Audacity Featured Artist Martha Ellen Johnson
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome writer Martha Ellen Johnson with “Getting Rid of the Books of a Dead Poseur II,” which won our Audacity essay/ creative non-fiction contest. This story …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome writer Martha Ellen Johnson with “Getting Rid of the Books of a Dead Poseur II,” which won our Audacity essay/ creative non-fiction contest. This story …
Synkroniciti had a number of wonderful essays submitted for the theme of “Audacity,” several of which will be featured in the issue. The finalists for the contest were two beautifully …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back poet Mykki Rios of Chicago with “MANIC-DEPRESSIVE,” a poem illustrating bipolar disorder. Mykki makes this immediately apparent by casting the poem in two parts …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome Houston-based visual artist Marie Casamayor-Harvey with two striking paper collage works. Industrial Pulse “channels the rhythmic intensity and raw energy of industrial landscapes. Rendered in …
Synkroniciti is honored to welcome poet and writer John Brantingham of New York with Eroica Zuihitsu, one of our poetry contest finalists. If you aren’t familiar with the Zuihitsu, it’s …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming writer and poet Hilary Plattner of New York. We are excited to feature two poems, “Prose Poem: The Box” and “Woman at the Fish Stall.” …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back Californian poet Naomi Ruth Lowinsky, who won our “Space” poetry contest at the end of 2023 and has graced our digital pages a number …
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 poet Meredith Davies Hadaway from Maryland. “By Hand” is an exploration of the creative process, a process that is “like breathing, easy, unless/ you think …
Synkroniciti is proud to welcome poet and author Jenifer DeBellis from Detroit with two chilling poems about structural violence. The first, Indecent Exposure, a finalist in our “Vulnerable” contest, recalls …
