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Tag Archives: online journal

Poetry Editor Michelle Bonczek publishes in Verse Daily

09 Friday Aug 2013

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online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, writers, Writing

Today at The Poets Billow we are celebrating Michelle Bonczek’s poem Hunger that was published on Verse Daily.

http://www.versedaily.org/2013/hunger.shtml

This Reminds Us: TPB Now Taking Submissions for The Atlantis Award ; Pangaea Prize Winner Posted

20 Saturday Jul 2013

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atlantis, contest, island of atlantis discovered, Lit. Journal, literature, online journal, pangaea, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, reading poetry, writers

First mentioned in two dialogues (Timaeus and Critias) by Plato in 360 BC, the legendary island of Atlantis has long been sought by historians, archaeologists, and explorers alike. Said to have originally existed between South America and Africa, this sunken island has been searched for in no less than dozens of locations worldwide, from Bimini to the Black Sea.

In a new twist, a team of scientists from Brazil and Japan say they have discovered their version of Atlantis, or at least an ancient piece of granite that was part of a continent that disappeared nearly a hundred million years ago when Africa and South America separated.

Read the Article at Redorbit

Check out the Pangaea Prize Winner

Submit to our Atlantis Award

Winner of the 2013 Pangaea Prize

20 Saturday Jul 2013

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accident, Article, car, contest, Culture, education, entertainment, god, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading poetry, writers, Writing

The Poets Billow is happy to announce the winner of the 2013 Pangaea Prize. Here is an except from Caitlin Scarano’s Entry. Visit our Literary Art Gallery to read seven of her finally crafted poems. 

Losing It

God came to me like a drunken man
running from a car accident. God came

at me with a mouth full of snow, blood
& broken teeth. I used to be alone.

I used to wake up without an arm across my neck.
No boys or gods licking the sole of my shoe

or testing the rope ladder hooked in my lower lip.
Sinning is storytelling –

you always look them in the eye. Your body
always betrays you. God came to me

like the accident itself. No, he came at me like the tree
that parted the car, or the girl that parted

the windshield. The only car accident I was ever in
was the night I lost my virginity in the backseat.

God wasn’t there.
Just a frightened, frightened boy.

Read more by Caitlin Scarano

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Pangaea Poetry Prize Deadline Approaching

10 Friday May 2013

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2013, award, contest, literature, online journal, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, writers, Writing

The Deadline for the Poets Billow Pangaea Prize is in 5 days. If you would like to enter get your submission in by May 15th.

The winning poet receives $100 and will be featured in an interview on The Poet’s Billow web site. The winning poems will be published and displayed in the Poet’s Billow Literary Art Gallery, at least one of the winning poems will be nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Finalists will also be considered for publication and nomination. If the winning poet qualifies, two poems will also be submitted to The Best New Poets anthology.

See the Poets Billow website for full guidelines.

Pangaea Poetry Prize Deadline Extended

29 Monday Apr 2013

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2013, award, contest, literature, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, writers, Writing

The deadline to enter The Poets Billow Pangaea Prize has been extended to May 15th.

The Pangaea Prize is awarded for the best series of poems ranging between two and up to seven poems in a group. Judging will be based on poems as individual entities as well as their cohesiveness – that can be in terms of common themes, images, narrative or however else you would like to group your poems. All poems must be previously unpublished.  There are no restrictions to length or style.

Go to The Poets Billow for full Guidelines.

Interview with Poets Billow Editors on Doutrope

21 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, writers, Writing

Doutrope has posted their interview with The Poets Billow editors Michelle Bonczek and Robert Evory on their website. Get a behind the scenes look at how we run our poetry competitions, who our favorite writers are, and what our judging process is like.

Link to the Interview

Interview with Francine Witte

14 Thursday Feb 2013

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2013, Article, award, contest, interview, literature, loss of memory, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, surreal image, writers, Writing

Your poem “Breaking Sky,” which won the 2012 Atlantis Award, opens with an imaginary, surreal image and progresses into the tangible, real world of birth and death. The tone shifts from something that at first seems playful and distant into an elegy for the speaker’s mother and loss of memory. How did this poem develop for you in the writing process itself? Did you know that the poem was moving toward the death of a mother? Or is it something that surprised you in the process itself?

I’m not really sure how the poem “started” in my head, but yes, this sudden appearance by my mother does happen often when I’m writing.  My mother’s slip into dementia was one of the most stunning occurrences in my entire life.  That first encounter with her when I knew she wasn’t in touch with reality was a gut punch for sure.  The memory of it doesn’t get dim either.  I think in this particular poem it came from talking about the piece of the sky, how you were once like a piece of sky falling from the mother’s thighs to my mother.  It just happened.  And no, I didn’t know when I began writing the poem.

Click to read the full interview

Pangaea Poetry Prize Submission Period Now Open

18 Friday Jan 2013

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2013, award, Chapbok, collection, contest, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, Publishing, reading, writers, Writing

The Pangaea Prize is awarded for the best series of poems ranging between two and up to seven poems in a group. Judging will be based on poems as individual entities as well as their cohesiveness – that can be in terms of common themes, images, narrative or however else you would like to group your poems. All poems must be previously unpublished.  There are no restrictions to length or style.

The winning poet receives $100 and will be featured in an interview on The Poet’s Billow web site. The winning poems will be published and displayed in the Poet’s Billow Literary Art Gallery, at least one of the winning poems will be nominated for a Pushcart Prize. Finalists will also be considered for publication and nomination. If the winning poet qualifies, two poems will also be submitted to The Best New Poets anthology.

Fragments for the End of the Year

31 Monday Dec 2012

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2012, 2013, aviation, climate, Jennifer, literature, nature, new year, new years, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, reading, science, Sweeney, transportation, wedding, writers, Writing

Fragments for the End of the Year

by Jennifer K. Sweeney

On average, odd years have been the best for me.

I’m at a point where everyone I meet looks like a version
of someone I already know.

Without fail, fall makes me nostalgic for things I’ve never experienced.

The sky is molting. I don’t know
if this is global warming or if the atmosphere is reconfiguring
itself to accommodate all the new bright suffering.

I am struck by an overwhelming need to go to Iceland.

Despite all awful variables, we are still full of ideas
as possible as unsexed fruit.

I was terribly sorry to be the one to explain to the first graders
the connection between the sunset and pollution.

On Venus you and I are not even a year old.

Then there were two skies.
The one we fly through and the one
we bury ourselves in.

I appreciate my wide beveled spatula which fulfills
the moment I realized I would grow up and own such things.

I am glad I do not yet want sexy bathroom accessories.
Such things.

In the story we were together every time.

On his wedding day, the stone in his chest
not fully melted but enough.

Sometimes I feel like there are birds flying out of me.

 

Taken from: http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/fragments%20for%20the%20end%20of%20the%20year

Poet’s Billow Editor Robert Evory Appears in The Baltimore Review

27 Saturday Oct 2012

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2012, astronomers, books, entertainment, Evory, Internet, Lit. Journal, literature, news, online journal, poem, Poet, Poetry, poets, Publishing, reading, reading poetry, Robert, science, writers, Writing

We wanted to recognize Robert Evory for his poem “Astronomers” that was just published in The Baltimore Review.

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