I have directly quote them below:
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“Please send all submissions to the following new address:
lapetitezine@gmail.com
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We accept e-mail submissions only. Please paste your work directly into the e-mail. If you are greatly concerned about formatting, please send an attached document in addition to the pasted text. We accept visual files in pdf, jpeg, and gif format. Include a brief bio with your submission.
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Please send work in all genres. And all non- or anti-genres. We consider visual work of all types. We consider personal and academic essays.
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We require that you put in your e-mail subject line the following information:
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LPZ.lastname.month.date.year.
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Thus, a submission from a poet might read in its subject line:
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LPZ.Notley.10.28.2006
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•Please send 3-5 poems. Essays and fiction should be under 2,000 words, but query if you think we have reason to consider your longer work.
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•Please include a brief bio.
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•Please, no multiple submissions. Simultaneous submissions are fine; please let us know if work’s been accepted elsewhere.
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•Please wait two months before submitting again.
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Any deviation from our guidelines may result in the disposal of your submission--trash folder, no questions asked.
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Read our current and recent issues before submitting. No excuses; they're free and they're stunners!
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If, after a few months, you haven't heard from us, please feel free to check in. Check nice! We’re tender.
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We acquire First Rights, or one-time rights. Copyright reverts back to author/artist after publication. “
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For more details go to:
http://www.lapetitezine.org/
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Good luck to all who enter and please stop by next week…
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Poems Found by Poet Hound
http://www.h-ngm-n.com/h_ngm_n-7/gavin-adair.html
Gavin Adair’s “After the crash”
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http://www.redividerjournal.org/deaths-daughter/
Cathleen Calbert’s “Death’s Daughter”
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Thanks for clicking in, please drop by tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Gavin Adair’s “After the crash”
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http://www.redividerjournal.org/deaths-daughter/
Cathleen Calbert’s “Death’s Daughter”
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Thanks for clicking in, please drop by tomorrow for more Open Submissions…
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Justin Barrett's the uncertainty principle
Justin Barrett sent this little gem in the mail and guess what? The poems are translated into French! The uncertainty principle is Barrett’s newest collection of poems, published by Les Mi(ni)crobe. Mr. Barrett admitted he wasn’t sure if they were available for purchase on-line so I e-mailed the press and hoped they could read English since I do not know how to write, let alone speak, French. I have not heard anything from the press but Justin Barrett has given me permission to review it regardless. The poems are in English and then in French and almost all of them make me laugh. I’ll spare you the French translation as I’m sure I’ll butcher it. As usual, Barrett’s poems aren’t for the faint of heart so you have been forewarned:
-
the good die young
-
a new study on the death rates
of writers was conducted by
a scientist from California
and his results showed that poets die
sooner than any other type of writer.
-
apparently, this finding is true across
cultural, racial, and gender lines.
-
novelists, playwrights, journalists,
how-to book writers;
all of them live longer
than poets.
it seems to be a side-effect
of writing poetry.
-
but, dying young and leaving
all the shit of this
world behind for
the rest of the writers to
write about is
just further proof
of the superiority of
the poet.
-
Don’t you just love the arrogant attitude at the end of this poem? I also wonder where he found this study that inspired the poem. Justin Barrett typically has a biting “punch-line” in his poems that makes him stand out from others and I admire that.
-
-
-
but, i must be better than that damn collection of yodeling CDs, right?
-
after years of suffering
through bad movies
and bad music
and bad television shows,
i finally tell my
wife that she
has horrible tase.
-
“the ultimate proof,”
she says,
“is the fact
that i chose you.”
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we both laugh.
-
i, because i know
it’s not true.
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she, because
she knows it is.
-
Again, this is a biting remark of a poem and it encompasses real life with a great title that at first appears to have nothing to do with the poem. Then after you read it, the title could easily work as the ending. This is a good example of a poem scaled down to its skeleton.
-
-
-
morning
-
After you wake
up and
leave in the
morning
-
i roll over
to your side
of the bed,
-
curl up in your
emptiness
-
and fall back
to sleep
in the ghost
of your warmth.
-
Mr. Barrett isn’t always biting in his writing, this is a great example of sentimentality pared down to its frame. Simple and engaging.
-
-
If you enjoyed this little collection, you can see if it is available for purchase by e-mailing rvmicrobeATyahooDOTfr
-
If you know French, you’ll probably get a response since I haven’t heard back yet. The collection is short and sweet, funny and entertaining.
-
Thanks always for reading, please drop in again tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…
-
the good die young
-
a new study on the death rates
of writers was conducted by
a scientist from California
and his results showed that poets die
sooner than any other type of writer.
-
apparently, this finding is true across
cultural, racial, and gender lines.
-
novelists, playwrights, journalists,
how-to book writers;
all of them live longer
than poets.
it seems to be a side-effect
of writing poetry.
-
but, dying young and leaving
all the shit of this
world behind for
the rest of the writers to
write about is
just further proof
of the superiority of
the poet.
-
Don’t you just love the arrogant attitude at the end of this poem? I also wonder where he found this study that inspired the poem. Justin Barrett typically has a biting “punch-line” in his poems that makes him stand out from others and I admire that.
-
-
-
but, i must be better than that damn collection of yodeling CDs, right?
-
after years of suffering
through bad movies
and bad music
and bad television shows,
i finally tell my
wife that she
has horrible tase.
-
“the ultimate proof,”
she says,
“is the fact
that i chose you.”
-
we both laugh.
-
i, because i know
it’s not true.
-
she, because
she knows it is.
-
Again, this is a biting remark of a poem and it encompasses real life with a great title that at first appears to have nothing to do with the poem. Then after you read it, the title could easily work as the ending. This is a good example of a poem scaled down to its skeleton.
-
-
-
morning
-
After you wake
up and
leave in the
morning
-
i roll over
to your side
of the bed,
-
curl up in your
emptiness
-
and fall back
to sleep
in the ghost
of your warmth.
-
Mr. Barrett isn’t always biting in his writing, this is a great example of sentimentality pared down to its frame. Simple and engaging.
-
-
If you enjoyed this little collection, you can see if it is available for purchase by e-mailing rvmicrobeATyahooDOTfr
-
If you know French, you’ll probably get a response since I haven’t heard back yet. The collection is short and sweet, funny and entertaining.
-
Thanks always for reading, please drop in again tomorrow for more Poems Found by Poet Hound…