“Haunting” Featured Artist Daniel Barlekamp
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back poet and writer Daniel Barlekamp, a New Jersey native living in Massachusetts, with “Words Spoken to an Eight-Year-Old in a Funeral Parlor.” Daniel has …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back poet and writer Daniel Barlekamp, a New Jersey native living in Massachusetts, with “Words Spoken to an Eight-Year-Old in a Funeral Parlor.” Daniel has …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back photographer Jason Baldinger of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. A poet himself, Jason’s artwork appears here in ekphrastic collaboration with Kansan poet Robert L. Dean, Jr. Luna …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back the first artist of “Haunting,” poet and writer Leslie Archibald of Houston, Texas. In the spirit of haunting’s larger interpretation as that which disturbs, …
Synkroniciti is proud to nominate six outstanding works for the Pushcart Prize this year: three poems, two short stories and a creative nonfiction essay. If we choose a piece for an …
Synkroniciti is excited to reveal the slate of artists contributing to our “Haunting” issue, debuting December 15th. We had a large number of submissions, particularly in short story and the …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to announce the winner of our “Haunting” short story contest, Kurt Newton’s “In the Shadow of the One Who Loves You.” We had forty short stories for …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back poet, writer and photographer Jonathan Yungkans with “Next to the Penny Left in the Ashtray,” a lyrical essay/extended prose poem that explores how belonging …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back Canadian poet and photographer Katharine Weinmann, who opens the “Belonging” issue with a group of poems and photographs exploring the subjects of self care …
Synkroniciti is honored to welcome poet Jonathan Chibuike Ukah, who resides in the UK, with two powerful poems about war and displacement. “Still, We Dream” describes a war-torn apocalyptic scene …
Synkroniciti is stoked to welcome back Ukrainian photographer and writer Viktoriia Sorochuk with the first of a series of photo essays exploring her displacement from her homeland due to the …
