Afi Koasi is a Ghanaian writer who through poetry has found a passionate outlet of self-expression. Her poems reflect the very essence of word power, exposing the reality of stories written beautifully. She’s a writer determined to be heard, writing away her deepest thoughts as experienced and observed. Afi is a lover of art, music and chocolates.
Read MoreArthur Nolan is a fairly fresh poet, only considering poetry as a full-time creative outlet recently. He tries to write in a range of tones and genres, from surrealism to comedy, and despite an emerging style, considers his room for growth far from done. Arthur’s work can be read in our latest Quarterly Anthology ‘Depression is What Really Killed the Dinosaurs.’ You can read more of his work on his Instagram.
Read MoreSarah Schriber is an educator and writer in Washington, DC. She studied English Literature at Johns Hopkins University. Sarah’s work can be read in our latest Quarterly Anthology ‘Depression is What Really Killed the Dinosaurs.’ This is the poet’s first publication.
Read MoreFly on the Wall Press is a publisher with a conscience, which means everything we do is with accessibility, ethics and sustainability in mind, from the books we publish to the way in which we correspond revolvers. We publish politically engaged fiction, poetry and cross on round apologies which often fundraise for charity.
Read MoreAugust Hawley is a high school senior from Michigan who’s been writing poetry since around age 13. Most of his writing focuses on grief, recovery, and his experiences as a transgender person in the 21st century. He hopes to continue his writing through college and develop a career in the publishing industry. August is also a staff writer for Sunday Mornings at the River.
Read MoreChloe Hanks is an emerging poet from Worcestershire. With the desire to absolve female villains from the patriarchal lens, her writing destabilizes stereotypes and reinvents what is familiar. Her work has appeared in a number of anthologies, including the recent debut from Fawn Press, and she was the winner of the V Press Prize for Poetry in 2020. She is currently studying an MA in Creative Writing at the University of Birmingham.
Read MoreKate Gough is a Canadian based poet and a member of the online poetry community. Her work modernizes romantic literary sensibilities and explores recovery to trauma and living with chronic illness. She has participated in a community poetry event “Escapril” three times, releasing poetry every day for a month. She has been published in several online journals, including the Latte Edit and Nightingale and Sparrow, as well as in her local community in Disability Pride Alberta, and in the YYC Portraits of People project. She lives a quiet life with her partner and cat, as she has always dreamed of.
Read MoreSarah (she/her) is a queer poet based in Colorado. She graduated from the Savannah College of Art & Design with a BFA in Sequential Art, where she also studied Creative Writing in the South of France. She is the author of chapbooks The Oceanography of Her and Anti/Muse, and the digital zine I Can Make A Love Poem Out Of Anyone. As a survivor of sexual assault and PTSD, she runs Beyond The Veil Press, advocating for mental health awareness and art as therapy. She is also a long-distance runner, cat mom, and visual artist.
Read MoreFawn Press is an indie publisher that aims to take the reader by the hand and lead them into the woods. Fawn Press aims to publish beautiful books of exceptional poetry, as theybelieve that poetry has the power to change lives through that transcendental connection between writer and reader.
Read MoreSofiya Ivanova has known she wanted to be a “rhyme-writer” since she was three years old. Born in Moscow, Russia, she was eight years old when she moved to the U.S., where she learned English from scratch and had to adapt to an entirely new culture. Her poetry was published for the first time in the Sunday Mornings At The River Spring 2020 Anthology; she was fourteen years old. Sofiya’s work is heavily inspired by contemporary spoken word and 1950s Beat poetry, as well as feeling everything too deeply, teenage melodrama, and the gorgeous landscape of Colorado.
Read MoreSophia-Maria Nicolopoulos is a Content Editor of fiction from Greece. She chooses to see her writing as the kind Ophelia would write had she navigated a world of boundless horror. She writes to make sense of said world and shed light on the obscure places where reality meets the surreal. She hates the taste of fresh tomatoes, and she loves cheese. In her free time, she removes cat hair from her clothes. Sophia-Maria joined us as a book reviewer recently, and you can find her articles on our blog.
Read MoreSindhu Rajasekaran is a literary nomad and transgressor of genres. She has published a novel titled Kaleidoscopic Reflections, which was nominated for the Crossword Book Award in India. Her collection of short stories, titled So I Let It Be, was published by Pegasus Publishers, UK. Her latest book of non-fiction, Smashing the Patriarchy – A Guide for the 21st Century Indian Woman, is to be published by the reputed Aleph Book Company. In her work, both fiction and non-fiction, Sindhu explores gender and sexuality, language and landscape, contemporary politics, and existential dilemmas.
Read MoreMichaela Dengg started writing poetry in 2015. In 2019, she started publishing poems on Instagram under the pseudonym ‘Mariam,’ a combination of her first and middle name. Her poetry frequently deals with the concept of ‘home’ and ‘home far away from home’. She usually writes short poems and aphorisms with powerful wordplays.
Read MoreAnna K. Dalton is a mother, and teacher of all things atypical in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. She spends her days helping others find their own inner voice on the yoga mat, or stretch their creative limbs at the pottery wheel, and in front of a sewing machine. Anna uses writing as a personal outlet; a small escape from the busyness of everyday life, and the inevitable chaos that comes from living with a six-year-old. This is her first published work.
Read MoreStephanie Johnson’s poetry has appeared in numerous publications including Witty Partition, Sink Hollow, Forum Literary Magazine, and others. She is an Associate Editor at Novel Slices, a new literary magazine based solely on novel excerpts, and has spent most of her adult life teaching English literature, ESL and Spanish in several countries around the world. Her writing often focuses on the slightly uncomfortable space of the expatriation/ repatriation experience. She is currently based in Sydney, Australia.
Read MoreRitwika Maity (she/her) is from a crowded metropolitan city where you can barely see the stars at night. She writes to paint constellations on her night sky. She became a poet at the age of 8 when a teacher asked Ritwika to read a poem she wrote for an assignment in front of the class. The teacher said she really enjoyed it and encouraged Ritwika to keep writing. Her grandfather gifted me a notebook later that month, and she has never stopped writing poetry since. A few years later, when her grandfather passed away, writing poetry made Ritwika feel closer to him and helped her to deal with the grief.
Read MoreElsie has always had a love of the written word, spending many hours reading the marvellous works of inspiring authors. She has been writing since elementary school and recently has been putting work out for others to see. She has had work published in two online magazines, now joining others in print with this COVID anthology.
Read MoreLydia Price is a Kentucky poet who is currently in love with the world at large. She is a sophomore at Taylor University where she is majoring in creative writing and minoring in professional writing. She has been published in Taylor University’s literary magazine, Parnassus, and she continues to seek out other publishing opportunities on her own. She is in the process of putting together her very first poetry collection and looks forward to sharing her work with the world.
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