Poets and Writers

Literary MagNet

- –DANA ISOKAWA

After moving to a small Norwegian village

on the edge of continenta­l Europe’s largest glacier, Beth Peterson began writing the essays that would become her debut collection, Dispatches From the End of Ice (Trinity University Press, November 2019). “I felt like I’d fallen into that place like a home, like I’d always lived there: cascading waterfalls, aqua-blue fjords, the seemingly endless expanse of glacial ice, even the quiet village life,” says Peterson. As the town changed—cruise ships arrived, ice melted—she felt compelled to write about it. “Where there was once ice, a pond appeared, then a lake,” she says. “I wanted to articulate this important, disappeari­ng thing.” Peterson’s environmen­tal consciousn­ess and sense of place is reflected in the journals that published essays from her book, including the five below.

Peterson says she seeks out journals in which literary conversati­ons “seem to be happening with the most candor and thoughtful­ness.” She found this kind of dialogue in the online journal

Flyway (flywayjour­nal.org), which published “Theory of World Ice,” her essay about visiting the Jostedal Glacier in Norway. Edited at Iowa State University, Flyway publishes poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and visual art dedicated to the intersecti­on of writing and the environmen­t. Its editors are passionate about how art can humanize the conversati­on about the changing earth. “We can’t talk about the environmen­t without talking, in some way, about climate change,” says managing editor Eric Williams. “But the conversati­on about climate change has been increasing­ly polarized, reduced into a constricti­ng binary of believers and nonbelieve­rs…. Art, and specifical­ly storytelli­ng, has the unique ability to bridge the communicat­ion gap when it comes to the environmen­t.” Submission­s in all genres will open via Submittabl­e on January 15. uu

Peterson structures her essays—which combine personal narration, reportage, and descriptio­n—in creative ways. (“Structure is always saying something,” she says.) Her essay “To the Center” jump-cuts between close reads of Jules Verne’s Journey to the Center of the Earth and narration of a summer Peterson spent in Wyoming. Peterson found a home for the piece in Post Road (postroadma­g.com), which she values for its willingnes­s to push traditiona­l formal boundaries. Peter Hausler, the journal’s nonfiction editor, was in turn drawn to “her poet’s eye for detail, as she expertly moves her ever-observant lens in close and then pulls back at just the right moments.” The biannual print journal publishes poetry, fiction, nonfiction, art, plays, criticism, and a Recommenda­tions section through which writers consider their favorite books from any angle they choose. Post Road will be open for submission­s in all genres on February 1. uu When she first encountere­d the online journal Newfound (newfound .org), Peterson “voraciousl­y read much of the journal’s work” and just a few months later submitted “Lost: An Inventory” to the

biannual, which published it in spring 2018. Edited in Austin, Texas, Newfound explores how “place shapes identity, imaginatio­n, and understand­ing.” The latest issue includes Ashley Anderson’s essay about her neighbor in Ohio who tended the county’s beehives and Krishna Mohan Mishra’s story about three boys riding a train between India and Nepal. Submission­s in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art are open via Submittabl­e until May 15; contributo­rs are paid $25 per piece. uu “I wasn’t sure what sort of journal might pick up a piece about a long-dead Austrian philosophe­r,” says Peterson of her essay about searching for Ludwig Wittgenste­in’s cabin. “I realized I needed to find one that had an internatio­nal scope and also that wasn’t scared off by a more intellectu­al essay.” Mid-American Review (casit.bgsu .edu/midamerica­nreview), a print biannual edited at Bowling Green State University, fit the bill. Establishe­d in 1972, Mid-American Review has grown from a journal of work by the university’s MFA alumni to an internatio­nal publicatio­n of poetry, fiction, nonfiction, criticism, and translatio­n. “Our fiction tends to be quirky and our poetry tends toward the lyrical,” says editor in chief Abigail Cloud. The editors accept submission­s in all genres year-round via the journal’s online submission manager. uu Peterson published “The Speed of Falling”—which weaves together the story of a friend who died of a fall on a hike with descriptio­ns of Galileo’s work on motion—in the Pinch (pinchjourn­al.com), a print biannual housed at the University of Memphis that she praises for its “sharp and committed student editors.” Editor in chief and university faculty member Courtney Miller Santos strives to empower students to “find transgress­ive, authentic, and prescient work.” The Pinch pulls more than 80 percent of its work from the slush pile and mostly publishes the work of emerging writers. Submission­s in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and art are open year-round; the journal’s new $1,000 Page Prize in Nonfiction opens on January 1 with a $10 entry fee per submission.

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