New from Blue Fifth Review ...
Broadside #12, “Meditation on Hair,” a poem by Yun Wang, now online.
Wang’s first poetry collection, The Book of Jade, won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize from Story Line Press and was published in 2002. Her poetry chapbook, The Carp, was published by Bull Thistle Press in 1994. She has published poems in numerous literary journals, including Kenyon Review, Green Mountains Review, International Quarterly, Poet Lore.
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Coming in late January, Broadside #13, a poem by Amy Lemmon.
Monday, December 22, 2008
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
pushcart nominations for 2008...
The following poems, appearing at BFR, have been nominated for the 2008 Pushcart Prize.
These are wonderful poems from gifted poets. I'm grateful that they've allowed their works to appear at BFR. Read them, and your world will be a richer view.
Congratulations to these poets.
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Collin Kelley, Patty Hearst on the Occasion of Her Presidential Pardon (Broadside #10, Spring 2008)
Jeff Mann, Writers’ Tour of Kayford Mountain— October 16, 2006 (Spring Supplement 2008)
Felicia Mitchell, Zen and the Art of My Brother (Broadside #11, Summer 2008)
Oliver Rice, Minarets, Incense, Beggars (Winter 2008)
Amy Riddell, Lament (Fall 2008)
Susan Terris, See a Cliché, Be a Cliché (Broadside #9, Winter 2008)
These are wonderful poems from gifted poets. I'm grateful that they've allowed their works to appear at BFR. Read them, and your world will be a richer view.
Congratulations to these poets.
Monday, November 17, 2008
presently reading submissions...
I am presently reading, and will continue through December, submissions for the Winter 09 issue – a special theme: works of collaboration. These works may be focused in poetry and/or art.
Remember that I’m interested in poetry that has not appeared in journals, print or online.
E-mail submissions or questions to bluefifth@lycos.com
Remember that I’m interested in poetry that has not appeared in journals, print or online.
E-mail submissions or questions to bluefifth@lycos.com
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
more on the fall issue...
I’m always amazed at poetry’s ability to shift my attention in new directions. Here I am moving along, taking in my life and the world, and of a sudden, I’m shifted in another direction, encountering places I’d never been to, listening to voices I hadn’t heard. And I’m enriched, finding myself on new journeys of the mind – and sometimes, of the physical. The new Fall 2008 Issue of Blue Fifth Review has that power.
The poetry of Melissa Buckheit, this issue’s featured poet, is astounding. The form finds its own pace. There’s a fresh ease in her work that is both inviting and startling – a wonderful paradox. She writes in the opening lines of “Always One Direction”:
This poem is a call to survival, a cry to move off center, to do the work that must be done – and that work is one’s life. You give yourself to that life. There are so many paths, so many lives – and here’s the hard edge: those lives “won’t forgive the moment of death / even in elation”. That is a powerful vision.
The poetry in Buckheit’s feature will challenge the reader. There is a wonderful physicality in these poems, a believable and intricate world that the reader is given access to. The poems unfold their intimate drama that is dreamlike but very real. It’s as if the reader becomes the casual eavesdropper to the moment. But here’s Buckheit’s gift – what I learn is about myself.
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Many of the writers in this latest issue – writers whose works I’m very familiar with – are appearing in the pages of BFR for the first time… Amy Lemmon, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Riddell, Steve Meador, Jon Ballard, and Yun Wang. There are many others, and I hope you enjoy them all.
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A poem from the pages...
Karen Head
“The muse says”
come to Chartres when the half-moon rises
wind your way up the tertres from the Eure,
pause only to pluck a peony for the Sancta Camisia.
Meet me on the sinners’ bench, last row on the left,
where cobalt light falls in shadows.
I’ll prop open the door beneath the archivolt
with the Seven Liberal Arts, Pisces, and Gemini.
Slip inside, shake loose your shoes,
glide across the labyrinth in your stockings.
And I ask,
isn’t it dangerous, this kind of devotion?
I know my feet will burn, no matter
how cold the ancient stone beneath us.
I know too, because I trust everything
you tell me, that the beauty will surpass
my capacity to describe it,
which is why you will embrace me,
press your open lips to mine,
ardent breath inspiring in me an approach –
the rapture so soon upon us.
The poetry of Melissa Buckheit, this issue’s featured poet, is astounding. The form finds its own pace. There’s a fresh ease in her work that is both inviting and startling – a wonderful paradox. She writes in the opening lines of “Always One Direction”:
If I could I would walk right out of here
the hundred lives we are meant to live
and can’t
won’t forgive the moment of death
even in elation
the gauze wrinkles up against the chin,
the skull sways,
a clear grip from behind.
This poem is a call to survival, a cry to move off center, to do the work that must be done – and that work is one’s life. You give yourself to that life. There are so many paths, so many lives – and here’s the hard edge: those lives “won’t forgive the moment of death / even in elation”. That is a powerful vision.
The poetry in Buckheit’s feature will challenge the reader. There is a wonderful physicality in these poems, a believable and intricate world that the reader is given access to. The poems unfold their intimate drama that is dreamlike but very real. It’s as if the reader becomes the casual eavesdropper to the moment. But here’s Buckheit’s gift – what I learn is about myself.
*
Many of the writers in this latest issue – writers whose works I’m very familiar with – are appearing in the pages of BFR for the first time… Amy Lemmon, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Riddell, Steve Meador, Jon Ballard, and Yun Wang. There are many others, and I hope you enjoy them all.
*
A poem from the pages...
Karen Head
“The muse says”
come to Chartres when the half-moon rises
wind your way up the tertres from the Eure,
pause only to pluck a peony for the Sancta Camisia.
Meet me on the sinners’ bench, last row on the left,
where cobalt light falls in shadows.
I’ll prop open the door beneath the archivolt
with the Seven Liberal Arts, Pisces, and Gemini.
Slip inside, shake loose your shoes,
glide across the labyrinth in your stockings.
And I ask,
isn’t it dangerous, this kind of devotion?
I know my feet will burn, no matter
how cold the ancient stone beneath us.
I know too, because I trust everything
you tell me, that the beauty will surpass
my capacity to describe it,
which is why you will embrace me,
press your open lips to mine,
ardent breath inspiring in me an approach –
the rapture so soon upon us.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
fall 2008 now online...
Fall 2008 Issue is now online.
This issue features new work by...
Melissa Buckheit, Rachel Lehrman, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Lemmon,
Susan Terris, Steve Meador, Robert E. Wood, Laurel K. Dodge,
Karen Head, Scott Owens, Yun Wang, Collin Kelley, Amy Riddell,
Marge Piercy, Tammy Ho Lai-ming, Felicia Mitchell, C. S. Reid,
J. Alan Nelson, C. E. Chaffin, Deborah Vatcher, Leslie Marcus,
and more
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Next: The Broadside Series, #12, by Yun Wang
Mid-November
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Special announcement:
Winter 2009 – special themed issue: Collaboration
Open for consideration: poetry of collaboration or art in collaboration with poetry.
I only consider new work that has not appeared in magazines, print or online...
This issue due out in February.
E-mail submissions to bluefifth@lycos.com
This issue features new work by...
Melissa Buckheit, Rachel Lehrman, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Lemmon,
Susan Terris, Steve Meador, Robert E. Wood, Laurel K. Dodge,
Karen Head, Scott Owens, Yun Wang, Collin Kelley, Amy Riddell,
Marge Piercy, Tammy Ho Lai-ming, Felicia Mitchell, C. S. Reid,
J. Alan Nelson, C. E. Chaffin, Deborah Vatcher, Leslie Marcus,
and more
*
Next: The Broadside Series, #12, by Yun Wang
Mid-November
*
Special announcement:
Winter 2009 – special themed issue: Collaboration
Open for consideration: poetry of collaboration or art in collaboration with poetry.
I only consider new work that has not appeared in magazines, print or online...
This issue due out in February.
E-mail submissions to bluefifth@lycos.com
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
fall 08 issue...
I’m in the final editing stages of the Fall 2008 Issue. Contributors will preview their pages later this week, and will be online next week.
This issue will feature new work by...
Melissa Buckheit, Rachel Lehrman, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Lemmon,
Susan Terris, Steve Meador, Robert E. Wood, Laurel K. Dodge,
Karen Head, Scott Owens, Yun Wang, Collin Kelley, Amy Riddell,
Marge Piercy, Tammy Ho Lai-ming, Felicia Mitchell, C. S. Reid,
J. Alan Nelson, C. E. Chaffin, Deborah Vatcher, Leslie Marcus,
and more
*
Winter 2009 – special themed issue: Collaboration
Open for consideration: poetry of collaboration or art in collaboration with poetry.
I only consider new work that has not appeared in magazines, print or online...
E-mail submissions to bluefifth@lycos.com
This issue will feature new work by...
Melissa Buckheit, Rachel Lehrman, Kenneth Pobo, Amy Lemmon,
Susan Terris, Steve Meador, Robert E. Wood, Laurel K. Dodge,
Karen Head, Scott Owens, Yun Wang, Collin Kelley, Amy Riddell,
Marge Piercy, Tammy Ho Lai-ming, Felicia Mitchell, C. S. Reid,
J. Alan Nelson, C. E. Chaffin, Deborah Vatcher, Leslie Marcus,
and more
*
Winter 2009 – special themed issue: Collaboration
Open for consideration: poetry of collaboration or art in collaboration with poetry.
I only consider new work that has not appeared in magazines, print or online...
E-mail submissions to bluefifth@lycos.com
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