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  • Paperplane letters by Kristina Gibbs

    Love was pressed between
    Stained smudges of downy diction
                Creased along the edges
    Bent over backwards
                Then folded forward
    Sealed by the weight of waxy hope
    Sent with a flick—
    but the sun beat on
          And on
          And on
    So it flut ter ed
                Falt er
          ed
                    Fall
                ing
    Hitting the water
    A distraught Icarus.
    The whole of its failure upon it
    Contributed to its
    Sinking.
    Words raged
    And swirled
    Unleashed—
                Torn open
    Harboured in
    The inky black deep.

    Kristina Gibbs is an emerging writer from Tennessee pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in English and minor in Linguistics. She has previously published in Speaking of Marvels and North of Oxford Review. When she is not reading or writing, you may find her clambering over both hiking trails and paint brushes.

  • a modern sonnet by Cleopatra Lim

    i know that it is okay because i said yes but it should mean
    that i don’t have to feel like a suckling pig before slaughter
    and i did this, i think, to feel like an adult now that i’m eighteen
    but i went too far– i go too far– ten bucks that he has a daughter

    somehow i can see myself in an hour, picking the curly aged hairs he shed
    off polka-dotted sheets that laid witness to my first lunar blood
    and soon he’ll unlock my beloved chest, spill jewels of cherry-red–
    hindsight says once a flower blooms, it’ll never again be a bud

    but reason and rationale are always late and the party don’t start
    til they walk in and see me: emptied and filled with cheap wine
    and tears… they said when it happened, i would feel in my heart
    completed, perfected, and his gaze would be sugary sunshine….

    instead the bed shakes and i am seasick until the north star, i can mark.
    he tries to see me but he can’t. i am with the stars that glow in the dark.

    Cleopatra Lim is a student currently attending Columbia University. She most enjoys writing prose poetry and personal essays, and has been published in some smaller literary journals. She currently works in NYC as a marketing assistant and a junior agent at a talent agency. In the future, she hopes to be able to work with both film and writing, working to incorporate poetry on to the big screen.
  • Eden by Kayleigh Macdonald

    We all have ways to weigh ourselves.
    Eden’s way: stay in motion.
    She would still the silence by
    praying to God, eating her vegetables,
    journaling in the achy fog of morning.
    She would lean against the counter when she stopped.
    Chairs were much too comfortable.
    I never saw it was defense
    until I, too,
    heard bees in my head.
    I see myself in Eden’s race
    against the unfair haste of silent time.
    There isn’t ease in inner peace
    when a piece of you is missing.

    Kayleigh Macdonald was born and raised in San Jose, CA. She is a recent graduate of California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo, where she obtained a Bachelor of Science in Graphic Communication and a Minor in English.

     

     

  • Flash Fiction Contest – $500 Award

    One week left to submit your best short fiction for the 2019 Julia Peterkin Award for Flash Fiction – $500 prize (ends August 15, 2019)
    • Previously unpublished fiction of 850 words or less are eligible for this contest. We are especially interested in stories that demonstrate a strong voice and/or a sense of place, but we consider all quality writing.
    • All submissions will be read blind, so do not include personal information with your submission. Submissions that include identifying information will not be considered.
    • We will select one winner to receive a cash prize of $500.
    • Four semi-finalists will be chosen for publication in South 85 Journal
    • Winners will be named in October.
    • All winning entries will be published in the Fall / Winter issue of South 85 Journal, which will be released December 15.
    • Simultaneous submissions are accepted, but please withdraw your entry if your piece is accepted elsewhere.
    • All winners must be over 18 years old and reside in the U.S. in order to claim their cash prize.
    • Please use double-spacing and a 12 point, standard font. We suggest Times New Roman. We consider only previously unpublished work.
    • Current and former staff members are not eligible for participation.
    • Current Converse College students and Converse College alumni are not eligible for participation.
    • SUBMIT HERE
    South 85 Journal does not publish work which has been previously published either in print or online. Our reply time is typically six to eight weeks. We acquire exclusive first-time Internet rights only. All other rights revert to the author at publication, but we offer formal, written reassignments upon request. Works are also archived online. We ask that whenever an author reprints the work that first appeared in our pages, South 85 Journal be given acknowledgment for the specific work(s) involved. Only the main contest winner will receive a prize.
  • A City Like a Dead Man by Jake Sheff

    I dreamed our city’s slender attitude,
    of ruined moonlight
    in the bombs. The dreamer’s femur is

    the squeaky wheel. If love could only speak
    and never hear, she said
    between the bombs. I loved her

    safe route to mercy. Lyme disease
    and bombs had similar inaccuracies. On foot
    she wandered through

    pretentious fire. You wouldn’t think to
    look at death, she said
    at night, the doctor who delivered it

    was darkness. As fever struck the garbage
    dump, I dreamt I was her Carthage.

    Jake Sheff is a major and pediatrician in the US Air Force. Poems of Jake’s are in Radius, The Ekphrastic Review, Crab Orchard Review, The Cossack Review and elsewhere. He won 1st place in the 2017 SFPA speculative poetry contest and was a finalist in the Rondeau Roundup’s 2017 triolet contest. His chapbook is “Looting Versailles” (Alabaster Leaves Publishing).

     

  • The Kiss by George Cassidy Payne

    (Inspired by Gustav Klimt)

    The kiss is nectar-filled
    skin wrapped over a corpse.

    It stands still in the mouth like
    a crouching tiger at a motionless
    midday stream.

    The kiss knows that figures are
    keeping watch. As tarantulas scuttle
    underfoot, it cracks apart like stepped on
    craw fish shells.

    Petite. Pink. Long and patient. Stingless
    and vaporizing. The difference between
    waiting and enduring.

    The kiss was never meant to be a hand
    shake or a goodbye. Like a moose, 5,343 feet
    below a canopy of charred balsam, scarfing wild
    shrooms, with instant knowing, The kiss bustles.

    Plunged into the minerals like an ice ax. Breaking them
    open upon a bed of prismatic sands. Submerged in
    asteroids. The kiss. Colliding intentions. Like the wind nudging
    two chimes. Existing together as they must.

    George Cassidy Payne is originally from the Adirondack Mountains of Upstate New York. He now lives and works in the City of Rochester, New York. George is a poet, photographer, essayist, professor of philosophy, and social worker. George’s poetry has been included in a variety of  journals and magazines, including Chronogram Magazine, Allegro Poetry Journal, Mojave Heart, the Red Porch Review, Albany Up the River Poets Journal, Teahouse, The Adirondack Almanac, The Mindful Word, Talker of the Town, Pulsar, Moria Poetry Journal, Ampersand Literary Review, and many others. 

  • Call for Submissions – South 85 Journal

    South 85 Journal is open for submission beginning today, August 1, 2019. South 85 Journal accepts poetry, fiction, and creative non-fiction and is published online twice yearly. Please read past issues for a sense of our aesthetic.  Submission fees are waived from August 1-14 for early-bird submissions. Click here to read past issues and full submission guidelines.

  • Zingara Poetry Review – Call for Submissions

    Submissions are open for Zingara Poetry Review. 

    ZPR will feature particular groups of individuals in the upcoming months, so please take a look at the following preferences. If none of the categories below feel like a good fit for you, please submit your work for National Poetry Month when ZPR will be publishing a poem every day of the month.

    August: Work by undergraduate students who are currently enrolled in an undergraduate program (any discipline) or who have graduated within two years. CLOSED

    September: Work by graduate students currently in a writing-related graduate program, including MFA, MA in English, etc.

    October: Work by indigenous people, particularly Native Americans.

    November: International Writers (anyone who isn’t living, or wasn’t born, in the United States).

    December: Poets over 50

    January: New and unpublished poets (0-3 single publications, no books or chapbooks)

    February: African American/Black American Poets

    March: Women only please!

    April: Poetry Month – a poem will be published every day this month so send your best work early!

    May: Poets who live WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI

    June: LGBTQ

    July: Editor Favorites

    Guidelines:

    • Send 1-3 previously unpublished poems of 40 lines of fewer in the body of an email, any style, any subject, to ZingaraPoet@gmail.com with the submission category (e.g. Undergraduate Student) as the subject of your email.
    • Include a cover letter and brief professional biography of 50 words or fewer, also in the body of your email.
    • Submissions are accepted year round.
    • Simultaneous submissions are fine, but please let me know immediately if submitted work is accepted elsewhere.
    • Published poets receive bragging rights and the chance to share their work with a diverse and ever-growing audience.
    • Submissions which do not follow these guidelines will be disregarded.
    • If accepted work is later published elsewhere, please acknowledge that the piece first appeared in Zingara Poetry Review.
    • There are no fees to submit, though you will be subscribed to the Zingara Poetry Review newsletter.
    • Check Zingara Poetry Review every week to read new poems, which are normally published by 9:00am Eastern Time.
    •  Zingara Poetry Review retains first digital rights, though rights revert back to the poet upon publication.

    What I look for in a poem:

    Like all editors, I like to see interesting poems that do what they do well. Whether traditional, conceptual, lyrical, or formal, they should exhibit the poet’s clear understanding of craft and, just as importantly, revision. Very elemental poems that have not undergone effective revision will probably not make the cut. Likewise, poems which are contrived, sacrifice meaning for the sake of rhyme, feel incomplete, do not risk sentimentality (or are too sentimental), or lack tension when tension is needed, will also be dismissed. I am a fan of rich, vivid imagery, cohesive discursiveness, and surprising metaphors. Finally, poems which perpetuate harmful stereotypes of gender, race, or class will most certainly not be considered.

    For a very good discussion on the elements of effective poetry, take a look at Slushpile Musings by James Swingle, publisher and editor of Noneucildean Cafe’

    Response time is 2 days to 6 months

  • Of the Palm by Toti O’Brien

    I admire the naivety
    How she stands among fellow trees
    sporting nothing
    but a scanty cluster of leaves
    in guise of a canopy
    as if going to a Victorian ball
    in flapper attire
    also wearing of course
    a feathered hat
    Of the palm
    I admire the frail nakedness
    delicately osé
    like a dancer’s shaved leg
    sheathed by nylon hoses
    If she dares
    intruding the arboreal crowd
    without blinking
    while so shamefully alien
    uncaring of uniforms
    she reveals
    among sister specimens
    exceptional
    skills of discipline
    How they march in orderly rows
    tracing parallels
    with their trunks
    fastening earth and sky
    with thin stitches
    How concertedly
    at the first puff of wind
    they tickle the horizon
    as if playing a keyboard
    with soft, even touch
    whole steps half steps
    hand in hand
    up and down the scale
    facilement

     

    Toti O’Brien is the Italian Accordionist with the Irish Last Name. She was born in Rome then moved to Los Angeles, where she makes a living as a self-employed artist, performing musician and professional dancer. Her work has most recently appeared in Gyroscope, Pebble Poetry, Independent Noise, and Lotus-eaters.

     

  • Neighborhoods I’ve Yearned For by Michelle Grue

    Prince Albert town homes
    Trees so beautiful I can live with their
    pollen that makes me sneeze
    Museums of purloined art and the
    heights (and depths) of science
    Posh crêperie on the street corner

    Creaking porch swings
    Acres of grass perfect for the active
    imaginings of my little black kids
    Creek down the way filled with
    pollywogs and crawfish
    Trees with moss hanging down
    obscuring the strange fruit they once hung

    Tip-top walking score
    Mom and pop flower shop
    Ethnic food not yet gentrified,
    A brewery that is
    Black that don’t crack still
    sitting on the stoop and
    spilling tea like they been
    doing since their double-dutch days
    Miss Mary Mack still dressed in black

    Michelle Grue is a doctoral candidate at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She studies higher education pedagogy and writing studies through the lenses of intersectionality and critical digital literacies. She has previously published in the fantasy journal Astral Waters Review, The Expressionists Magazine of the Arts, and DASH Literary Journal. Feeding her creative energies and making space during motherhood and graduate school life has been a challenging pleasure.

     

  • Elegy with Ice Cream by Kathy Nelson

                ―Travis Leon Hawk

    A man fits a contraption
    onto a wooden pail, fills it with ice.
    The child turns the handle as easily

    as her Jack-in-the-box but soon
    grows bored and runs to play
    in the dappled shade of July.

    This the man who, as a boy, teased
    white fluff from the knife-edges
    of cotton bolls under summer sun

    till his fingers bled. Once, he spied
    a rattler coiled between his feet.
    He wants her to understand how

    hardship built this good life, how
    readily dust could blow again, how
    quickly flak jackets could come back.

    He calls her to him, teaches―add salt
    to the ice, keep the drain clear, turn
    the crank without haste, without desire.

    Her small shoulder stiffens. He grips,
    labors with his own broad forearm,
    churns the peach-strewn cream.

    Kathy Nelson (Fairview, North Carolina) is the author of two chapbooks―Cattails (Main Street Rag, 2013) and Whose Names Have Slipped Away (Finishing Line Press, 2016). Her work has appeared or is forthcoming in Asheville Poetry Review, The Cortland Review, Tar River Poetry, Broad River Review, and Southern Poetry Review.

  • Homage to the Horny Toad by Chuck Taylor

    Friend Montrose says Why don’t you play the lead
    in my next horror film? I’m filming in
    Junction where the motel rents are low. The
    Monster’s going to be the horny toad.

    I’ll film him close and blow the image up
    So on screen the horny toad looks large and
    Scary what with all that horny skin.

    That ought to work I say. We had them in
    The backyard down in Deadwood. They can squish
    Down flat or blow up big to scare away
    The wolves, the foxes, and the coyotes.

    You think you know these toads? Why they can squirt
    Bright red blood out of their eyes. That’s why I
    Am shooting the film in Technicolor.

    They’re tiny guys, but not scared of people.
    They’ll sit quiet on the palm of your hand.

    Carolyn’s said she’ll play the heroine. She’ll
    Be chased by what seems to be a giant
    Evil monster. Its sticky tongue will flick
    Out as if it’s going to swallow her
    Whole. A developer’s out to buy her
    Land and has trained the beast to chase her.
    Good thing you’re using the horn toad. No one

    Will recognize little guy made big on
    The screen. When I was a kid growing up
    I’d see them everywhere, but haven’t seen
    The horny toad in more than twenty years.

    Chuck Taylor’s first book of poems was published by Daisy Aldan’s Folder Press in 1975. He worked as a poet-in-the-schools and as Ceta Poet in Residence for Salt Lake City.

  • Michelle Renee Hoppe Launches “Capable,” Seeks Submissions

    I first met Michelle Renee Hoppe in 2009 when we were both teaching for the same company in South Korea.  Though our contact with one another has been casual since then, we have managed to keep tabs on each other through various social media. I was excited when she reached out to ask me to help get the word out about her new literary magazine, Capable, and am very happy to share the following interview wherein we learn what Michelle has been up to these last 10 years.

    Wow. It’s been a while since we last saw one another in person. Tell me what you have been up to since 2010.

    Almost a decade! I have been teaching special education in NYC public schools, earning an MSED in special education, and, as of three days ago, really started to develop Capable. I’ve been to Hong Kong, fallen in love, almost gotten married, not gotten married, and even had my first online publication about it all. I’m now dating a wonderful Mexican engineer who supports my writing like no one else I know.

    Tell me more about your current project, “Capable,” including the significance of the title. Do you have a mission statement? 

    Right now our mission is to raise awareness of the community of disabled and ill among universities and clinics to doctors, medical advocates, and professionals. We aim to help universities teach disability and illness through an arts lens. There is a substantial amount of research that supports that having empathy helps physicians practice better medicine, and that narrative medicine, including reading literature and viewing art, goes a long way in developing such empathy.

    Years ago, I brainstormed Capable with some friends from undergrad and they thought it was the best way to describe a zine that was dedicated to stories of disability and illness.

    We seek exceptional work, because people with disabilities make exceptional work. I don’t pull any punches about that.

    What kind of work are you seeking and where can people send their submissions? How many pieces can a writer submit? How many pages or poems? Are there any submission fees?

    I would say this is the best example I can muster about what we are looking for in nonfiction: https://magazine.nd.edu/stories/his-last-game/

    No submission fees for now, though after we launch, we’ll charge $3 to $5 per submission to cover the costs for Submittable. Until then, anyone can send me as much work as they like at michellehiphopp@gmail.com, but I cannot promise I’ll get through all of it in a month. I recommend sending two poems and up to 3,000 words of prose. I love long pieces of prose, but I do want to keep things tight for the launch. I have a soft spot for humor pieces. I think a lot of us use humor to cope and it’s its own art.

    What are some of your favorite literary journals?

    I’ve found a reading home at Catapult. I absolutely adore them. They have such a sense of community there, and it’s remarkable to be able to offer classes in addition to a publication. I’ve taken two amazing classes and I really recommend Allie Rowbottom as a teacher. I also read Luna Luna Magazine, as they have a section dedicated to stories of chronic illness, and their founder Lisa Marie really showed me by doing that a publication is possible. She’s a bright light, despite the fact that I think there is not any such thing as magic. She’s also built such as sense of community through her work. I really admire that.

    And, of course, Zingara Poetry Review. I love that you are able to teach. I still remember you were so kind in Korea. You and Gary were so welcoming, and you really spoke to the emerging author in me. Your warmth meant a lot.

    Are you the sole editor for this project or are you working with a team?

    I am not the sole editor, but I am kind of a one-woman show at the moment, as my editorial team is just getting together. I’m so impressed with them. I have to remind myself that I’m the manager of the talent and not the talent to keep going. I receive a resumes that are so impressive that I don’t know what to say to that person except, “Congratulations, I probably cannot afford you right now. I’m sorry.” I’m going to have to put together a team of all stars for the VC funding pitch, because these investors want a team they can believe in, and I am fully confident we have that through the #Binders group and others.

    There are also the wonderful emails from reeeeally established authors. They are like, “Call me when you can afford me. I’m in.”

    Honestly, I appreciate all the emails right now. This has been my baby for about three years now, ever since I recovered from my own illness and learned to cope with my own disabilities.

    What inspired you to start such a literary journal? Will this be solely online or do you plan to send out print copies as well?

    I have been “sick” my whole life. I’ve been misdiagnosed with leukemia and thyroid disorders, and I have celiac disease. It’s frustrating to be told again and again that I am making these things up when they are very real.  I also work with students with disabilities every day, and the disabled are the largest minority and the most underrepresented in the entertainment industry. I learned that from a friend of my cousin’s,  Maysoon Zayid. Everyone should see her TED talk.

    I would love for it to be a print publication, but that’s not something I can afford right now. We are just getting funding off the ground. Right now, I want to get everyone on my team and my authors paid as much as possible. They deserve it.

    What other projects are you working on?

    I’m working on Teach North Korean Refugees. TNKR is a nonprofit that doesn’t get enough attention in South Korea. They help rehabilitate North Korean refugees and teach them English. They also help them author their own lives for the first time, and it’s really inspiring work. Honestly, they’ve done more for my career than any other position I’ve taken. They’re that into advocacy that they even advocate for their team, and I’d like to be like that as a Founder. The founders are geniuses of the nonprofit world, and so kind.

    I’m writing a collection of essays about growing up in an espionage family. I probably never told you about that, but, yeah, both my parents were raised with spies. It’s tentatively titled We Don’t Talk About the Family. It includes many scenes with pinatas. My mother insisted on pinatas at every birthday. Gotta love being (kind of) Puerto Rican and raised in Japan. My work–I Can Make You Immortal, My Rapist Told Me–was recently endorsed by Donna Kaz and earlier Brian Doyle told me one of my essays was, “Damn fine, searing and layered work.” His words are something I turn to when I feel less alone, and the world really misses him. Like you guys, he was so kind to everyone.

    Michelle can be reached at michellehiphopp@gmail.com.

     

  • In the Era of Collective Thought by Gary Fincke

    From a hospital in Texas,
    one hundred brains have vanished
    and, as always, there are flurries
    of posts suggesting suspects
    from genius to sociopath.
    Still unaccounted for, the brains
    of the frequently concussed, those
    in early dementia, those
    whose last demand was suicide.
    Tonight, after we lock our doors,
    we speculate the thief lives
    surrounded by so many brains
    he cannot admit a guest.
    That he must master home repair
    or live among leaks and drafts
    and dangerous wiring. All day,
    we have seen nobody outside.
    As if our isolation has been
    perfected by the relentless work
    of the brain-eating zombies
    we are fond of discussing.
    Cerebrum, cerebellum–
    we recite our parts like beginners
    in anatomy, counting down to
    the constancy of medulla
    while the underworld’s weather
    loots the grid we rely upon.
    Drought has master-minded
    the overthrow of farming.
    Rain is a hostage whose ransom
    has been raised so high the sky
    is unable to pay. Shut-ins,
    we carry the memory of comfort
    like a congenital hump.
    Decisions made elsewhere are
    hurtling toward us in rented trucks,
    all of them explaining themselves
    in a gibberish of slogans.

    Gary Fincke’s latest collection, The Infinity Room, won the Wheelbarrow Books Prize for Established Poets (Michigan State, 2019). A collection of essays, The Darkness Call, won the Robert C. Jones Prize for Short Prose and was published by Pleiades Press in 2018.

     

  • The Impact of Unattractiveness: An Interview with Poet Camille-Yvette Welsch, Author of “The Four Ugliest Children in Chrstendom”

    I am very pleased to introduce poet Camille-Yvette Welsch to ZPR readers. I met Camille at this year’s AWP conference in Portland, OR and had the great pleasure of reading with her at the off-site reading for The Word Works. I was immensely engaged with her collection of poems and think you will be too.  To illustrate what I mean, here is a sample poem from her book, followed by our interview together.

     

    The Ugliest Girl in Christendom Goes to the Gynecologist

    When she asks the doctor what it looks like,
    the doctor hands the girl a small mirror.  The girl curls
    her knobby shoulders forward,  places
    the glass between her legs and gasps in fury.
    Here, at last, all the missing pigment, all
    the rich color, the plump curvature she longs for.

    Outside, her body glows white, Siberian hair,
    pale eyes, skin white as pneumatic froth.  And thin,
    so very thin.  When she swims in front
    of the pool light, her siblings see
    her every attenuated bone, the long fingers
    of ribs closing over her heart.  But here,
    between her legs, smiling lipstick.

    The doctor raises a questioning brow;
    the girl scowls more deeply, shimmies
    forward on the table and swings her legs down,
    the knock of her knees a dull sound.
    The doctor leaves, and the girl pulls
    on her bra and shirt, contemplates ways
    to wear very short skirts, to bend until people see
    her burst, the real rage of her body, this small strip.
    She pulls her bikinis up slowly, fuming.
    What good is a secret that can’t be told?

    Tell us about your book and the process of writing it. Where can readers find out more about your book and purchase it?

    The book follows the lives of four children who have been adopted by two anthropologists, bent on doing a longitudinal study on ugliness. They handpicked these four children and keep subject reports on each child, monitoring their mental, physical, and emotional lives, and the impact physical unattractiveness has on those lives. In addition to the subject reports, we hear from the children themselves, get a sense of their voices and what it means to live inside these strictures.

    The book got its start in some ways when my mother dragged my brothers and me to church as kids. I grew up Catholic and my mother loved the choir at one church in particular. One of the families at the church was led by a very angry woman who could not believe that she had not been invited to be a part of that choir. To make up for it, she screeched through all of the hymns as loudly as possible. When she and her children made their way up the aisle to accept the Eucharist, the kids looked dumpy and ashamed. I was talking to my parents about that as an adult, dubbing them the four ugliest children in Christendom. Immediately my mother said I should write a poem about that. When next faced with a blank page, I did exactly that.

    Still, in the course of writing, and even in that initial moment, I had sympathy for those kids. They were in a tough situation with their mother demanding a kind of negative attention. Loudly and in a church. When I started writing the book, all of the poems were in third person. The narrator was a sort of anthropological voice over, in the early 20th century tradition of staring and studying anyone who was not white, cis-normative heterosexual and Eurocentric. My husband has a doctorate in Anthropology and an extensive collection of anthropology books and the early ones are insanely racist and paternalistic. I found myself wondering if we had gotten away from that or if we were simply more subtly immersed.

    I submitted some of the poems to a workshop with Marilyn Nelson and she suggested writing from the children’s point of view. I really liked that idea a great deal, to give these charaters a voice would bring us a step closer to empathy rather than the more distant sympathy. Once I started writing in their voices, I felt I understood them much better and I started to see how the poems could become a novel in verse. Even then, I was in for more awakenings. My former student, Kayleb Rae Candrilli read a draft and told me that I had no climax, and they were right. Back to the drawing board again. I found joy in writing it as a novel in verse because there were lots of narrative, structural problems to solve, but because it was poetry, I didn’t have to do a huge amount of transition between time and place.

    The other thing that worked out beautifully for me was sending my manuscript to The Word Works. Should you get a finalist or semi-finalist position, they offer feedback. That feedback was key. I revised again, submitted again, and got the acceptance I wanted.

    For those interested in reading more, you can find the book at Small Press Distribution

    How did you come up with your book’s title?

    The titles all use some version of The Four Ugliest Children in Christendom do X. Because they are so visually marked, I wanted each poem, and the title, to also feel visually marked. The titles also gave me an entry point for each poem. I set up the plot and setting generally in the title, as in ‘The Ugliest Girl in Christendom Goes to the Gynecologist’ or ‘The Ugliest Boy in Christendom Attends the Star Wars Conference.’

    Who are you reading right now?

    I am all over the place, in part because I review books. I just read In My Own Moccasins, Helen Knott’s devastating memoir about violence against indigenous women, both by rapists and by the Canadian government. I was thrilled by Sarah Blake’s novel, Naamah that tells the story of Noah’s wife. She did all of the packing, the planning, the coordinating, the dealing with the in-laws—all of the mental load that plagues women today. It was a revelation. I am also diving into Lynda Barry to see if I can change up some of the ways that I write and teach.

    For poetry, I just re-read Denise Duhamel’s book about Barbie, Kinky. Her book is fearless and funny. She pivots in so many directions with Barbie always at the center. My favorite poem is actually the title poem, where Ken and Barbie switch heads. My students are so alarmed by that poem, but it does everything I want poetry to do—it is startling, inventive, funny, and powerful.

    What other creative activities do you take part in? What do you do to take a break from teaching, grading, writing, revising, etc?

    A break, you say? I am not sure that I take breaks exactly. I do a LOT of reviewing, but I am also learning how to teach children how to write poems. In two classes I am offering this summer, we are creating our own Rorschach blots and writing about them based on an essay by Scott Beal called “Brain Spelunking.” And, I am writing poems with senior citizens about their lives as a part of the Poems from Life project sponsored by the PA Center for the Book.

    I am also raising two children, so I find my creativity lit in that context—I designed an escape room style treasure hunt for my son’s birthday, and a series of ridiculous games for my daughter’s. We paint together and build things and make much of clouds and their shapes. Being with my kids helps me to pay more attention to little things as a caterpillar will stop them in their tracks, thus I am halted and returned to the world, breathless and awake.

    What projects are you working on now?

    Right now, I am working on poems about the body. Years ago, I wrote a poem entitled, “Ode to the Fat Woman at the Mutter Museum who, When Buried, Turned to Soap.” The alkaline in the soil reacted to the fat as it would to lanolin, thus turning it into soap. Crazy fascinating. The body has so much potential and is so very strange. We haul these bodies around but they are like a totally different galaxy inside with civilizations and outposts that we know nothing about. I find that compelling, and when these miraculous bodies don’t respond as we expected, we are at such a loss. Atul Gawande talks about bodies, or at least doctors’ perception of them, as being somewhere between the uniform melt of an ice cube, and the wildly divergent behavior of hurricanes. As a woman who experienced pregnancy, I know just how bizarre the body can be, the unexpected language attached to it, the ways in which it can suddenly and drastically change a life. The poems range from commentary on the Playboy Playmate who mocked a naked woman in a locker room to poems about being sliced open to reveal a face in your womb. I am both in awe and occasionally skeeved by the body and its manufacturings. I think that is a good place to be in a poem.

    Camille-Yvette Welsch is the author of The Four Ugliest Children in Christendom and FULL. She works at The Pennsylvania State University where she is a teaching professor of English and director of the High School Writing Day. For more information, go to www.camilleyvettewelsch.com.