HOOT POSTCARD 138, MAY 2023

love as Echo-location in a heart chamber by: Alison Lubar art: Kyle Congdon Alison Lubar is a mixed-race queer femme who teaches high school English by day and yoga by night near/in Philadelphia.  You can find out more at http://www.alisonlubar.com/ or on Twitter @theoriginalison. Kyle Congdon is a visual artist and art therapist residing in Philadelphia, PA. In […]

HOOT POSTCARD 132, NOVEMBER 2022

POEM FOR NEW YORK CITY by Kyle Seamus Brosnihan art by Bernadette Johnson Kyle Seamus Brosnihan is a Filipino-American poet, playwright, and currently an MFA candidate in Poetry at Brooklyn College. He is the Arts Editor for the Brooklyn Review. His poem ‘Martha’ was voted Poem of the Year by the Brooklyn Poets in 2020.

HOOT POSTCARD 121, NOVEMBER 2021

Self-Portrait After I Move To Kentucky by Beth Gilstrap photography by author Beth Gilstrap is the author of Deadheading & Other Stories, winner of the 2019 Red Hen Press Women’s Prose Prize, forthcoming October 5. She currently lives and writes in an old shotgun house in Louisville.

HOOT POSTCARD 91, APRIL 2019

A Love Letter Yet to be Answered by Audra Coleman   Audra Coleman lives in Asheville, North Carolina. Her work has appeared recently or is forthcoming in publications including Five on the Fifth, Into the Void, Star 82 Review, Typehouse Literary Magazine and The Penn Review.

HOOT POSTCARD 74, NOVEMBER 2017

The Matter of Confusion by M.J. Smith M.J. Smith teaches composition, literature, mythology, and assorted arcane disciplines at the City College of San Francisco. He lives windward of Mount Diablo, California and considers this very important.

HOOT POSTCARD 58, JULY 2016

Nations of the Sitones By David Villaverde   David Joez Villaverde has recently been published in After the Pause, Cheap Pop, Restless, and the Great American Wiseass Poetry Anthology among others. He can be found at schadenfreudeanslip.com

HOOT POSTCARD 53, FEBRUARY 2016

Place(less)ness by Laurel Nakanishi   Born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, Laurel Nakanishi is the author of the prize-winning chapbook Manoa|Makai, and the recipient of a Fulbright scholarship to Nicaragua.  She currently lives with her partner in Miami, Florida.