“Haunting” Featured Artist Jonathan Yungkans
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back our final Featured Artist for “Haunting,” Los Angeles area writer, poet and photographer Jonathan Yungkans, with “Gardening with Napoloeon” and “We All Came to …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back our final Featured Artist for “Haunting,” Los Angeles area writer, poet and photographer Jonathan Yungkans, with “Gardening with Napoloeon” and “We All Came to …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back poet Jonathan Chibuike Ukah, based in the UK, with “It Should Always Be Fall in the Cemetery” and “A Mother’s Promise,” two poems about …
Synkroniciti is pleased to welcome back Texan poet Ken Farrell with “Carnival of the Taken,” examining a father’s ongoing trauma many years after his son went missing at a carnival. …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming Washingtonian poet Kristin Roedell with “That Silent Word,” recounting the heart-breaking story of a couple in their elder years who become separated as dementia and …
Synkroniciti is excited to introduce poet and visual artist Michele Noble, born in London, with “Bone Song,” an exploration of mortality through the contemplation of a shapely bird bone found …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming Canadian poet Tara Knight, with an achingly expressive cadralor, “Urban Spaces.” These five stanzas vary between five and six lines and are filled with rich …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back writer Julie Dron, based in Taiwan. We nominated Julie for a Pushcart prize for her flash fiction “Take Me Back” in our “Broken” issue …
Synkroniciti is proud to welcome New York poet and writer Nancy Avery Dafoe. Her poem “On the Ways My Son Was Vulnerable From a Silent Genetic Disorder” is a finalist …
Synkroniciti is glad to welcome back poet Peter Cashorali, who lives and works in Los Angeles and Portland. “Geese” contemplates a flock of birds flying through the sky with purpose, …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming the first featured artist from our upcoming “Vulnerable” issue, Ohio poet Pamela R. Anderson. “The Anatomy of Loss” is a finalist in our “Vulnerable” poetry …
