"This work is unlike any other, in its range of rich, conjuring imagery and its dexterity, its smart voice. Carroll-Hackett doesn’t spare us—but doesn’t save us—she draws a blueprint of power and class with her unflinching pivot: matter-of-fact and tender." —Jan Beatty

Archive for the ‘Bless the Day’ Category

Celebrate the New Year By Sending Us Your Beautiful Work! HeartWood Call for Submissions!

HeartWood Literary Magazine

HeartWood, an online literary magazine in association with West Virginia Wesleyan’s Low-Residency MFA program, publishes twice yearly, in April and October. Our inaugural issue will go live April 2016.

HeartWood

Submission Guidelines

HeartWood, an online literary magazine in association with West Virginia Wesleyan’s Low-Residency MFA program, publishes twice yearly, in April and October. Our inaugural issue will go live April 2016.

We accept submissions year round through Submittable, and welcome previously unpublished poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, from both established and emerging writers. We do love Appalachian voices, but we enthusiastically encourage writers from all backgrounds to submit. 

General Submissions

What We Want:

We are interested in writing that pushes into, dares to reveal, its own truth, that takes emotional risks, that gets to the heart of the matter.

Simultaneous submissions are fine, provided you notify us if the work is accepted elsewhere.

We also welcome queries from Appalachian artists (writers, visual artists, musicians, performers, folk artists, etc) interested in being included in our Appalachian Arts section.

Submission Details

Prose submissions, fiction or nonfiction, should be 3000 words or less.

Fiction: Fiction submissions may include short stories, flash fiction, or novel excerpts if the excerpt can stand alone. You may submit more than one piece of flash fiction, as long as the total word count does not exceed 3000 words.

Creative Nonfiction: We’re open to a wide range of nonfiction, with the exception of academic articles, or that which would be considered more traditionally journalistic. Personal essay, memoir, lyric, literary journalism, or some blurring in between, are all acceptable.

Poetry: Poets should submit no more than 3-5 single-spaced poems at a time. Include all poems in a single document for upload. Lyric, narrative, experimental, prose poems–we’re open to all variations of the poetic voice.

Surprise us. Make us think. Make us feel. Make our hearts race.

Appalachian Arts Interviews

We also welcome queries from Appalachian artists (writers, visual artists, musicians, performers, folk artists, etc) interested in being included in our Appalachian Arts section. We define Appalachian artists as an artist who is heavily influenced by the Appalachian region and its traditions, history, and people. At HeartWood, we are looking for artists who take these traditions and speak to them in a new and unexpected way.

To query about possible inclusion in the Appalachian Arts section: Submit the following in one document (doc, docx) through the Appalachian Arts link on our Submittable page:

  • Artist bio
  • Artist statement addressing what being an “Appalachian artist” means to you, how you uniquely define yourself as an Appalachian artist, and how your connection to Appalachia as you see/define it connects (or doesn’t) to your work.
  • At least one link to where artwork or samples can be seen/heard (artist website, other publications, YouTube, etc).

If we’re interested, based on the query, editors will email requesting additional information and work sample.

What We’ll Do

Submissions will be responded to within three months. If you haven’t heard from us after three months, feel free to inquire by sending us a note through Submittable.  If your work is accepted, HeartWood acquires first North American rights. All rights revert to the author upon publication, but we do ask for first publication attribution in any future publications. We also reserve the right to include accepted pieces in any future anthologies or promotions. If we have passed on a submission, please wait 6 months before submitting again. Regrettably, time being as it is, we are unable offer feedback on submissions. 

As much as we would love to be able to pay our contributors, unfortunately we are not able to do so. This is a labor of love for all of us, and we will do our best to honor and promote your work. 

(Please note: We regret that current or past employees, current or past students, and alumni of WVWC are not eligible for publication in HeartWood, but we wish you much luck with your work elsewhere.)

http://www.heartwoodlitmag.com/

Sometimes the Prompt Is a Change

Daily Prompt
 
“In the space between chaos and shape there is another chance.”~Jeannette Winterson
 
Make art about rising to the challenge of change.
 
butterfly woman

Monday Must Read: Jonathan K. Rice: Killing Time

jonathan promo pic 7This week meet Jonathan K. Rice. Jonathan is founding editor/publisher of Iodine Poetry Journal, which is in its sixteenth year of publication. His latest poetry collection is Killing Time (Main Street Rag Publishing, 2015). He is also the author of Shooting Pool with a Cellist (Main Street Rag, 2003) and Ukulele and Other Poems (Main Street Rag, 2006). His poetry has appeared in many periodicals, including The Aurorean, Blue Unicorn, CharlotteViewpoint, Cold Mountain Review, Comstock Review, Ekphrasis, Eunoia Review, Gargoyle, Kakalak, Kentucky Review, Main Street Rag, O. Henry Magazine, Pedestal, Sacred Journey, San Pedro River Review, Slipstream, Sundog: A Southeast Review and The Southern Poetry Anthology VII: North Carolina. He has been a longtime host of poetry readings in Charlotte, NC, where he lives with his family, and is the recipient of the 2012 Irene Blair Honeycutt Legacy Award for outstanding service in support of local and regional writers, awarded by Central Piedmont Community College.

Jonathan is also a visual artist. His work has been featured as cover art on several books. His art has also appeared in the online magazines The Pedestal, Referential Magazine, Red Headed Stepchild, Levure Litteraire, The Inflectionist Review and Empty Mirror. He was the featured artist in the spring 2015 issue of Apogee Magazine, the literary arts magazine of High Point University.

He has had solo exhibits at Jackson’s Java, Vin Master, Wingmaker Arts Collaborative, The Peculiar Rabbit, University of North Carolina Charlotte Student Union Gallery, the Pennington-McIntyre Gallery on the campus of Cleveland Community College in Shelby, NC and the New South Gallery and Studios in Statesville, NC. His art has also been included in a number of group exhibits in galleries such as Hart-Witzen, Green Rice Gallery, Max L. Jackson Gallery at Queens University Charlotte, Studio K (Charlotte, NC), Mooresville Art Depot (Mooresville, NC), Gallery 102 (Lancaster, SC), Art in the Village (Ballantyne Village in Charlotte, NC), Fanjoy-Labrenz (Hickory, NC) and Gallery Twenty-Two (Charlotte, NC). Jonathan’s work is in many private collections and businesses.

Jonathan’s Artist website:

www.jonathankriceartist.com

Buy Jonathan’s books at Main Street Rag Publishing:

http://mainstreetragbookstore.com/?product=killing-time

http://mainstreetragbookstore.com/?product=ukulele-and-other-poems

http://mainstreetragbookstore.com/?product=shooting-pool-with-a-cellist

Read Jonathan’s beautiful poetry online:

http://www.kentuckyreview.org/index.php/issues2/rk2014menu/item/212-ricebio

http://referentialmagazine.com/contributors/p-r/jonathan-k-rice/

https://eunoiareview.wordpress.com/2014/02/08/want-2/

http://www.charlotteviewpoint.org/article/3181/Rearranging

See Jonathan’s beautiful art online:

http://inflectionism.com/previous.htm (The Inflectionist Review, Number 3)

http://levurelitteraire.com/jonathan-k-rice/

http://www.emptymirrorbooks.com/features/visual-art/dream-sequences.html

Jonathan on Youtube

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qC9DTy6_iMg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh6cpnYDNQ0

Happy Reading!

xo

Mary

Sometimes the Prompt’s Right In Your Own Hands

Daily Prompt
 
“I thought of happiness, how it is woven
Out of the silence in the empty house each day
And how it is not sudden and it is not given
But is creation itself like the growth of a tree….”~May Sarton
 
Make art about making your own happiness.
Happiness-Hands1

 

Monday Must Read! Nancy Peacock: A Broom of One’s Own

Monday Must Read! 

Nancy 6This week meet Nancy Peacock! Nancy is a mostly self-taught author. Her first novel, Life Without Water, was chosen as a New York Times Most Notable Book. She followed with a second novel, Home Across the Road. Her collection of essays on writing and housecleaning, (a personal favorite here in Mary’s house :-)) A Broom of One’s Own was published by Harper Collins. Her third novel The Life and Times of Persimmon Wilson will be published in 2016 by Atria Press. Peacock has supported herself and her writing life with numerous jobs including housecleaner, bartender, carpenter, paper deliverer, assistant drum maker, costumer, baker, milker on a dairy farm, and teacher.

Nancy’s also an incredibly generous spirit, offering ongoing classes and workshops aimed at helping other writers, and she hosts a don’t-miss blog, Matginalia, filled with wonderful insight and writer wisdom.

Visit Nancy’s website:

www.nancypeacockbooks.com

Check Out Nancy’s Beautiful Books!

Life Without Water

http://www.amazon.com/Life-Without-Water-Nancy-Peacock/dp/0553379291

Home Across the Road

http://www.amazon.com/Home-Across-Road-Nancy-Peacock/dp/1563525097/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1450703985&sr=8-1

A Broom of One’s Own

http://www.harpercollins.com/9780061357879/a-broom-of-ones-own

Read Nancy’s Blog!

http://nancypeacockbooks.com/wp/

Praise for Nancy’s Work:

Publishers Weekly

http://www.publishersweekly.com/978-1-56352-337-3

Kirkus Reviews

https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/nancy-peacock/the-life-and-times-of-persimmon-wilson/

Southern Scribe

http://www.southernscribe.com/reviews/general_fiction/Home_Across_Road.htm

Reading Group Guides:

http://www.readinggroupguides.com/reviews/life-without-water

http://www.readinggroupguides.com/reviews/home-across-the-road

Classes & Workshops

http://nancypeacockbooks.com/classes/

 

Happy Reading, y’all!

xo

Mary

Daily Prompt Catch-Up! Gifts & Soup & Conspiracy Theories

Dec 18

Wrapping presents 🙂 I’ve never before managed to have them wrapped this early LOL  Make art about something kept under wraps. 

Dec 19

That bowl of soup—it was dearer than freedom, dearer than life itself, past, present, and future.” ― Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn  Made Garden Vegetable Soup for me and my son.

Make art about soup. 

Dec 20 

Read a new story this morning about someone carrying a belief in a conspiracy theory too far. Make art about conspiracy. 

tree with presents

Sometimes the Prompt Is Left Behind For You

Daily Prompt
 
Just drafted a poem called The Words Mama Left Me.
 
Make art about inheritance.
 
inheritance_506x163

Sometimes the Prompt Dances In Like a Gift

Daily Prompt
 
Dreamt the walls of my bedroom melted away and I found myself surrounded by a herd of gentle deer, with their liquid eyes and dancer feet. They nuzzled me with velvet snouts, and whispered Welcome Welcome. We picked our way through a twilight wood, until the trees opened up into broad sweet-smelling fields. And then we ran, and ran, and ran. 🙂
 
Make art inspired by deer.
 
twilight-along-the-brook-doe-mule-deer

Sometimes the Prompt Requires Action

Daily Prompt
 
First week in the online class is all about defining activism, personal and professional.
Make art rooted in action.
action makes change

Sometimes the Prompt Is A Tender Touch

Daily Prompt

Thinkin of all the loving care my nurse mama and sister gave their patients for decades.

Make art about nurses, about caretakers.

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Then subscribe & support HIV Here & Now

http://www.hivhereandnow.com/poems/poem-195-%C2%B1-december-14-2015/

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american nurse

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