this anthology, many of the stories and poems are connected by disturbances small and large — whether endured by troubled adolescents, bereaved mourners, day laborers, boxers or struggling writers (including Mary Shelley).

Wordrunner eChapbook’s Editor’s Choice for this issue is “Minder Root” by Stan Kempton, a haunting tale set in a timeless rural South. Other contributors include fiction by Jim Beane, Ed Davis, Frank Diamond, Stan Kempton, Joseph Kierland and Don J Taylor; nonfiction by Jane Boch, Ann Calandro, David Hawdbawnik and Melanie S. Smith; and poetry by GTimothy Gordon, Peter Grieco, Ted Morrissey and Pamela Wynn.

Last year, Wordrunner eChapbook’s began publishing micro fiction and creative nonfiction. Their Micro Issue 2 went online January 2025. Submissions open again September 2025.

Magazine Stand :: Sky Island Journal – Spring 2025

Sky Island Journal’s stunning 31st issue features poetry, flash fiction, and creative nonfiction from contributors around the globe. Accomplished, well-established authors are published — side by side — with fresh, emerging voices. Readers are provided with a powerful, focused literary experience that transports them: one that challenges them intellectually and moves them emotionally. Always free to access, and always free from advertising, discover what over 150,000 readers in 150 countries, and over 1,000 contributors from 54 countries, already know; the finest new writing can be found where the desert meets the mountains.

Magazine Stand :: The MacGuffin – April 2025

The MacGuffin April 2025 issue sold out at the 2025 Association of Writers and Writing Programs Conference (!) but is now available again for individual purchase — whew! This hot issue features winners of Poet Hunt 29 with commentary by Judge Michael Meyerhofer as well as a look ahead to this year’s Poet Hunt 30 including a mini-feature of poems by Judge Darrel Alejandro Holnes. The issue rounds out with a quadruplet of short memoirs; fiction selections including Margaret Willey’s family drama — as turbulent as the lake it’s set on, and Angela Townsend’s “Present Lives,” whose main character invites readers to ‘tune in, turn on,’ referencing enhanced spirituality. All of this wrapped neatly within Jennifer Rodrigues’s compelling cover art, “Switch Plate.”


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Sheila-Na-Gig – Spring 2025

sheila na gig online

Curated by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions author Simona Carini, Sheila-Na-Gig online’s spring 2025 issue is now available. This volume contains work by Editors’ Choice Award winner Vincent Caseragola along with 44 other new and returning contributors.

Started in 1990, Sheila-Na-Gig continues its mission, “to support the work of both established and emerging writers in a crisp, uncluttered space online and through the publication of individual collections and anthologies from Sheila-Na-Gig Editions.”

Sheila-Na-Gig currently has an open call for submissions until May 31, 2025, for AMPLIFY: An Anthology by Black Poets, Indigenous Poets, and Other Poets of Color to be edited by Sandra Rivers-Gill.

Magazine Stand :: The Missouri Review – Spring 2025

The Spring 2025 issue of The Missouri Review (Sprint 2025) is themed “Outsiders” and includes the winners of the 2024 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize, plus debut fiction by Jeffery Brady, new fiction by Phuong Anh Le, William Torrey, Drew Calvert, and Mark Labowskie. New poetry from Rebe Huntman, Liane Strauss, and Amanda Gunn, and new essays by Sarah Mullens and Justin Thurman. Also, an art feature on James Ensore, and a new “Curio Cabinet” on Theda Bara, and a omnibus review of four novels about becoming a mother by Cynthia Miller Coffel.

This is also the first issue that will be available worldwide on Project MUSE via Open Access here.

New Lit on the Block :: Tween Magazine

In a world that can feel overrun with digital content, print still holds its own and can, in fact, provide some much-needed relief from tech fatigue. This can be especially important for young people, which is where Tween Magazine shines like a beacon in the night. “As parents learn the negative effects of social media and devices, they are returning to more traditional media,” says Founding Editor and Creative Director Mary Flenner. “Tween Magazine offers girls a screen-free chance to engage, learn life skills, build confidence, and find inspiration.”

Tween girls are those in that “in between” stage of life, the preteen years where they are leaving childhood and entering adolescence. “We aim to fill the content void for young girls 8 to 12 who have outgrown children’s magazines but aren’t ready for the mature content in teen magazines,” explains Flenner.

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Tween Magazine”

New Lit on the Block :: Silly Goose Press

A name like Silly Goose Press can’t help but attract such comments as “Have you seen that egg?!” or “What a honking good time they are to be around!” which the editors would take as high praise, along with recognition for knowing how to use an Oxford comma. Puns (mostly) aside, Silly Goose Press is a new, online magazine publishing poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, art, and photography roughly every four months. Readers can enjoy accessing each piece individually online or via PDF which can be downloaded – all for free.

Silly Goose Press was inspired when the editors attended their first AWP conference. “We are best friends who love flocking together,” says Editor-in-Chief Rhiannon Fisher, “just a group of silly geese and always have been. The publication name is an inside joke amongst writing friends that has evolved into something magical.” After the conference, Fisher says, “We challenged ourselves to expand our knowledge of and place in the literary world. We wanted to be a part of something bigger than our individual literary careers, make friends, and build community. Also, now we are legally bound to maintain a friendship.”

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: Silly Goose Press”

Magazine Stand :: Thema – Spring 2025

Inspired by a post-dinner conversation in 1988, Thema offers writers a target theme to inspire poetry, stories, art, and photography. While the premise does not have to be a central element, it also cannot be “merely incidental.” Walking that fine line in this newest Spring 2025 issue with the theme “My Favorite Bookmark” are contributors Tytti Heikkinen, Cheryl Matthis, Casey Lawrence, Judy Penz Sheluk, Cezanne Waid, Sunayna Pal, Jill Munro, Elizabeth Raum, Pamela Hobart Clark, Lynda Fox, Tom Schmidt, Linda Berry, Matthew J. Spireng, Lynda Fox, Frank Markover, Allan Lake, Orman Day, James B. Nicola, Stacey Alderman, and Kathleen Gunton, with cover artwork by Aria Marotta.

Forthcoming themes include “I Wish I’d Said That,” “Today’s Onerous Task,” and “While the Snowstorm Was Raging…” Visit Thema‘s website for submission information and deadlines. Thema does accept previous published works that fit the theme.

Sponsored :: Thorn & Bloom: A Bold New Literary Magazine Cultivating Self-Care as Resistance

Thorn & Bloom: A Bold New Literary Magazine Cultivating Self-Care as Resistance
Published by redrosethorns Ltd. Liability Co., March 2025

Thorn & Bloom is a quarterly literary magazine that reimagines self-care as an act of resistance, reclamation, and radical honesty. Through a curated collection of essays, poetry, fiction, and expert insight, the magazine explores personal healing as a catalyst for collective liberation.

Launched last month, the debut issue features a diverse range of emerging and established voices who offer grounded self-care practices, challenge internalized narratives, and illuminate the social conditioning that distances us from our authentic selves. Thorn & Bloom brings a fresh voice to the literary landscape—one that dares to treat self-care not as luxury or aesthetic, but as essential, intentional, and deeply political. The magazine is rooted in a commitment to inclusivity, empowerment, and truth-telling, offering a platform for stories that are both tender and transformative; inviting readers to embrace storytelling as a healing practice and self-care as a radical path to liberation.

Magazine Stand :: Plume – #164

The April 2025 issue of Plume (164) features works by Tiana Nobile, Marilyn A. Johnson, Olga Maslova, Jen Karetnick, Dai Weina, Phillis Levin, Harry Martinson, Daniel Tobin, Doug Anderson, Carol Muske-Dukes, and Jean Nordhaus, a conversation with Phillis Levin by Frances Richey, a review of Virginia Konchan’s Requiem by Heather Treseler, and commentary from this issue’s contributors.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Blue Collar Review – Winter 2024-25

The Journal of Progressive Working Class Literature, Blue Collar Review Winter 2024-25 opens with an editorial documenting the political state of our country in the context of a global history of dictatorships. Writing as witness, this issue documents the role of creative expression, “We know they are coming for us and we are as enraged as we are frightened. In typesetting this issue, we note a proliferation of expletives. Working class writing often evokes our class mood and these poets are pissed!”

Joining the paper protest in this issue are poets Dave Roskos, Dan Grote, Robert Cooperman, G.C. Compton, Darrell Petska, Cathy Porter, Fred Voss (R.I.P), Thot King, Andrew Slipp, Gregg Shotwell, Christopher Buckley, Gregg Shotwell, Dan Grote, Bill Mohr, R.M. Yager, Chris Butters, Manry Franke, Shirley Adelman (R.I.P.), Al Markowitz, Angelo Mesisco, Steweart Acuff, many more.

Visit the Blue Collar Review website for subscription info and sample poems from the newest issue.

Magazine Stand :: Bellevue Literary Review – 48

Assistant Fiction Editor Lauralee Leonard opens Bellevue Literary Review Issue 48 with reflective inquiry for readers and writers alike, “Where does a story bring us? Where do we get when we read a poem to its end for the first time, the second time, the third time? How is it that a person we are likely never to meet, through only words arranged on a page, can enter our consciousness so fully? And how does it happen that we surrender so completely to a created place that we are jolted, at the end, to find ourselves still in our own chair, suspended momentarily between worlds?”

Offering readers the opportunity for further contemplation, this issue offers fiction by Fiona Ennis (Winner of the Goldenberg Prize for Fiction), Chinaecherem Obor (Honorable Mention), Nandini Bhattacharya, Ronald Niezen, Yuya Hattori, Michael Welch, Marcia Walker, TW Dalton, Sabrina D. Wang; nonfiction by Pia Jee-Hae Baur (Winner of the Felice Buckvar Prize for Nonfiction), Liesel Hamilton (Honorable Mention), Carlos Rafael Gómez, Veronica Cano, Diane Zinna; and poetry by Sandra Dolores Gómez Amador (Winner of the John and Eileen Allman Prize for Poetry), Cedric Rudolph (Honorable Mention), Laura E. Garrard, Karen Zheng, Maya Klauber, Laurie Sansom, Michael Montlack, Christopher Stewart, Timothy Kelly, Won Lee, Brett Warren, Kelly Grace Thomas, Bridget Bell, Cecil Morris, Wendy Wisner, Becky Nicole James, Xinyue Huang, Joseph Radke, Judith Fox, Alexandra Ozols, and Rob Macaisa Colgate.

Cover art by Aliza Nisenbaum.

Magazine Stand :: Apple Valley Review – Spring 2025

The Spring 2025 issue of the Apple Valley Review features flash fiction by Madison Ellingsworth and Luke Rolfes; short stories by Peter Newall, Zehra Habib, and Tony Rauch; and poetry by Miriam Van hee (translated from the Dutch by Judith Wilkinson), Athena Kildegaard, Mark Lilley, Mickie Kennedy, and David Armand. The cover artwork is by painter John Singer Sargent. An international literary journal, Apple Valley Review publishes short fiction, poetry, personal essays, and translations in online open access, semiannual issues. The journal was founded in 2005 by its current editor, Leah Browning, and welcomes submission year-round.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Broadsided – Spring 2025

Broadsided Spring 2025 celebrates National Poetry Month with a folio of eight new broadsides — eight new original collaborations between writers and artists for readers to enjoy online or download and print to hang up and share in their communities. Together, the words and images of each broadside combine to a unique expression, a dance of meaning and significance between artists and mediums.

Poets in this issue are Livia Meneghin, Amanda Quaid, Lex Runciman, Amílcar Santanan, Emily Light, Isabel Acevedo, Jennifer K. Sweeney, and Katharine Whitcomb. Artists in this issue are Michele L’Heureux, Bailey Bob Bailey, Sandra Vega, Daniel Esquivia Zapata, JoAnne McFarland, Stacy Isenbarger, Janice Redman, and Jennifer Moses.

Broadsided Press also shares “Collaborators’ Q&A” for each broadside, in which artist and writer share responses to each other’s work and the process of bringing them together, books and art that have recently inspired them, responses to the folio as a whole, creative prompts, and more.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – April 2025

The April 2025 issue of The Lake, an online journal of poetry and poetics, is now online featuring Gareth Adams, Jean Atkin, Deborah H. Doolittle, Neil Elder, Sharif Gemi, Norton Hodges, Mike O’brien, Audell Shellburn, J. R. Solonche, Yucheng Tao, Bhuwan Thapaliya, Lori Zavada.

David Mark Williams reviews I Sing to the Greenhearts by Maggie Harris, and Charles Rammelkamp reviews Sonnets for My Mother as Lear by Martin Malone and Still Motion by Jianqing Zheng and Leo Touchet.

“One Poem Reviews” give authors the opportunity to share a poem from a recently published collection. This month’s contributors are Mark Belair, Daniel Hinds, K. S. Moore, Annie Stenzel, and Sue Wallace-Shaddad.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Jewish Fiction – Issue 39

Do you love great stories? If so, you’ll be delighted by the 15 terrific ones in the new issue of Jewish Fiction! Issue 39 contains 15 fabulous stories originally written in Italian, Polish, Hebrew, and English. Contributors Shulim Vogelmann, Sagit Emet, Yuval Yavneh, Mikołaj Łoziński, Anna Rosner, Richard E. Marshall, Jaime Levy Pessin, Warren Hoffman, Maya Ben Yair, Adolf Rudnicki, Aaron Goodman, Karen Zlotnick, Shelly Sanders, Hannah Glickstein, Jill Siebers invite readers to feast on their works and enjoy!


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: South Dakota Review – 59.1

South Dakota Review continues their commitment to cultural and aesthetic diversity, publishing exciting and compelling work that reflects the full spectrum of the contemporary literary arts. This newest issue (59.1) features poetry, short stories, and essays by Stella Wong, Mackenzie Carignan, Anthony D’Aries, Michael Leal Garcia, Michael Meyerhofer, Vivek Sharma, Andy Bodinger, Camille Carter, DS Levy, Sappho Stanley, Tiffany Graham Charkosky, Bernadette Geyer, Susan L. Leary, Brooke Sahni, Emily Seibert, Josiah Nelson, Teresa Milbrodt, Joel Fishbane, and a review of Sarah Ghazal Ali’s Theophanies by Joanna Acevedo.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: New England Review – 46.1

Opening issue 46.1 of New England Review, Editor Carolyn Kuebler writes about ecosystems and survival, commenting on the proliferation of literary publications, “. . . if you see magazine publications as an artistic practice that contributes to the literary ecosystem, and if you see them as part of a community rather than as random and unrelated, they look more like a sign of vitality than of diffusion.”

Contributing to the vibrancy of our literary landscape, the newest New England Review invites readers to enjoy engrossing prose by Nilou Panahpour, Tom DeBeauchamp, and Julie Marie Wade; poetry by Cathy Linh Che, Derrick Austin, and Amy Dougher-Solórzano; translations from the Portugese and Spanish; and much more, wrapped in captivating cover art by Brian Flinn.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Alaska Quarterly Review – Winter/Spring 2025

The Winter/Spring 2025 issue of Alaska Quarterly Review is now available in print for readers to enjoy stories, essays, poetry, and a novella. Online, readers can access over forty years of Alaska Quarterly Review in their archive with the content of the most recent twenty years available with no paywall.

Alaska Quarterly Review has launched a YouTube Channel, with recent videos featuring craft conversations with Jane Hirshfield and Dorianne Laux, and readings with Jason Brown, Jessi Lewis, Joan Murray, Maura Stanton, Doug Ramspeck, and more.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Salamander – 59

Housed in and published from Suffolk’s English Department, Salamander is biannual print magazine of poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, and works in translation. Founded in 1992, Salamander aims to publish work by writers deserving of a wider audience at any stage in their careers as well as to focus intentionally on inclusivity and outreach to marginalized writers.

This newest issue features an Art Portfolio (including the cover image) by sculptor Dale Rogers; Creative Nonfiction Andrew Bertaina; Fiction by R. S. Powers, Caroline Fleischauer, Michael Welch, Danny Lang-Perez, Gillon Crichton, Taylor Melia Elyse Mahone; Poetry by Marcy Rae Henry, Sharon Lin, Despy Boutris, Cynthia Atkins, James Davis, Cecelia Hagen, John A. Nieves, Jane Newkirk, Justin Groppuso-Clark, Benjamin Paloff, Alexandra Malouf, Lindsay Clark, Kate Hubbard, Susannah Sheffer, Donna Vorreyer, Moriah Cohen, Alice White, Sara Watson, Lisa Summe, John Gallaher, Jason Fraley, Amy Roa, Leah Umansky, Lindsay Younce Tsohantaridis, Julie Danho, Anthony DiPietro, Gabrielle Grace Hogan, Mary Rose Manspeaker, Katrina Madarang, and A. Molotkov.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Shore – Issue 25

The Shore Issue 25 stares down the springtime of our discontent with poetry that refuses to flinch. It features sharp new work by Dana Wall, Doug Ramspeck, Sarah Carson, Jaiden Geolingo, Rachel Nelson, Mary Paterson, Beth Oast Williams, Sally Rosen Kindred, Anthony Frame, Michele Santamaria, Susan L Leary, ND Allison, Stuart Greenhouse, Nicole Callihan, Helen Gu, Rucha Virmani, Ellis Purdie, Caron Wolfe, Caroline Cahill, Christopher Locke, Disha Trivedi, V Joshua Adams, Radian Hong, Le Wang, Nadine Hitchiner, Lara Chamoun, Bex Hainsworth, Elizabeth Wing, Ann Haven McDonnell, Lee Potts, Alastair Morrison, Tom Blake, John Bradley, Minnie Wu, Shannon Hardwick, M Cynthia Cheung, Binoy Zuzarte, Jeremiah Moriarty, Michael Lauchlan, Kate Kobosko, and Sharon Denmark. It also features art that bursts off the screen by Jennifer A Howard.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Tint Journal – Spring 2025

The Spring 2025 issue of Tint Journal, the magazine for English as a Second Language (ESL) writers, includes 24 new poems, short stories and nonfiction essays by writers identifying with just as many different nationalities and speaking 17 different first languages. The texts represent a travel across time and space: imaginary dreamlands, alien scapes, and hopeful wishes go side by side with anecdotes of festivities, radio shows, and seaside travels. All texts are available to read free online.

Contributors include Selene Lacayo, Stefan Sofiski, Wera Lou Gmeiner, Christian Lesmes, Bianca-Olivia Nita, Tanya Ng Cheong, March Abuyuan-Llanes, Madina Tuhbatullina, Ibrahim Oladeji Tijani, Marlena Maduro Baraf, Nazia Kamali, Olga Zilberbourg, Vincent Ternida, Nawel Abdallah, Diana Kussainova, Lars Love Philipson, Mariana Serapicos, Caroline Siebbeles, Ludivine Massin, Anke Laufer, Jesimiel Williams, Elodie A. Roy, Lara Della Gaspera, and Shrutidhora P Mohor.

Artwork: Vanesa Erjavec (@creativityvexus)

Magazine Stand :: Blink-Ink – #59

Holding firm to publishing in print since 2009, Blink-Ink is a tenacious quarterly of the best fiction of (approximately) 50 words or less. The theme of Issue #59 is “Bad Science,” with writing that challenges our beliefs. “People believe humans can’t move a big rock without a big machine or supernatural powers” the editors explain. “People believe ‘to evolve’ always means, ‘to get better.’ And those are just some harmless ones. Science works to correct itself; technology has overrun us, and most people believe the same pernicious nonsense people believed two hundred years ago.”

Contributors to Blink-Ink #59 sharing what they know about Bad Science include Carolyn R. Russell, Norbert Kovacs, Z.J. Lee, Katie Keridan, Clodagh O’Connor, Dart Humeston, Catfish McDaris, Sally Reno, Daryl Scroggins, Joe Hillard, Collen Addison, and many more.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Colorado Review – Spring 2025

In her introduction to this Spring 2025 issue of Colorado Review, Editor-in-Chief Stephanie G’Schwind writes, “Control may be an illusion, but we can always find ways—even small ones—to help, protect, and heal. And when ‘the world is too much with us,’ we can also retreat for a bit, construct a place for sanctuary, whatever that may look like for each of us: real, imagined, or remembered. May the work in this issue offer you a bit of respite.”

Offering respite for the world weary, readers will recharge with fiction by Rebecca Turkewitz, Ji Hyun Joo, Becky Hagenston, Leanne Ma; nonfiction by Jamie Cattanach, Calla Jacobson, Sarah Carvill; poetry by Sarah Kathryn Moore, Amit Majmudar, Triin Paja, Ira Sadoff , Susan M. SchultzTor Strand, John Allen Taylor, Xiaoqiu Qiu, Edwin Torres, Eric Pankey, Mackenzie Kozak, Maxine Chernoff, Kristin George Bagdanov, Brittany Cavallaro, Jonathan Aprea, Adam Ray Wagner, Miriam Akervall.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Cutthroat 20th Anniversary Edition

screenshot of CUTTHROAT's 20th Anniversary Edition announcement flyer
click image to open flyer

Enjoy 350+ pages of work in CUTTHROAT’s 20th anniversary edition: Taking Liberties, a joint project with The Black Earth Institute. See flyer for more information about this issue and a link to our website.

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Magazine Stand :: The Tiger Moth Review – Issue 13

The Tiger Moth Review is an online art and literature journal publishing poetry, prose, art, and photography engaging with nature, culture, the environment and ecology. In her Editor’s Preface, Esther Vincent Xueming comments on the meaning of sounds and silences, a thread that runs through Issue 13, including man-made disasters, food choices, flowering and decaying in nature, consciousnesses in body and memory, and playful mark making in forests.

The Tiger Moth Review champions minority, marginalize, and underrepresented voices, and publishes works in translation, with this newest issue feature works by Su Thar Nyein, Madeline Newell-Wilson, George M Jacobs, Andrea Ferrari Kristeller, Özge Lena, Tonia Leon, AnnaLeah Lacoss, Jerome Masamaka, Raka Banerjee, Shalome Lateef, Kimberly White, Shilong Tao, Michelle Pietrzak-Wegner, Kathy Pon, Jiang Pu, Nazia Kamali, William Summay, Eóin Flannery, Sadie Rittman, Matt Carrano, Tom Laughlin, and December Ellis.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Under the Gum Tree – Winter 2025

Under the Gum Tree is a gorgeous print quarterly literary arts micro-magazine that “strives for authentic connections through vulnerability” by publishing creative nonfiction and visual art. The Winter 2025 issue features works by Jenny Bartoy, Meg Ritter, Gillian Dockins, Shawna Ervin, Zoë Christopher, Rita Malenczyk, and Cori Matusow, with a photo essay by Anna Omni and artwork by Mihone Forsyth.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Cholla Needles – 100

Established in 2016 in Joshua Tree, CA by r soos, Cholla Needles celebrates its 100th Issue Anniversary this March 2025. Cholla Needles selects ten to twelve writers for each monthly issue to give the reader a full taste of each writer. In addition to these monthly issues, Cholla Needles publishes two youth (K-12) issues per year. Contributors come from around the globe and regularly include works in translations.

Opening this celebratory issue, Editor r soos comments, “I am often asked how I keep the pace up. The people you read in this issue supply several answers. First, of course, is because I love poets and poetry. But that alone does not answer the question. So, the very same writers you are reading in this issue supply the answer. I cannot, all by my lonesome, keep up the pace. The ten writers in this issue have all edited issues of Cholla Needles on a voluntary basis, and some of them two and three times. They offer me the break I need to take a breath and find time away from the desk. I thank them all for the opportunity AND I thank them all for their professionalism in keeping our literary standards high.”

The editors/writers featured in this issue include Cynthia Anderson, David Chorlton, Tobi Alfier, Juan Delgado, Miriam Sagan, Michael Dwayne Smith, Romaine Washington, John Brantingham, Cati Porter, and Bonnie Bostrom.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Story Monsters Ink – February 2025

Story Monsters Ink is a monthly literary resource for teachers, librarians, parents, and young readers featuring interviews, book reviews, and articles of interest about the YA literary. The February 2025 issue includes interviews with Amanda Gorman, David Shannon, Megan McDonald, Martellus Bennett, Andrea Beatriz Arango, Kaitlyn Sage Patterson, Nikki Shannon Smith, Terry Pierce and Nadja Sarell. Enjoy regular columns, like Conrad’s Classroom: Falling Rocks from Outer Space, Live on Life: Toxic Beauty Standards, Judy Newman talking about the power of stuffies, and Nick Spake’s movie review of Paddington in Peru.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The 2River View – Winter 2025

There’s still time to catch the Winter 2025 issue of The 2River View, published by 2River, which also publishes individual authors in the 2River Chapbook Series. All their publications are available to read free online as well as download in printable formats. The Winter 2025 issue features new poems by Kristin Lueke, Lindsey Brown, Jenny Burkholder, Andrew Cox, Leila Farjami, Rae Flores, Sarah Jefferis, January Pearson, Daye Phillippo, Adam Tavel, Diana Woodcock, and artwork by Rae Flores.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

New Lit on the Block :: MoonLit Getaway

We all grapple for moments of respite in our current world, whether a road trip to a warm place to escape the cold, or just a quiet moment with a warm cuppa or a secret bowl of midnight ice cream. While MoonLit Getaway might sound like a metaphysical location — a realm of refuge, apart from the worries of everyday life, an imaginary vacation place for the world-weary — it is actually just a click away. Sharing new artwork, fiction, and poetry every two weeks open access online, with a print anthology released every September (aptly named Harvest Moon), Moonlit Getaway has created a haven for both creators and consumers of what’s new in literary arts and more.

Continue reading “New Lit on the Block :: MoonLit Getaway”

Encourage Young Writers and Readers

NewPages curates Publications for Young Writers and Writing Contests for Young Writers, two guides where young readers and writers can find print and online literary magazines to read, places to publish their own works, and legitimate contests. These are ad-free resources regularly updated with carefully vetted content, wonderful resources for teachers to use in the classroom as well as for anyone mentoring young readers or writers in their lives.

Pictured is Fleeting Daze Magazine, a youth-run literary online quarterly magazine publishing all forms of literary arts and writing from contributors ages 13-24. Their most recent issue is themed “Aurora.”

If you know publications or contests for young readers and writers not listed, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Lake – March 2025

The March 2025 issue of The Lake, an online journal of poetry and poetics, is now available for readers to enjoy new work from Pratibha Castle, Christian Emecheta, Diana MacKinnon Henning, Jacqueline Jules, John K. Kruschke, Beth McDonough, Yvonne Morris, Charlie Pettigrew, Kenneth Pobo, Marilyn Ricci, Richard Stimac, and Kate Young.

The Lake also book reviews of Ruth Padel’s Girl, Kayleb Rae Candrilli’s Winter of Worship, and Mark Vernon Thomas’s Tales of Fenris Wolf. “One Poem Reviews” is a unique feature that invites poets to share a sample poem from a recently published collection. This month’s poets are Emily Bilman, Eugene Datta, Laura Theis, Louise Warren, and A.R. Williams.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Malahat Review – 229

The newest issue of The Malahat Review (229) features the 2024 Constance Rooke CNF Prize Winner, “Lanterns” by Marcel Goh, as well as an interview with the author. The issue also includes new poetry by Olive Andrews, Jocko Benoit, Ronna Bloom, Shauna Deathe, Susan Gillis, Jennifer Gossoo, Eve Joseph, Sneha Madhavan-Reese, Steve McOrmond, John O’Neill, Shannon Quinn, Natalie Rice, Sue Sinclair, Owen Torrey, and Paula Turcotte; fiction by Atefeh Asadi (trans. from Persian by Rebecca Ruth Gould), Manahil Bandukwala, Jake Kennedy (incl. an interview), Yasmin Rodrigues (incl. an interview), and Stuart Trenholm; and creative nonfiction by Kate Burnham and Shane Neilson. Cover art by Laura St. Pierre.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Baltimore Review – Winter 2025

The Winter 2025 issue of Baltimore Review invites readers to enjoy new poems, short stories, and creative nonfiction by Shelley Berg, Diane LeBlanc, Joanne Merriam, Kayla Rutledge Page, Tyler Patton, Fran Qi, Rook Rainsdowne, Emily Ransdell, Maggie Riggs, Elizabeth Rosen, Leanne Shirtliffe, Nancy Takacs, Sage Tyrtle, and Ben Van Voorhis, as well as winners of the Baltimore Review Winter Contest selected by final judge, Fracine Witte: “Furniture Bones,” prose poem by Dawn Dupler; “beta waves,” flash creative nonfiction by Marika Guthrie; “Crux,” flash fiction by Kayla Rutledge Page.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

New Lit on the Block :: Fruitslice

While its name exudes a playfully inviting quality, Fruitslice: A Queer Quarterly has established a solid foundation upon which to build “a living archive of contemporary Queer life,” the editors assert. “Fruitslice documents the stories, voices, and experiences that mainstream spaces often overlook. We believe in dismantling colonialist, capitalist, and exclusionary frameworks that have historically dominated the publishing world. Through each issue, we amplify Queer creativity with a focus on uplifting marginalized voices, especially those of BIPOC, disabled, and Trans creators. Our work is as much about preserving our present as it is about imagining and building liberatory futures.”

This inclusion extends to the publication’s encouraging submissions from all genres, with particular interest in prose, essays, and creative nonfiction, as well as printable mediums including visual and arts formats (no audio/video at this time). Issues are timed to release quarterly with each solstice and are always free and open-access online through ISSUU, with no paywall. Fruitslice is also available in collectible print issues for individual purchase.

Collective Credentials

While Fruitslice maintains a full staff of editors, their process is “deeply collaborative, rooted in techniques that prioritize community-driven creativity over rigid structures. Rather than adhering to a singular editing style,” the editors explain, “we focus on what resonates with and reflects the voices of our contributors and readers. We believe that storytelling and literature are tools to foster connection, understanding, and bring Queer people together in meaningful ways.

“Our editorial team brings a diverse range of expertise and creative backgrounds to Fruitslice. Together, we hold degrees in fields such as literature, creative writing, film production, screenwriting, performance, and visual arts, with academic affiliations including Columbia University, Portland State University, Cornish College of the Arts, and Drew University. Our editors have worked across various disciplines, from leading roles in literary journals, like The Portland Review, to contributions in magazines, such as Art Chowder and Eleven PDX.

“Our editors are writers, artists, and community builders who share a commitment to amplifying Queer voices. This ethos drives every issue we publish, a collective effort to document and celebrate Queer creativity while fostering meaningful connections through art.”

Editorial Process: Consistency and Care

For writers and artists contributing works, the editors approach every submission with this same philosophy of care and collaboration. “Our editorial process is designed to be both rigorous and personal,” the editors detail, “ensuring that every piece receives thoughtful attention while honoring the unique voice of each contributor.”

Submissions are received through Submittable and are first reviewed by a team of designated readers. “While many readers also take on additional roles, such as reviewers, editors, or proofreaders, their primary responsibility during this stage is to conduct the initial review of each piece. Each piece is evaluated based on an internal rubric, and team members submit detailed review forms to guide discussions. Pieces that move forward are then evaluated by our leadership team for a second review. Any final decisions on uncertain pieces are made by the Editor-in-Chief, ensuring every submission is handled with consistency and care.”

Collaboration continues through the editing phase as accepted pieces are assigned to a designated editor, who works closely with the contributor through multiple rounds of feedback, as needed. “This personalized process focuses on collaboration rather than prescriptive editing,” the editors assure, “allowing the author’s voice and vision to remain central to the work. At Fruitslice, we provide feedback as suggestions rather than mandates, aligning with our philosophy of amplifying rather than altering the contributor’s voice.”

The response time for this kind of thoughtful attention to submissions is 45-60 days.

Queer Language & Norm Challenging

Fruitslice offers contributors a working style guide that “outlines principles and practices that Queer language and challenge traditional norms. It serves as a tool for guidance, not restriction,” the editors assure, “and is available to the public on our website for anyone interested in exploring our approach. We encourage contributors to engage with the guide to align their work with our mission, but adherence is never a requirement for publication. Requiring strict adherence would contradict the guide’s purpose as a living document as a tool to resist the rigid systems that often silence marginalized voices. Our priority is honoring the authenticity of each piece while fostering a sense of connection and resonance within the larger community.”

Consuming Fruitslice

For readers, Fruitslice is equal parts a literary magazine and a lifestyle magazine. “We have short fiction and poetry, but we also have thoughtful essays on pop culture, technology, politics, and Queer culture. Each issue of Fruitslice features work from around 60 Queer artists, with the majority of our content curated from open call submissions. However, we’re not a traditional literary magazine. We also include staff-written pieces, which allow us to balance genres, explore diverse topics, and fully develop the story we aim to tell with each selected theme. This hybrid model ties the issue together, ensuring cohesion and depth. Staff-written pieces, decided through an internal pitch process, often include artist features, interviews, and other content that’s harder to source through open call submissions.”

Recent contributors include Ais Russel, Anya Jiménez, Amritha York, Ann McCann, Cam Reid, Em Buth, Hamish Bell, Jill Young, Kayla Thompson, Kelsey Smoot, Kenna DeValor, Lorinda Boyer, Meg Streich, Nyanjah Charles, Nico Wilkinson, René Zadoorian, Roman Campbell, Rhyker Dye, Starly Lou Riggs, and Taylor Michael Simmons.

Existing Boldy

With any new venture, there is always a learning curve. Fruitslice editors reflect on their fresh experience as newbies with the insight of an ancient. “The greatest lesson we’ve learned in starting this publication is the power of embracing imperfection. Waiting for the ‘perfect moment’ or feeling ‘perfectly qualified’ can be a form of self-sabotage, particularly for those who have been socialized to constantly question our place at the table.

“The studies showing that cis straight white men routinely pursue opportunities they’re only partially qualified for, benefiting from what we’ve come to see as a ‘productive delusion,’ an unshakeable confidence born of never having their presence questioned. We all deserve access to that kind of audacious belief in ourselves. We deserve to take up space, to make mistakes publicly, to learn as we go, and to value our unique perspectives even when — especially when — they challenge the mainstream.

“Like identity, creative work isn’t about achieving a fixed, perfect state, it’s about existing boldly in spaces of transition and transformation. Every cycle, we move forward with the publication before we feel ‘ready.’ We’ve learned that the most meaningful work often happens in these uncomfortable spaces where we dare to create despite our doubts. There will never be a perfect moment, and this publication will never be perfect, and that’s precisely what makes it vital, authentic, and true.”

“Queering” the Indie Publication Scene

Fruitslice holds an important place in our collective culture, not just for today, but also establishing a foothold for the future. “To ‘Queer’ something means to reimagine it beyond traditional systems,” the editors explain. “At Fruitslice, we’re doing more than just publishing Queer voices, we’re fundamentally rethinking how a publication can operate. Here’s how:

“First, we’re challenging what ‘professional’ publishing looks like. Our editorial process celebrates imperfection and values authentic expression over rigid grammar rules. We don’t just accept submissions, we build relationships with our contributors, working collaboratively to help their vision shine through while respecting their unique voice and style.

“Second, we’re reimagining growth. While other publications may chase rapid expansion and profit, we prioritize sustainable, community-centered development. This means sometimes moving slower to ensure no one burns out, valuing collective care over productivity, and making sure our growth serves our community rather than the other way around.

“Third, we’re Queering what leadership looks like. Our organizational structure embraces multiple ways of contributing and leading. We recognize that the best ideas often come from questioning traditional hierarchies and empowering everyone to shape our direction, regardless of their role or experience level.”

This matters, the editors impress, because “traditional publishing often excludes marginalized voices not just through who they publish, but through their entire approach to what makes writing ‘good’ or ‘professional.’ By Queering these systems, we’re creating space for voices, stories, and ways of working that have been historically silenced or deemed ‘unprofessional.’ We’re proving that a publication can be both high-quality and radically inclusive, both structured and fluid, both ambitious and sustainable.

“This isn’t just about making space within existing systems, it’s about building something new together, something that celebrates the messy, beautiful reality of Queer creativity in all its forms.”

Magazine Stand :: The Main Street Rag – Winter 2025

Now hailing from its new home in Pennsylvania, The Main Street Rag Winter 2025 opens with an interview by M. Scott Douglass with Doralee Brooks: Poet Laureate, Educator, and Editor of The Gulf Tower Forecasts Rain: A Pittsburgh Poetry Anthology. The publication also features “Stories & Such” by John Azrak, Joe DeLong, Sydney Lea, Rebecca L. Monroe, and Carolyn Wilson-Scott, as well as poetry by Doralee Brooks, Richard Band, Sam Barbee, Richard Thomas Murray, Clayre Benzadón, Carolyn Dahl, Eleanor Eichenbaum, Timons Esaias, Arvilla Fee, David A. Goodrum, Anthony Gloeggler, Andrew Schwartz, L M Harrod, David James, Karen Jones, Craig R. Kirchner, Jan Ball, Kristin Laurel, Abbie Bradfield Mulvihill, Richard Levine, Mark Madigan, Peter McNamara, Kurt Olsson, Kevin Ridgeway, Claire Scott, William Snyder, T.N. Turner, Mark Vogel, Tom Wayman, Kimberly White, Myles Weber, Sharon Whitehill, and Mike Wilson. Cover photos by M. Scott Douglass.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Black Warrior Review – Fall/Winter 2024

From the new 2025 Masthead, the Fall/Winter 2024 issue of Black Warrior Review features poetry by Edward Salem, Hayley Veilleux, Kailah Figueroa, Kristen Swane, Lian Sing, Lily Holloway, Mag Gabbert, Qianqian Yang, Rasaq Malik Gbolahan, Rose Zinnia, Tasia Trevino, Yi Wei; prose by Amber Starks, Ala Fox, Alexandra Salata, Cameron McLeod Martin, Carl Lavigne, Ruofei Ivy Du, Emilio Carrero, Sammy Lê, Gabriel Mundo, Jasmyn Huff, Jaia Hamid Bashir, Leia K. Bradley, Lindsey Godfrey Eccles, Exquisite Armantè, Danielle Batalion Ola; comics and art by Kristin Emanuel and Mariah Gese. Evans Akanyijuka is the featured artist both on the cover and with a full-color portfolio inside.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: HEART – No. 19

HEART is a small literary journal from the low country of South Carolina published by Nostalgia Press. Its spirited and struggling editor-publisher has freely given voice to poets from all over the world since 1986. HEART uses modern prose poetry, poems that give life and motion to moods, messages from simple moments, and sparkling lines from meditative thought. An annual cash award is offered, and the 2024 HEART Poetry Award winner, “Piano” by Eric Machan Howd of Ithaca, New York is featured in HEART Issue 19. Readers can also enjoy works by Ben Onachila, Carol Despeaux Fawcett, Kimberly Lewis, David James, Ion Corcos, Jacob Friesenhahn, Kathie Collins, Laurice Gilbert, Victoria Melekian, Lesley Sherwood, Shutta Crum, Mike Wilson, and a contribution and commentary from Editor Connie Lakey Martin.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: The Midwest Quarterly – Winter 2025

The Midwest Quarterly: A Journal of Contemporary Thought Winter 2025 is a special issue, “The Future. From a Woman’s Perspective,” guest edited by Judy B. Smetana, Interim Associate Dean for the Crossland College of Technology and Associate Professor and the HRD Graduate Program Coordinator in the School of Technology and Workforce Learning, Pittsburg State University. The articles in this issue include “Exploring the Intersectional Experiences of Black Women in Fortune 500 Companies” by Shana Yarberry, “Remote Work for Women in the Workplace: A Balancing Act to Doing It All” by Kayla Thomas, “Webs of Worry: Women and Financial Anxiety” by Goldie Prelogar-Hernandez, “Leading Through Change: An Adaptive Mindset” by Julie D. Dainty, “Business as an Agent of Individual Fulfillment” by Preeti D’mello, “A Word Please: The Effects of Using ‘Pussy’ as a Microaggression” by Erin Jordan, a selection of poetry, and the team-authored study, “Female Students’ Aspirations and Study in the U.S.: Voices of Gen Z from Uzbekistan.”


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.

Magazine Stand :: Posit – Issue 38

The editors of Posit Issue 38 believe that “the art and literature in this issue offers wisdom and succor for our troubled psyches readers,” offering remarkable new poetry and prose by Gillian Conoley, Matthew Cooperman, Judy Halebsky, Brian Johnson, Tony Kitt, Peter Leight, Edward Mayes, Sheila Murphy, Jesse Nissim, Mikey Swanberg, and Martha Zweig; sculpture, photography, and paintings by Loren Eiferman, John Einarsen, and Gregory Rick; and text + image by Joanna Fuhrman.

Enjoy the issue online here.


Discover loads more great lit mags with our Guide to Literary Magazines, Big List of Literary Magazines, and Big List of Alternative Magazines. If you are a publication looking to be listed in our monthly roundup or featured on our blog and social media, please contact us.