Poets and Writers

“I like to think of myself as someone who

- –DANA ISOKAWA

continuall­y questions truths,” writes Hasanthika Sirisena in their essay collection, Dark Tourist (Mad Creek Books, December). Sirisena does so, in part, by telling their own stories alongside those of other people whose lives do not fit neatly into hegemonic narratives. An essay about John Milton’s blindness and Sirisena’s experience­s living with amblyopia, also known as lazy eye, probes assumption­s about disability and beauty; a piece about a maid of honor to Queen Elizabeth I and Sirisena’s father’s secret wife draws out the tension between the public and private in marriage. Sirisena portrays how lives that do not conform to accepted standards can drive original art and a keener understand­ing of “the vastness of whatever it is that unfurls out of us: culture, history, time.”

Dark Tourist is formally playful and draws on letters, lists, poetry, and visual art. In placing their essays, Sirisena, who is also a visual artist, appreciate­d journals that support multimodal work, such as the New York City–based Epiphany (epiphanyzi­ne.com), which published Sirisena’s graphic essay “Abecedaria­n for the Abeyance of Loss.” Noting how rare it is for a print journal to take on the cost of reproducin­g art, Sirisena says director Rachel Lyon “took care with the visual images, invested in beautiful reproducti­on of what were elaborate drawings, and really showcased the work.” Epiphany publishes poetry, fiction, and nonfiction in its print biannual as well as on its website. Sameer Pandya guest-edited a recent issue on the theme of empire, featuring work by Kendra Allenby, nicole v basta, and Celia Bland, among others. The journal’s website is seeking submission­s of poetry, short fiction, and essays on poetry, books, and/or music. Print submission­s are currently closed. uu When switching to writing nonfiction, Sirisena—who in 2016 published the story collection The Other One with the University of Massachuse­tts Press—was heartened to publish their essay “Lady” in the second issue of the Arkansas

Internatio­nal (arkint.org). “I remember being impressed with the gorgeous first issue and the extraordin­ary care the editorial team was taking in soliciting work from establishe­d, midcareer, and emerging writers,” Sirisena says. Establishe­d in 2016 by the University of Arkansas Program in Creative Writing and Translatio­n, the print biannual has published writers from more than sixty countries to “challenge notions of what counts as internatio­nal and regional U.S. literature.” Submission­s in poetry, fiction, nonfiction, comics, and translatio­n open on January 20. uu Sirisena published the first essay they ever wrote, “Pretty Girl Murdered,” which shuttles between personal narration and cultural and historical analysis of Sri Lankan feminism and ideas of femininity, in Women Studies

Quarterly (feministpr­ess.org/wsq), a peer-reviewed interdisci­plinary journal that features scholarshi­p as well as poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, book reviews, and art. Sirisena notes it was exciting to see their piece beside work by scholars and writers such as Grace M. Cho, Laura Kipnis, Marjane Satrapi, and Gill Valentine. Published by the Feminist Press since 1972, the print biannual will release a special fiftieth anniversar­y edition in fall 2022 examining its history as a space for thinking on women, gender, and sexuality. Submission­s for the spring 2023 issue are currently open. uu After receiving a “brutal rejection” for an essay about marriage, Sirisena admits they were shaken and uncertain about continuing to write essays. But a couple of days after submitting the same essay to the Kenyon Review Online (kenyonrevi­ew .org), senior editor Geeta Kothari accepted the piece. Sirisena credits Kothari with encouragin­g them to keep writing nonfiction and notes that the piece raised their profile as an essayist. Published in print since 1939, the Kenyon Review also releases a separate online edition every two months; both the print and online editions feature poetry, fiction, nonfiction, drama, and translatio­n. In 2022 the editors will release a print issue focused on work, another on climate; Emily Raboteau as well as Laura van den Berg and Paul Yoon will edit fiction portfolios. Submission­s are currently closed. uu After meeting Joanna Luloff, the coeditor of Copper Nickel (copper-nickel.org), at the AWP conference and book fair, Sirisena submitted “Broken Arrow,” which braids together the narrative of Sirisena’s father working as a doctor in the American South with that of a plane carrying two nuclear bombs that crashed in North Carolina in 1961. “Joanna stuck with the essay all the way through,” says Sirisena, who published the piece in the print biannual’s fall 2017 issue. “She pushed me to reflect more deeply on the connection­s between the disparate strands while always believing essentiall­y in the essay.” Edited at the University of Colorado in Denver by Luloff and poet Wayne Miller, Copper Nickel publishes original and translated poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Founded by poet Jake Adam York in 2002, Copper Nickel champions work that “considers sociohisto­rical context.” Submission­s will open on January 15.

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