“Family” Featured Artist Suzanne Glade
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome Chicago poet Suzanne Glade with “The Holiday Family Dinner is Over,” a vivid examination of the emotional wake and trauma left after a contentious family …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome Chicago poet Suzanne Glade with “The Holiday Family Dinner is Over,” a vivid examination of the emotional wake and trauma left after a contentious family …
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 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 …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming Virginian poet and artist Terry Cox-Joseph. We are overjoyed to feature two of Terry’s poems, each paired with an image excerpted and detailed from her …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome writer (and musician) Naomi Bindman from Vermont. Her beautifully-crafted visual poem, “heart space,” explores the grieving process. Taking the shape of three folded or half …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back our final “Broken” featured artist, California poet Jonathan Yungkans. “And He Can See Quite Clearly into the Needle” is based on Caroline Bacher’s artwork …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back poet Merryn Rutledge who won the “Curiosity” poetry contest in our previous issue. “Broken” features two pieces. In “Trying to Imagine From Far Away, …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back California poet David Holper with “The Earthquake,” which won our poetry contest on the “Broken” theme. Reaching from personal tragedy, an earthquake at Christmas …
Synkroniciti is excited to welcome Philadelphia poet Alison Hicks with “Copper Beech,” a poem in two parts that explores how a Copper beech tree experiences thirst and scarring, damaging conditions …
Synkroniciti is delighted to welcome back poet Jonathan Yungkans. “For the Wind Passes Over It: Five Questions from Neruda” is a masterfully haunting cadralor, a five stanza poem in which …
