“Space” Featured Artist Margo Stutts Toombs
Synkroniciti is over the moon to welcome back multi-faceted Houston artist Margo Stutts Toombs with “Anyone Could Fly,” a poem recalling a trip to Macchu Picchu five decades earlier, “a …
Synkroniciti is over the moon to welcome back multi-faceted Houston artist Margo Stutts Toombs with “Anyone Could Fly,” a poem recalling a trip to Macchu Picchu five decades earlier, “a …
Synkroniciti is proud to welcome Houston poet and writer Sandi Stromberg with a captivating poem set in the Space City. “Why I Need the Cosmos” is a juxtaposition of modern …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome the members of Chicago’s P2 Collective with a set of poems and photographs that probe the theme of “Space” and humanity’s relationship to creation and …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome emerging poet A.J. Parker from Arizona. “i wrote this sick on sleep medicine, sick of you” is a searing, vulnerable look at how the bitterness …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back Houston-based writer Neil Ellis Orts with “Twelve Hundred Miles,” a poignant flash fiction piece about a relationship which has been sundered. A sudden rainstorm …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome back New Zealand playwright Rex McGregor, formerly featured in our “Birds” issue, with another witty comedy, Zany Planets. “The stars move across the sky in …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome poet Miriam Manglani, based in Massachusetts. “House Plant” laments the former intimacy between two lovers symbolized by a potted plant left behind, “its branches spilling …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back writer Jennifer Maloney from Rochester, New York. Jennifer won our “Wild” poetry contest last winter. “Space” features “Of Goats and Eagles, Frogs and Machines,” …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome writer Gavin Kayner from Tucson. “Space” features “Bobby’s Swing,” an enchanting poem that hearkens back to childhood–“”How high we soared/ Up into summer days/ Kicking …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back poet D.R. James from Michigan with three poems. “Celestial Elbow” recounts a dazzling sunset, painted with fricatives, sibilants and alliteration as evocative as brushstrokes …
