Featured Artist: Jonathan Yungkans
Please join us in welcoming back poet Jonathan Yungkans. Synkroniciti is excited to present two intriguing poems about human nature and its eccentricities, “You Don’t Learn the Cancan at Obedience …
Please join us in welcoming back poet Jonathan Yungkans. Synkroniciti is excited to present two intriguing poems about human nature and its eccentricities, “You Don’t Learn the Cancan at Obedience …
Please join Synkroniciti as we welcome back poet Lori Lasseter Hamilton with “Ritual: A Dictionary Definition,” a heart-wrenching poem that alludes to how society hides away sexual assault, denying people …
Welcome back our Fall 2021 poetry contest winner David Estringel with two poems, “The Healing Clock” and “The Yawning Grave.” Both are moving laments on the death of his mother, …
Ritual makes me think of being in the flow of the creative process—when I’m fully focused on the creative, often listening to music, making the work, making intuitive creative decisions …
Please join Synkroniciti in welcoming back playwright Peter Dakutis with his one-minute play, “Stream of Memories.” An individual experiences their last few moments, life flashing before their consciousness. If this …
Synkroniciti welcomes back poet Jack M. Freedman, aka Jacob Moses, this time as a photographer and the creator of our marvelous cover. “Cauldron” won the cover art contest for “Ritual” …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to introduce writer Jamie McArdle. Her story “Grace,” a love story informed by changing social norms on the early American farm, inspired by a census entry, swept …
Please welcome back writer Sara Collie. Sara won our “Birds” essay contest last summer with “Field Notes from When the World Was Ending” and her luminous essays, photos and stories …
Please welcome poet, playwright and photographer Kelly DuMar to Synkroniciti. We are excited to feature three delicate photos paired with short poems: “Chicken of the Woods,” “Feather in Grass” and …
Synkroniciti is thrilled to welcome artist and poet Diane Funston, with three captivating poems: “Labyrinth Lost,” “Cleansing” and “Midnight.” The first is a lament for those who persist in seeing …
