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Tag Archives: small press poetry

Men& Beasts has arrived!!!

15 Saturday Apr 2017

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in National Poetry Month '17, Thoughts on Poetry

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#NationalPoetryMonth, #NDN, #readwomen, chapbook, Dancing Girl Press, Men&Beasts, mixtape bundle, Poetry chapbook, small press poetry, women poets

Smack-dab in the middle of National Poetry Month and I haven’t posted a thing. Can you believe it? Ah, life. Well, poetry peeps, the good news is that my chapbook Men& Beasts is now ready for your hot little hands. Just click the title for the purchasing link, and pick up some of the other awesome wopo (women’s poetry) offerings at Dancing Girl Press while you’re at it.

The dpg mixtape bundle (5 for $25) is an awesome deal and perfect for rounding out your #nationalpoetrymonth TBR pile, or getting in a few more #readwomen, and in my case, #NDN titles.

Big thanks to the fantabulous Kristy Bowen for all that she does to bring good poetry into the world. Don’t you all just love the cover?  I do.

Anyone interested in doing a review, shoot an email to bonesparkblog@yahoo.com

 

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Favorite Poetry Covers of 2016

05 Monday Dec 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

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Aja Couchois Duncan, Allan Peterson, Ashland Poetry Press, Bear Star Press, Burt Kimmelman, CavanKerry Press, Dana Green, Dancing Girl Press, Daneen Wardrop, David Rivard, David Weville, Donika Kelly, Dos Madres Press, Ehtlel Rackin, Eileen Tabios, Floating Bridge Press, Glenis Redmond, Graywolf Press, Greg Alan Brownderville, Kevin Carey, Knives Forks Spoons Press, Lee Sharkey, Litmus Press, LSU Press, Lydia Popovich, Lydia Swartz, Lyn Hejinian, Marsh Hawk Press, Max Ritvo, Megan Snyder-Camp, Michael Rothenberg, Milkweed Editions, Mouthfeel Press, Natalie Safir, Noah Warren, Omnidawn Press, Paper Swans Press, Parlor Press, poetry covers, Press53, Shinjini Bhattacharjee, small press poetry, Tarpaulin Sky, Tavern Books, Tupelo Press, Yale Press

Dos Madres Press
Dos Madres Press
Dos Madres Press
Dos Madres Press
Litmus Press
Litmus Press
Floating Bridge Press
Floating Bridge Press
Graywolf Press
Graywolf Press
Graywolf Press
Graywolf Press
Tarpaulin Sky
Tarpaulin Sky
Paper Swans Press
Paper Swans Press
Ashland Poetry Press
Ashland Poetry Press
Milkweed Editions
Milkweed Editions
Parlor Press
Parlor Press
LSU Press
LSU Press
Press 53
Press 53
Yale Press
Yale Press
Tavern Books
Tavern Books
Dancing Girl Press
Dancing Girl Press
Knives Forks Spoons Press
Knives Forks Spoons Press
CavanKerry Press
CavanKerry Press
Omnidawn
Omnidawn
Tupelo Press
Tupelo Press
Tupelo Press
Tupelo Press
Mouthfeel Press
Mouthfeel Press
Bear Star Press
Bear Star Press
Marsh Hawk Press
Marsh Hawk Press

Buying Links:

Dos Madres Press
Litmus Press
Floating Bridge Press
Graywolf Press
Tarpaulin Sky
Paper Swans
Ashland Poetry Press
Milkweed Editions
Parlor Press
LSU Press
Press53
Yale Press
Tavern Books
Dancing Girl Press
Knives Forks Spoons Press
CavanKerry Press
Omnidawn Press
Tupelo Press
Mouthfeel Press
Bear Star Press
Marsh Hawk Press

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Baby Writes Poems: “Chick-links” #4

17 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

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Because, chicklinks, Colors of the River, Dinner with Emerson, Jo McDougall, new poetry, Nightboat, Nina Lindsay, Sixteen Rivers Press, small press poetry, Stella Ann Nesanovich, Tavern Books, The Old Philosopher, The Undiscovered Room, Tiger Bark Press, Vi Khi Nao, Wendy Mnookin, women poets, Yellow Flag Press

Thank goodness it’s Thursday so you can get another poetry fix. Here’s five more pen-wielding women with new collections to drool over:

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COLORS OF THE RIVER by Stella Ann Nesanovich (Yellow Flag, Nov 2015 )

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DINNER WITH EMERSON by Wendy Mnookin (Tiger Bark Press, Mar 2016)

BecauseFrontCover

BECAUSE by Nina Lindsay (Sixteen Rivers, Apr 2016)

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THE UNDISCOVERED ROOM by Jo McDougall (Tavern Books, Feb 2016 )

Vi Khi Nao_cover

THE OLD PHILOSOPHER by Vi Khi Nao (Nightboat, Apr 2016)

 

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Baby Writes Poems: “Chick-links” #2

15 Tuesday Mar 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

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421 Atlanta, Bloodaxe Books, Carol Dorf, chicklinks, Earth Science, Emma Bolden, Finishing Line Press, Jessy Randall, Maura Dooley, medi(t)ations, Noctuary Press, poetry picks, Sarah Green, small press poetry, The Silvering, Theory Headed Dragon, There Was An Old Woman, Unicorn Press, women poets

All you poetry-loving ladies, here are today’s recommended collections from your sister writers.  Enjoy!

Green_Science_Cover-768x1024

EARTH SCIENCE by Sarah Green (421 Atlanta, Mar 2016)

[Click titles for purchase links, author names for bios.]

THERE WAS AN OLD WOMAN by Jessy Randall (Unicorn Press, Dec 2015)

THEORY HEADED DRAGON by Carol Dorf (Finishing Line, Jan 2016)

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THE SILVERING by Maura Dooley (Bloodaxe, Mar 2016)

 

meditations

medi(t)ations by Emma Bolden (Noctuary Press, Mar 2016)

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Baby Writes Poems: “Chick-links” #1

14 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Thoughts on Poetry

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Black Lawrence Press, Bright Stranger, chicklinks, Dos Madres Press, Graywolf Press, Jennifer Grotz, Katherine Soniat, Kristy Bowen, Latest Volcano, LSU Press, Marsh Hawk Press, new poetry, Old Ballerina Club, poetry picks, Salvage, Sharon Olinka, small press poetry, Tana Jean Welch, Window Left Open, women poets

Monday through Friday, this week only, BoneSpark is bringing you a special “chick-links” collection of contemporary women poets with new or newish releases from small or university presses. 5 chicas X 5 days! Why that’s 25 books worthy of sacrificing your lunch money to hold.

And without further ado, today’s five picks are:

9781625579478-150x232

SALVAGE by Kristy Bowen (Black Lawrence Press, May 2016)

old-ballerina-club-cover-500x750

OLD BALLERINA CLUB by Sharon Olinka (Dos Madres Press, Jan 2016)

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LATEST VOLCANO by Tana Jean Welch (Marsh Hawk Press, Feb 2016)

Bright Stranger

BRIGHT STRANGER by Katherine Soniat (LSU Press, March 2016)

WINDOW LEFT OPEN by

WINDOW LEFT OPEN
by Jennifer Grotz (Graywolf Press, Feb 2016)

[Click titles for (direct) purchase links and author names for bios.]

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Small Press Q&A with Lavender Ink/Diálogos

14 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Small Press Interviews, Thoughts on Poetry

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A Sweeter Water, All Night It is Morning, Andy Young, Bill Lavender, Chris Sullivan, Ever, Laura Madeline Wiseman, Lavender Ink/Dialogos, Levertov, Louisiana literary magazines, Mardi Gras, Marthe Reed, megan burns, N.O. Lit 200 Years, Nancy Dixon, New Orleans Literature, New Orleans small press, Peter Thompson, poetry trends, post-Katrina, Ralph Adamo, Sabotage Reviews, Sara Henning, small press poetry, small press Q&A, Some Fatal Effects, Sound and Basin

cityscape-still-text

In true New Orleans style, whenever I ask the good folks at Lavender Ink/Diálogos for review copies of new titles, I always get a little lagniappe thrown into the box. And somehow I always love everything that they send me.  It’s as if they have some sort of mind reading powers. Or maybe it’s just the common roots.

Either way, you’ll find me gushing about their titles: here or in the upcoming roundup for Sabotage Reviews. But before we get into all the goodness that exudes from the press, let’s get to know some of the faces behind it.

This week I spoke with Founding Editor Bill Lavender (pictured here with his Mardi Gras face) about choosing manuscripts, his vision for the press and of course current trends in poetry.  Hope you enjoy!

Bill Lavender

Bill Lavender

Q& A

What mishmash of fictional, historical or pop culture characters best describes the press?

Imagine that Emily Dickinson (looking cynical and uncomfortable), Ted Berrigan, Nikki Minaj, Samuel Beckett, Bertolt Brecht and Jacques Lacan were sitting at a table reading manuscripts and drinking. At a certain point they all pass out. Then I come in and clean up, forging their signatures to the stuff I like.

 

Who are your literary superstars, mentors and heroes?

They are both too numerous and too few to mention. When I was younger I went through brief periods of romantic attachment to the Romantics (mainly Coleridge), feelings of Marxist historical burgeoning for the German Expressionists (like Brecht), drug-crazed word burnout on Rimbaud, prosey oceans of Joyce, meta-enchantment with John Barthes and Paul Auster, swung both ways on the Derrida/Lacan argument, heard the dumb thrumming of language in Zukofsky and its watery mirror in Lorrine Niedecker, feel into Jack Spicer’s trance, drummed with the Beats, and rejected it all as being too precious. One thing I have always hated: the contemporary United States poetic establishment: the “big names” in po-biz, AWP, MFA programs (even though I taught in one, for a time), “Best American Poetry 20xx” (an embarrassment, if it were true), I could name names but I’m too discreet—and I mean I ALWAYS hated this crap. I didn’t come to hate it after loving it for a minute in misspent youth. I came into poetry because it offered an ESCAPE from John Ciardi (just to name one who was famous when I was cutting my teeth—actually I don’t remember them; I paid no attention.) I did have the great privilege of growing up poetically in the same environs as Frank Stanford and C.D. Wright—I remember C.D. turning me on to some French poets I didn’t know, this was back in about 1973 or 4. Frank didn’t like my work (it didn’t deserve to be liked), but I learned tons from the Battlefied…. It was like finding a French surrealist in my hometown.

 

How was the idea for the press born in you, and what is your vision for its future? Proud milestones? Recent successes?

Now that I have basically retired—perhaps not from money-grubbing but at least from doing it in soul-killing bureaucracies like universities— I’m putting a lot of time, energy, and money into the press, even to the detriment of my own writing, so I seem to be determined to accomplish something. In some ways my press adventures are all experiments: I want to see what happens if I disseminate a certain work in a certain way. I’m intrigued by the notion of financial success, but so far that is entirely theoretical.

 

Tell me about the process of choosing manuscripts. Who do you most want to see published? Any collections you wish had come out of your press?

I have several people, sort of an informal board, most of them authors published by us, that I regularly ask for advice. Peter Thompson, at Roger Williams University, has been my partner in Diálogos from the beginning, and I always confer with him on matters of translation. In the end, though, all the decisions come back to me.

Peter Thompson

Peter Thompson

And lately, I should add, my publication decisions have come to depend more and more on concrete matters at hand… that is, isn’t ONLY that I feel the work SHOULD be published (for in truth, anyone can publish anything now; that old sacred goal of PUBLISHING really doesn’t exist any more) but HOW it should be published, where it should be pushed, encouraged, what sorts of conversations and interactions it might produce. For a long time I eschewed the humble form of the pre-pub blurb, but lately I’ve come to see that the pre-publication discourse, of which the blurbs can be the locus, can be as important as any other segment of the book’s arc.

 

What brought about the 2012 expansion from exclusively poetry into fiction and other genres?

This question is more troubling and troubled than its brevity would portend. It actually has many answers, one being that I have begun writing fiction (novel) myself (get the ebook), but that practice, too rises out of a growing… disillusion is the wrong word; there is still a lot of poetry that interests and satisfies me… let’s say a growing sense that poetry is no longer expanding, that it is no longer implanting itself at the true center of the culture and fomenting rebellion there. That it is, in short, fizzling. I know a lot of people will protest this vociferously, and it may actually be that part of the problem is their sheer number. It may be the fact that we have now sanctioned “National Poetry Month”…. Such efforts culminate in a Disneyworld of poetry; wax (well, PVC) effigies of social responsibility. Where prose right now, with its complete and entirely unnostalgic commodification, actually presents an opportunity for subversion; cracks in the editorial edifice open up because the editors ARE accountants and have no idea what they’re reading.

 

In the aftermath of Katrina, much of coastal Louisiana has eroded. Do you feel that same sort of erosion is true for its culture? Was the publication of the 200 yrs of N.O. Lit title important to its preservation? And is the current literary scene still thriving or on its deathbed?

Well, I certainly don’t think it’s on its deathbed. There is so much happening in cover250New Orleans right now it’s hard to keep track of. One of the reasons we cut off N.O. Lit pre-Katrina was that there is so much contemporary material that the book would have doubled its already substantial size. The real impetus for Dr. Nancy Dixon’s N.O. Lit: 200 Years of New Orleans Literature was a teacher’s desire to see a sampling of the very rich, disparate, multi-lingual field of the city’s literature collected into a single volume to use as a teaching tool. It’s astonishing, really, that no one ever attempted such a collection before.

 

Talk to me about your relationship with the city of New Orleans and the Louisiana connections of (most of) your authors.

I’m not an unreserved fan of New Orleans and its cultural output (I thought Treme, for example, was awful—an embarrassment.) And lately in the poetry community there has been some talk about our unsung past, about how the Beat movement had more roots here than we are given credit for, etc. Such chest beating bores me. What doesn’t bore me are the actual poets and writers at work here with little or no recognition. I could name names: Joel Dailey, Megan Burns, Chris Sullivan… but this list is simply the Lavender Ink catalog.

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Who are some of the other faces behind the press?

Well, my wife and constant inspiration, Nancy Dixon, is second in command. She reads in her field and I never design a cover without consulting her. Peter Thompson at Roger Williams U. is a great friend and consultant on matters of translation and on Diálogos titles in general. I have called on almost every author in my list, at one time or another, to help out with editorial duties, from manuscript recommendations to copy editing to fact checking, etc. And they are all great and generous partners in the endeavor. In the end, though, I’m too cantankerous and autocratic for most people to work with, so it pretty much ends up being my baby.

Nancy_Dixon_0

Dr. Nancy Dixon

 

How does Dialogos (an imprint) fit into the larger press? Is the cross-cultural focus an outgrowth of New Orleans’ history as a port city?

No. It comes from my earliest experiences with poetry that excited and moved me, which was always poetry in translation. There was a real flowering of translation as its own art form when I was cutting my teeth in the 60s, and I was disappointed to see a waning of interest in literature in translation in later decades. I think there was brief flowering of internationalism back then that coincided with the country’s general swing to the left. That, of course, is gone now and we have sunk back into (the normal human condition of) paranoid xenophobia. Now I enjoy being an irritant, at least as much as I am able…

 

Current trends (in poetry or fiction) that frighten you? Those that excite you?

Certain things do frighten me, but they aren’t the things you’d think. It doesn’t worry me that “no one reads poetry any more.” No one ever read poetry. Nor does it bother me that fiction lives at the whim of capitalism. The novel was born in Grub Street and was never meant to be anything but a means for hustlers like Defoe to add a few pounds to their income. What worries me is precisely the opposite of these… Maybe too many people read poetry now; maybe we are actually developing an inflated idea of poetry’s potential and importance. Poetry doesn’t make revolutions. Poetry—fine poetry that describes in great detail our innermost feelings and defines in certain terms the parameters of our identity—can exist in the most egregious police state and be written by the most ruthless bureaucrats. Didn’t Mussolini write haikus? There might be such a thing as poetry that can change the world, inspire rebellion, bring out the knowledge we didn’t know we had—but most of us just want to run when we encounter it.

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Down the Bayou: Talking Poetry with J. Bruce Fuller, Editor of YELLOW FLAG PRESS

08 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in Small Press Interviews, Thoughts on Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

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Amy Watkins, Bar Coasters, broadsides, Cajun Country, chapbooks, Chorus Frog, Copper Canyon, creole poets, Darrel Bourque, Down the Bayou, Erica McCreedy, Generalizations about Spines, Gravity, halloween, if you abandon me, J. Bruce Fuller, Katy E. Ellis, Lafayette, Lauren Gordon, limited box set, Lisa M. Cole, Louisiana culture, Louisiana Purchase, Louisiana Series of Cajun and Creole Poetry, Louisiana small press, McNeese, Milk & Water, post-Katrina, Red Winters, Sabotage Reviews, small press poetry, submissions, The Love Machine, women poets

Lion 7 copy Undoubtedly one of the best kept secrets in Cajun Country, Yellow Flag Press is the poetry world’s little engine that could. Steadily climbing the literary heights with such ringers as Darrel Bourque, the new (appointed by me) Emperor of Creole-dom and former Louisiana Poet Laureate and the very highly praised Amy Watkins, YFP is quickly becoming one the small press darlings to know.

I was lucky enough to obtain two of their titles recently (including the latest from Bourque) for a second Louisiana poetry roundup that will run later this month at Sabotage Reviews (UK).

Besides graciously providing these gorgeous, handmade gems, Editor J. Bruce Fuller also shared his thoughts on everything from current poetry trends to his literary heroes.

And in the the spirit of Halloween, I may J. Bruce Fullerhave asked,  “What Frankenstein-y mishmash of fictional, historical or pop culture characters best represents Yellow Flag?”   

And he may have said something about drag. But I’ll let you dig into that for yourself.

 

Ok, people, settle your crawdads; here’s what you want……

 

Q&A with J. Bruce Fuller of Yellow Flag Press

How was Yellow Flag born and why is the limited-run chapbook/broadside so necessary?

Yellow Flag Press was founded in 2008 while I was working on my MFA at McNeese. I had been making chapbooks and broadsides for a few years prior just as a hobby, but had not really been active for a while. Some of my fellow grad students suggested that we start a press and since I had some experience I was recruited. The press has grown and thrived over the years, but we started small and took it slow.

We make limited run chaps and broadsides for a couple of reasons. First, it is the format I am most interested in, I think because they are artistic and collectable. All of our releases (except for one anthology) are hand-made. We touch every part of the books. That adds an element of care. The second reason is historical. Chapbooks go back hundreds of years, and are an economical way of disseminating art or information. These types of releases are necessary because poetry has such a small foothold in the publishing industry that we must find ways to be seen and heard.

42571-9bb44a82784a44db98718dc31820df2e
2013-01-29 12.41.06
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MilkWater cover
2014-08-15 11.16.51
Louisiana Purchase
Louisiana Purchase

 

Thinking about your poets, give us a word collage of the demographic highlights, backgrounds and styles.

While we have a good mix of poets, we value prosody, image, metaphorical language, down-home speech, rural over urban, heartfelt over sentimental, themed collections. We value risk but not experimentation for the sake of it. We publish out of the box collections that may not fit in other markets, as well as collections that could fit anywhere.

What is the literary scene like in Lafayette? Does it feel isolated or connected to that of New Orleans? Is it a hub for the Cajun culture or otherwise?cajun-country-map-300x248

Lafayette is a close-knit community of poets and writers. I have felt welcomed and supported since I came here almost four years ago. I lived in New Orleans before I made poetry my career choice, so I don’t have much experience to compare the two. Lafayette is definitely the hub of all Cajun culture; that is an added bonus to the poetry scene.

And speaking of Cajun country, is living there what inspired the press’ Louisiana Series of Cajun and Creole Poetry (La Série de Louisiane de Poésie des Acadiens et Créoles) or was it the magnetic personality of Darrell Bourque? [Man! Darrell Bourque. I am totally in love with his chap if you abandon me, comment je vas faire: An Amédé Ardoin Songbook. How’d you hook up with him?]

YFP-122 coverDarrell is one of the most accomplished Cajun writers, and to me, probably the most important Cajun poet. Darrell and I met when he did a reading at McNeese my second year, and he has been a mentor to me ever since.

I had been thinking for a while of doing a series highlighting Cajun and Creole poets. As a Creole poet myself I knew I could help bring some attention to the many great Franco-American poets out there. I mentioned the idea to Darrell and he agreed. I knew I wanted him to be the first book in the series. What he delivered (if you abandon me, comment je vas faire: An Amédé Ardoin Songbook) blew us away, and ended up being more successful than we could have hoped.

The scientists among us are saying that post-Katrina, the Louisiana landmass has been greatly eroded. Do you feel that it’s the same for the culture? Are we still going strong or faltering?

I think the culture has risen to the challenge of Katrina and Rita, as well as the BP oil spill. I think we entrenched and became more proud of who we are. We face a great challenge because when the sea levels rise we will be the first to lose our homeland. We may become the first great displaced culture in America due to climate change. For Louisianans, it is already on our doorstep.

What has been your greatest surprise about publishing (from both sides of the desk)? And who are your literary superstars, mentors and heroes?

The biggest surprise is how many great books I have to reject because we can’t publish them all. I have to follow my gut, and my aesthetic, and make the best choices I can under the circumstances. It has given me a greater respect for the editors who have rejected me. Rejection is not always and indictment on your writing. Publishing really is a crapshoot.
As far as heroes, there are too many to list. If I could pick a press I’d most like Yellow Flag to emulate, it would have to be Copper Canyon. That’s our role model press in a lot of ways.

What do you wish more people knew about Yellow Flag?

That we are a two person operation. That we work out of one room. That we publish poetry only, and always will.

Current poetry trends (local or nationally) that frighten you? Those that excite you?

We see a lot of poems that are lacking in prosody. Poetry is an art form; what it says is important, but saying something important is only half the work of a poem.
It is exciting to see so many poems from previously unheard segments of the population. Variety is important, and America has enough of it to remain important for centuries to come.

What can we expect from the press in the coming year and what from you personally? I know a Ph.D is on the horizon. What next?

I will finish my PhD this year, and then it is on to the next place, wherever that may be. The press will continue no matter where I go, and I am sure we will find a way to keep our Louisiana roots.

We have three new books that will be out early next year: Lauren Gordon’s indexGeneralizations about Spines, Lisa M. Cole’s The Love Machine, and Katy E. Ellis’ Gravity. We will be reprinting a few titles that are out of print, including Erica McCreedy’s Red Winters. There will also be a new book out next year in The Louisiana Series. Always busy.

And in the spirit of Halloween, what Frankenstein-y mishmash of fictional, historical or pop culture characters best represents Yellow Flag?

Walt Whitman dressed in drag, two-steppin’ at a fais-do-do. That’s what’s up.

[Somebody make me GIF already!]

 

*If you want more of Yellow Flag, they are offering a limited-time boxed set that includes: 11 chaps, the Vision/Verse Anthology and a signed broadside by Amy Fleury. Just in time for Christmas, yippie. Get yours!

42571-7ef39a4c60384f3598b8f386e205441c

 

**And for those interested in submitting a manuscript, go here for regular submissions and here for The Louisiana Series of Cajun and Creole Poetry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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