“Haunting” Featured Artist Michele Noble
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome back poet and visual artist Michele Noble from the UK with two thoughtful, haunting poems. “Attics, Burton Constable” is an eerie exploration of a stately …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome back poet and visual artist Michele Noble from the UK with two thoughtful, haunting poems. “Attics, Burton Constable” is an eerie exploration of a stately …
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 …
