“Haunting” Featured Artist Wilda Morris
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back Chicago poet Wilda Morris, previously featured in our “Space” (as a member of the P2 Collective) and “Family” issues. “Christina” is a contemplation of …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back Chicago poet Wilda Morris, previously featured in our “Space” (as a member of the P2 Collective) and “Family” issues. “Christina” is a contemplation of …
Synkroniciti is overjoyed to welcome Canadian writer and photographer Kerri Merriam, our cover artist for “Haunting.” Trapped, our spine-tingling cover, is shown inside the issue in its entirety, capturing the …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming poet Judy McAmis, currently a resident of Massachusetts. We are excited to publish three spooky poems that traverse the classical sense of “Haunting.” In “The …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome Mexican surrealist painter Mercedes Marin Giménez. Cuervo (Crow), is painted in oil on newsprint and is linked ekphrastically with Brian Duran-Fuentes poem Corvus morbidi, published in …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome Houstonian poet Joseph R. Larsen with two atmospheric poems. “Horseman on a Road” is an elegant, romantic villanelle. This is a famously difficult form with …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome New York City poet Dorothy Johnson-Laird with a heartfelt tribute to a mentor, friend and fellow poet, Cenen Moreno, who passed in 2002. “Move into …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome Houstonian poet and writer Melissa McEver Huckabay with “Sleeping Late, I Heard,” a moving poem of transparent simplicity, belying its depth. In the liminal state …
Synkroniciti is glad to welcome back Californian poet David Holper with two poems contemplating mortality. “Lessons” speaks of the memento mori experiences Holper had as a child on vacations to …
Synkroniciti is glad to welcome back poet and visual artist Diane Funston, a native New Yorker making her home in California, with a poem and a photograph exploring what humans …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome poet Andrea L. Fry from Massachusetts with “Memento Mori,” which won our “Haunting” poetry contest and was then nominated for a Pushcart Prize. The title …
