Excited to have a poem in issue 6! Look at all these other goodies 😍
Posts by Asterales: A Journal of Arts & Letters
What a treat to read this issue full of wonder and beauty with my coffee this morning—so happy two of my micros, “Velma Learns to Love a Mystery” and “Plot Diagram for the Girl Detective,” found a home here.
Issue 6 is here! With poems from @erindorney.bsky.social, @mrmack88.bsky.social Renee Emerson, Sunshine Lately, Jackson Benson, & Isaac Salazar, flash from @emcapettini.bsky.social and art from @christenkauffman.bsky.social & Jill Khoury!
www.asteralesjournal.com/current-issu...
Happy birthday to Issue Four contributor @willmusgrove.bsky.social !
Read his piece here while you wait for Issue 6!
asteralesjournal.com/1-4-musgrove...
Issue 6 drops on April 20! Get ready for some wonderful poetry, art, and fiction coming your way!
And prep those subs...we'll be opening May 1 for Issue 7 submissions in all categories!
@asteralesjournal.bsky.social contributor has made the finals of @marchxness.bsky.social with her essay on Celine Dion's "My Heart Will Go On." Go vote for her in the finals, coming up soon! Check it out here before the final match goes live!
marchxness.com#/finalfour-d...
Congratulations to Issue One contributor @jasonbcrawford.bsky.social for his @lambdaliterary.org nomination for his gorgeous book Yeet!
We are excitedly making decisions, sending acceptances, and, as is the way, rejections for Issue 6. (We know, we know, but it's always hard to send those no's.)
All of our decisions/emails should be out by Saturday. We can't wait to share our next issue with you!
Black text reads Featured Artist Dayna Patterson with four images of collage work featuring a steam train, a moon, an angel with a scroll, and a woman with a garden around. Each image is enhanced by embroidery work in geometric patterns and chains.
Sharing the last of our Issue Five contributor highlights - enjoy the collage/stitchery magic of @titaniayellow.bsky.social. Visit the issue to see these pieces in their full-sized precision and glory.
Now that you're back from AWP or recovered from your AWP fomo, remember that we're open for submissions until the 15th! We would particularly love to see more visual art and non-fiction/essay work!
Both sidea, front and back, all parts, a rhythm of swinging,a rhythm of movement, the predictable way objects are first far away and then become close, closer, and then are moving away again, behind, if you turn your head, farther, farther, and then not seen. Carolyn Williams-Noren "The Brain Discovers its Injury and Recovery" all written in black text over a background photo of a road sided by green trees in golden sunlight with the yellow words PAST PRESENT FUTURE superimprosed from the bottom to the top of the road.
Another gem from Issue 5 - this form-follows-content cnf about the nature of injury and thought from @creakyvoice.bsky.social.
www.asteralesjournal.com/2-5-williams...
A yellow background with PLEIADES in white text in a black box with photo of a doll with orange ribbons in dark locks, a teal and red patterned shirt and pants and black arms and feet. The face is patterned with beads and irridescent colors.
Svetlana Litvinchuk Lily Pond Near Desna Dacha I carefully turned each item to its shady side, exposing collecting the harder to reach bait on a mission that was to the sun the damp underbellies of discarded things, one-part hunt and one-part forage. Early mornings were best for trash pit diving, when the dew was still evaporating off the bent lounge chairs, broken toys, heaps of food containers and other trash too hard to burn. Much later I would learn that this faraway smell of country fires that roused such childhood nostalgia wasn't the earthy fragrance of smoked meat, but of burning garbage, that musky incense of poverty. My tiny hands were ideal for finding the small wriggling bodies, dropping them with a plink into the can, as entire families helplessly trembled before my pincer grasp filling the container as the men smoked cigarettes and waited to go fishing. This is one way that children become the provider of the family that no one ever talks about, having no say in the risks to their bodies, only the singular option of doing as they're told disguised as child's play. My own body, pale and small, was accustomed to entering the forest reliant on men who drink to protect me from the lurking wolves and owls who waited to carry me away, the way my mother cautioned in bedtime stories. When the sun burned off the morning's haze, that's when the flies came out to swarm- dutiful parents protecting their young from the perils of early harvest. My reward for the morning's labor was a detour to the lily pond where the men watched as I waded into the water, stripped down to my underwear, careful
The first page of more new work from Asterales Issue Five poet Svetlana Litvinchuk in the new issue of @pleiadesmag.bsky.social!
A photo of red turnips clustered over ice covered leaves. Text: When I say I want flowers, I mean I want to be round and fertile as the Earth. I want to be a turnip left in the ground through the frost-to grow tender in the cold months and leave the earth richer than I found it. Svetlana Litvinchuk, "When I Say I Want Flowers"
Still celebrating our Issue Five contributors while we read subs for Issue 6 - we're open until March 15 and we'd love to see your visual art, your prose, and your poems!
Today, enjoy the fertile beauty of Svetlana Litvinchuk's "When I Say I Want Flowers".
www.asteralesjournal.com/2-5-litvinch...
We are thrilled to have @sjane.bsky.social as one of our featured artists in Issue Five.
If you are a visual artist (participating in Februllage, perhaps?), we would love to see your work for Issue Six.
asteralesjournal.com/submissions
While you're prepping your submission for Issue Six, take a break and enjoy this tasty tidbit from Amanda Lee's story "You Need to Lose Weight" in Issue Five.
www.asteralesjournal.com/2-5-lee-sloat
The wind / may whip it, but the bird rides / the violence
Don't forget, subs are open until March 15. No fee to submit and we want to see your poems, your prose, AND your visual art!
asteralesjournal/submissions
I may live in MA, but I will always be home on the edge of the Mid-Atlantic. New poem in @asteralesjournal.bsky.social
White text reading "You are primordial life, my miles-deep mystery. What lives in your absence of light? How does that darkness mold me?" Rebecca Kirk Connors "The Mid-Atlantic Cradle" over a photo of ocean waves at night in white and deep blue.
Cradle yourself in the ocean with @aprilist.bsky.social "The Mid-Atlantic Cradle" in Issue Five.
www.asteralesjournal.com/2-5-connors-...
Soar and ponder with the evocative movement of "November" by @energiapoet.bsky.social in Issue Five!
www.asteralesjournal.com/2-5-gifford-...
Issue Six Subs are now open!
While you prep your submissions, enjoy @katiemanningpoet.bsky.social's work in Issue Five!
This very cold day has been perfect for me to work on the personalized thank you notes for our Issue 5 Contributors, something our editors really enjoy!
While we prepare to highlight each of our Issue Five Contributors, polish up your poems, prose, and visual art for our Issue Six Submission Window, opening February 1!
Guidelines at asteralesjournal.com/submissions
We are so excited to feature your work!
Thank you for sharing it with us!
Correct link here! I got too excited...
asteralesjournal.com/current-issue-2-5
Oops, wrong link!
asteralesjournal.com/current-issue-2-5
Cover page of the website at asteralesjournal.com with the names of pieces and contributors in beige colored boxes with original art in circles.
Issue Five is now live with words from @katiemanningpoet.bsky.social, Katie Kim, @aprilist.bsky.social Svetlana Litvinchuk, @creakyvoice.bsky.social, Amanda Lee, & Stephen Energia Gifford Bell. Art from @sjane.bsky.social and @titaniayellow.bsky.social!
asteralesjournal.com/currentissue
Issue One Successes black text on linen background with red/pink asters at the bottom. ALL DETAILS on silde at http://asterales.com/celebrations
Issue Two Successes black text on linen background with red/pink asters at the bottom. ALL DETAILS on silde at http://asterales.com/celebrations
Issue Three Successes black text on linen background with red/pink asters at the bottom. ALL DETAILS on silde at http://asterales.com/celebrations
Issue Four Successes black text on linen background with red/pink asters at the bottom. ALL DETAILS on silde at http://asterales.com/celebrations
We're celebrating our first year of publication by sharing some of the successes of our Year One contributors. Without them, there is no journal!
Check out the new Celebrations page at asteralesjournal.com/celebrations for details and links.
Stay tuned for Issue Five coming up later this week!
Aren't they gorgeous!?