Winner of Boulevard’s 2018 Nonfiction Contest for Emerging Writers, Gabe Montesanti’s essay “The Worldwide Roller Derby Convention” is featured in the Spring 2019 issue (#101/102). Montesanti lives in St. Louis where she skates for the local team, Arch Rival, under the name Joan of Spark.
In a commentary about her work, she says, “‘The Worldwide Roller Derby Convention’ became the final chapter of my MFA thesis at Washington University in St. Louis, and is now the final chapter of my full-length memoir about derby. This essay unlocked the whole project for me, in a way. Recognizing the themes of physicality and queerness led me to draw new parallels between roller derby and my unconventional and often violent upbringing. Having a vision of the end also gave me direction—a place I could write toward.”
The 2019 Nonfiction Contest for Emerging Writers opens June 2, 2019. The winner receives $1000 and publication.

As John Zheng shares in his introduction to the Fall 2018 “Rivers and Waters” issue of
A great idea to celebrate the 200th birthday of Walt Whitman,
Now in its 13th LUCKY year, the
The Winner of the 2018 Orison Poetry Prize was published earlier this month, and readers can now find As One Fire Consumes Another by John Sibley Williams at the 


A novel idea indeed, but also one that is deeply appreciated as a model approach to genre storytelling. The editors comment on the larger issue behind creating this prize: “While women in the real world are fighting sexual abuse and violence, being harassed, assaulted and raped, or being murdered because they’re women, the casual and endless depiction of females as victims or prey sits uneasily alongside their fight. Real rape survivors struggle to be heard, counted and believed, under-reporting is rife, partly because victims fear being torn apart in court, and prosecutions continually fail. Meanwhile, in popular culture, women are endlessly cast as victims of stalking, abduction, rape and murder, for entertainment.”
First Place
Founded in 1990, the Iowa Poetry Prize is awarded for a book-length collection of poems each year.
Monmouth University has announced a new way for students to earn a degree. The
The editors of
Winner
With its Spring 2019 issue, 


Jason Splichal, Founder and Co-Editor-in-Chief of
First Place
Produced within the
“Etymology of a Mood” by Ama Codjoe won
In January, Anhinga Press released the winner of their
Flash Prose

Recent posts include:
If your interest is in the outdoors as well as the arts, something fresh and new,
This month, find Luxury, Blue Lace by S. Brook Corfman at Autumn House Press. Winner of the 2018 Rising Writer Contest, judge Richard Siken notes how Corfman “examines the ways that presentation and representation conflate and complicate. Expansive, generous, deeply considered, and highly lyric, this book, with its transformations and overlaps, astounds.”
As I write now, during the middle days of February, hard upon our Spring 2019 deadline, the dice are still not fully cast for my successor or my exact departure date – and so I will be brief again: the earliest I would step away is 1 June, at which time our Summer 2019 issue will literally be in press and the preparation of the Fall 2019 contents will be in full swing, so my ghost will be around for at least some aspects of the latter. The goal for me, for the rest of the Georgia Review staff, and for the University of Georgia, is a transition that will be as smooth as possible for our submitters, contributors, and readers.
Write Prize for Fiction
The Kenyon Review
There was a lot going on at the end of 2018, so maybe you missed out on some of the award-winning books published toward the tail end of the year. Don’t worry—we’ve got you covered.
Glimmer Train March 2019 Bulletin
Pleaides Press annually hosts the
Subscribers to
Scholastic News Kids Press Corps
The 


First Place
Engaging Civically through Collaborative Art: Developing a Working Aesthetics of Protest Art with Michelle Slater
Since there is always a lag time created between contemporary news issues and publications of poetry,
“Oh, plastic, scourge of the Anthropocene, shaped into adorable shapes and dyed multifarious colors; plastic, who will be with us forever: it’s easy to forget about you, but when I remember you’re here, I’m annoyed and freaked out all at once.”
1st place goes to Marian Palaia [pictured] of San Francisco, California, who wins $2500 for “Wild Things.” Her story will be published in Issue 106, the final issue of Glimmer Train Stories.
“All of the work in this special Fall issue of
First Place


growing into ourselves
First Place
Co-edited by Nicole Oquendo [pictured], Editor Lisa Roney introduces the newest issue of