“Broken” Featured Artist Joan Leotta
Synkroniciti is happy to welcome back poet Joan Leotta from North Carolina with “I Bet Some Thought It Was Broken,” a poem about friendship, time, and communication. So much in …
Synkroniciti is happy to welcome back poet Joan Leotta from North Carolina with “I Bet Some Thought It Was Broken,” a poem about friendship, time, and communication. So much in …
Synkroniciti is honored to welcome poet Sharon Kennedy-Nolle from New York with a deeply vulnerable cycle of five poems about her son’s death. “Parenting Patrick” delves into a mother’s excruciating …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back poet D.R. James from Michigan with two poems. “Early Morning Love Song” recalls the possibility and expectation of a new morning, as “my old …
Synkroniciti is happy to welcome back poet, writer and artist Rachael Ikins from the Finger Lakes region of New York. Her poem, “Transformation,” expresses the heartache of caring for an …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back Slovak visual artist Radoslava Hrabovská. This time she presents two sets of works, which we accompany with an article entitled “Of Women and Children: …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back California poet David Holper with “The Earthquake,” which won our poetry contest on the “Broken” theme. Reaching from personal tragedy, an earthquake at Christmas …
Synkroniciti is glad to welcome back Australian poet Miles Hitchcock with two poems about lines that shape human experience. “Borders” is about the imaginary lines we draw to classify and …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome Philadelphia poet Alison Hicks with “Copper Beech,” a poem in two parts that explores how a Copper beech tree experiences thirst and scarring, damaging conditions …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to introduce writer Daryl Hendrickson, based in Iowa, in his literary debut. “The Cell” is an atmospheric flash fiction piece about a convict returning to “normal” life …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back poet Benjamin Harnett of New York with “Dwarf Fortress Bugs,” a whimsical observation of glitches in the classic indie video game Dwarf Fortress. He …