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The Shit Creek Review was founded by Australian poet Paul Stevens in 2006. Stevens was joined by Nigel Holt and Angela France (who also edit the United Kingdom print magazine Iota) [1] as its poetry editors, Don Zirilli as its art editor, and Patricia Wallace Jones as artist-in-residence.
Written in a variety of formats from desktop-published text to comics, collages and stories, zines cover broad topics including fanfiction, politics, poetry, art & design, ephemera, personal journals, social theory, intersectional feminism, single-topic obsession, or sexual content far enough outside the mainstream to be prohibitive of ...
After writing poetry for 30 years, she began submitting her work to literary journals. In her first year her work was published in over two dozen journals, including Chiron Review , Tulane Review , Writers Journal , Buffalo Bones , The Rockford Review , The Ledge , The Orange Willow Review , VLQ , Black Bear Review , and The American Dissident .
0–9. Category talk:17th-century Russian poets; Category talk:18th-century poets from the Russian Empire; Category talk:19th-century Belgian poets
The American Poetry Review (1972–current) The American River Review (1984–current) The American Scholar (1932–current) American Short Fiction (1991–current) Ancient Paths (1998–current) Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine (2002–current, Australia) Angelaki (1993–current, Britain) Another Chicago Magazine (1977–current)
Acallam na Senórach (Middle Irish) Historia Regum Britanniae ; The Knight in the Panther's Skin by Shota Rustaveli; Alexandreis by Walter of Châtillon ; De bello Troiano and the lost Antiocheis (Latin) by Joseph of Exeter; Carmen de Prodicione Guenonis, version of the story of the Song of Roland in Latin
British punk and post-punk fanzines from the 1970s. A fanzine (blend of fan and magazine or -zine) is a non-professional and non-official publication produced by enthusiasts of a particular cultural phenomenon (such as a literary or musical genre) for the pleasure of others who share their interest.
Chandler's works of poetry and prose have been published in a variety of magazines, newspapers and e-zines. Most notably, his poetry earned a coveted role in The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry anthology, edited by Alan Kaufman and S. A. Griffin, in 1999.