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  2. Get Paid to Write: Top 18 Sites That Pay (up to $1 per Word)

    www.aol.com/paid-write-top-18-sites-170032449.html

    Each week, Poetry Nook holds a free-entry poetry contest (for 350 weeks and counting). Multiple winners and honorable mentions may be chosen. Multiple winners and honorable mentions may be chosen.

  3. Four Way Books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Way_Books

    Four Way Books is an American nonprofit literary press located in New York City, which publishes poetry and short fiction by emerging and established writers. It features the work of the winners of national poetry competitions, as well as collections accepted through general submission, panel selection, and solicitation by the editors. [1]

  4. Poetry.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry.com

    The site's ostensible primary purpose was publication of poetry anthologies submitted by aspiring authors and poetry conventions hosted by the group. The Better Business Bureau of Greater Maryland classified the business as a vanity publisher and noted that the quality of the poetry submitted to them "does not appear to be a significant ...

  5. Wattpad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wattpad

    Author Anna Todd, whose work After has received over a billion reads on the site, was given a publishing deal with Simon & Schuster to turn her online work into a multiple-book published saga. A film version starring Josephine Langford , Hero Fiennes Tiffin , Selma Blair, Jennifer Beals, Peter Gallagher, and Shane Paul McGhie was released by ...

  6. Marsh Hawk Press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsh_Hawk_Press

    Marsh Hawk Press was founded by Jane Augustine, Thomas Fink, Burt Kimmelman, Sandy McIntosh, and Stephen Paul Miller, as a juried collective and literary resource to produce books which highlight the affinity of poetry, memoir and the visual arts.

  7. Poetry (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poetry_(magazine)

    Wiman "expressed in print a stern preference for formal poems, and a disdain for what he calls 'broken-prose confessionalism' and 'the generic, self-obsessed free-verse poetry of the seventies and eighties", according to a New Yorker magazine article. [1] One of his top goals for the magazine was to get more people "talking about it", he has said.

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