Elsie 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 MoreThe written word has the power to connect, through empathy, emotion, and experience. When things go well, the writer forges a bond between themselves and the reader, through their expression of passion upon the page. However, where and how does the magic begin? What forces summon a poetic expression in a unique and engaging way? How does one connect with their audience and grow as a successful writer?
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.
Read MoreEmmanuella Hristova was born in Oakland, California and grew up in the Bay Area. She is the third daughter to Bulgarian parents who immigrated to California shortly before she was born. She began drawing at the ripe age of four, and studied the fine arts for five years in high school. There, she received many art accolades including a Congressional award for her piece Boy in Red in 2009. In 2015, she received her Bachelor of Arts in Linguistics from the University of California, Berkeley. She began writing poetry at age twenty-four when she was in graduate school.
Read MoreShaylee is pursuing a PhD in Biochemistry in Galway, Ireland. Poetry keeps her sane. She uses it throughout her day in the lab, reading and writing during incubation times. Science poetry makes up a large part of her personal writing and has also spurred an involvement in the online poetry journal Consilience, which publishes peer-reviewed science poetry.
Read MoreRachel Jeffcoat is a poet, writer and editor. She has had work published in Dear Damsels, Fourth Trimester Magazine and Huff Post. She lives in an old house in the South-East of England, with her family and approximately ten thousand books.
Read MoreKaci Skiles Laws is a closet cat-lady and creative writer who reads and writes voraciously in the quiet moments between motherhood and managing Crohn's Disease. She grew up on a small farm in a Texas town alongside many furry friends, two sisters, and a brother. She has known tragic loss too well, and her writing is a reflection of the shadows lurking in her psyche.
Read MoreDevon Bohm received her BA from Smith College and earned her MFA with a dual concentration in Poetry and Fiction from Fairfield University. After serving as Mason Road’s Editor-in-Chief, she worked as an adjunct professor of English. She was awarded the 2011 Hatfield Prize for Best Short Story, received an honorable mention in the 2020 L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future Contest, and was long-listed for Wigleaf’s Top Very Short Fictions 2021.
Read MoreAmanda Roth (she/her) is poet, photographer, and former clinical social worker. She is the author of the full-length poetry collection, A Mother's Hunger (2021), and has been published in Rag Mag Revival. After nearly two decades in the Pacific Northwest, she now lives in Central Texas with her husband and two sons. Find her on Instagram @amandarothpoetry
Read MoreMaggie Doyle is a poet and digital content designer working in various story contexts including written word, film, web, theatre, and transmedia storytelling. Maggie has a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of British Columbia and works as a story consultant through her business, What Is Your Story. Maggie is currently working on a collection of poems about her walks by a river during the pandemic which chart the emotional tributaries of life in lockdown.
Read MorePoetry is a very personal thing. It feels like belonging, a favourite jumper we go back to every fall, no matter the number of holes that are in it. It is a sink or a toilet bowl we empty our worst selves into. While reading Sammi Yamashiro’s book “The Peach Pit Mask”, I felt a bit like an intruder, for stumbling upon some of the rawest and most honest poetry I have ever read. I felt like I needed to stop turning the pages, but I couldn’t.
Read Moreadam Shove is an Estonian English poet, who writes poems laden with cryptic metaphors and pop culture references; doused in vodka and thrift shop ideas. Inspired by RZA, Frank Ocean, secondhand clothes, models, tattoos and expensive cars.
Read MoreCaitlin Upshall is a British-American author from Washington State. Her work has been published by the tiny journal, OyeDrum, The Sweet Tree Review, Entropy Magazine, and others. In her spare time, she enjoys most things dinosaur-related, trivia nights, and reading scholarly articles on the Great Emu War.
Read MoreBefore you can publish any book, you must make sure the text in that book is presented in a professional and eloquent way. No one bakes their favourite meal in a messy kitchen (unless that’s your thing). We want your manuscript to come out so polished, you could it from its floor. Or so to speak. If your kitchen is a mess, it doesn’t matter that the most delicious food is piled up in the cupboards, health and safety wouldn’t let you anywhere near it.
Read MoreIt’s the season to spend money lalalalalala. So you gave the poet you love a thousand and one notebooks for their birthday already. Christmas is coming up, you start to sweat. Your loved one is still filling out the notebooks you gave them the previous year. They have the most beautiful pens to do that with. And yes, the holidays are all about love and spending time together, but we are here to save your arse all the same with some material goodies for your loved one. Here’s our list for Santa this year.
Read MoreIt is both true and heart-breaking to admit that we are not doing enough for women. I am not doing enough for women. Because I’m busy, because I’m tired, because I don’t have enough time, because actually our current society isn’t set up to accommodate the collective awakening needed to do enough for women.
Read MoreNelly Bryce is a writer, a poet, a mother of four living in Manchester, UK. In 2016, after spending most of her career working in HR (learning and development), she left her corporate job to launch Guilty Mothers Club, a community for modern feminist mothers. Nelly is a journaling addict, who is never far from a notebook and pen. She is also an optimist and encourager, so if you need a dose of either of those two, you found a home with Nelly.
Read MoreSean Felix writes with the fervour of every poet who has ever fallen in love with the seductive muse of Paris. His work is fuelled by a gritty determination to keep crawling forward – through insomniac nights and midnight possessions. “From the echoing drums on cold stone / a necromancer in the shape of a black man / too ugly to share my face so I draw on it.” He possesses an ability to set a vivid scene and tell a story so dramatic, you’ll awake as if from a lucid dream.
Read More