Contributors
Brian Michael Barbeito is a Canadian poet, writer, and photographer. His work appears at various online and print venues such as Fiction International and Literary Orphans. His novelette, Indigo Gemini Seven, was chosen by the University of Notre Dame as the online feature from their fiftieth anniversary print edition. Brian is the author of the prose poem collection Chalk Lines (Fowl Pox Press). He is currently at work on the visual and written nature narrative Mosaics, Journeys Through Landscapes Rural.
Noah Berlatsky (he/him) has a poetry collection forthcoming from Ben Yehuda press and chapbooks forthcoming from above/ground, LJMcD Communications, and Origami Poetry Project. He tweets too much at @nberlat and scribbles longer at Everything Is Horrible (https://noahberlatsky.substack.com/).
Jennifer Bisbing is an award-winning book editor and photographer, originally from the Midwest, and pays respect to the Apsáalooke, Tséstho’e, and Séliš peoples, the traditional custodians of the Montana land she lives on today. Raised by a renowned forensic scientist, Bisbing’s murder mystery Under the Pines reveals childhood memories of trips to the crime lab. With family dinner conversations notoriously leading to murder cases, it’s no surprise her forthcoming poetry chapbook (Finishing Line Press) has a few lingering villains. She currently writes for Montana Quarterly, edits for several national and international publishers, and can be found online at jenniferbisbing.com.
Jude Brigley is Welsh. She has been a teacher, an editor, and a performance poet. She is now writing more for the page. She has a chapbook of poems, Exchanges (Thynks Press), and her work has appeared in various magazines, including Otherwise Engaged, Blue Nib, Sylvia, and Scissortail.
Paul Brucker, a marketing communications writer, lives in Mt. Prospect, Illinois, “Where Friendliness is a Way of Life.” He put a lid on poetry writing when he went to the Northwestern University grad ad school in a questionable attempt to learn how to think like a businessman and secure a decent income. Nevertheless, he has succumbed to writing poetry again.
Beverly M. Collins is the author of the books Quiet Observations: Diary Thought, Whimsy and Rhyme and Mud in Magic. Her poems and short stories have appeared in publications based in the USA, England, Ireland, Australia, India, Berlin, Mauritius, and Canada, both in print and online. She was the winner of a 2019 Naji Naaman Literary Prize in Creativity (Lebanon), was twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize, was a prize winner for the California State Poetry Society, and one of three winners of the June 2021 Wilda Morris Poetry Challenge (Chicago). Her photography can be found on Fine Art America products, Shutterstock, iStock/Getty images, Adobe Stock, and more. To see more of her work, go to her website: https://beverlym-collins.pixels.com.
Jeffrey Dreiblatt is a poet, visual artist, and volunteer firefighter. His poetry and artwork have appeared in the New Feathers Anthology, Pinhole Poetry, Cathexis Northwest Press, and other publications. He lives in Copake, New York.
D. Dina Friedman has published widely in literary journals, including Rattle, The Sun, Chatauqua, Mass Poetry, Hawaii Pacific Review, Crab Orchard Review, and has received two Pushcart Prize nominations. She’s the author of two young adult novels: Escaping Into the Night (Simon & Schuster) and Playing Dad’s Song(Farrar, Straus, and Giroux) and one chapbook of poetry, Wolf in the Suitcase (Finishing Line Press). Her short story collection Immigrants is forthcoming from Creators Press this fall, and a second chapbook of poetry, Here in Sanctuary, Whirling, is scheduled for publication by Querencia Press in 2024. She has an MFA from Lesley University and taught for many years at the University of Massachusetts–Amherst. Visit her website www.ddinafriedman.com and her blog on living a creative life in a creatively challenged universe at https://ddinafriedman.substack.com.
George Freek's poem “Enigmatic Variations” is currently nominated for Best of the Net. His poem “Night Thoughts” is also nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His collection Melancholia is being published by Red Wolf Editions.
Jane Ellen Glasser’s poetry has appeared in numerous journals, such as The Hudson Review, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Georgia Review. In the past she served as the poetry critic for The Virginian-Pilot, poetry editor for the Ghent Quarterly and Lady Jane’s Miscellany, and co-founder of the nonprofit arts organization and journal New Virginia Review. She won the Tampa Review Prize for Poetry for Light Persists (2006), and the Poetica Publishing Chapbook Contest for The Long Life (2011).Jane Ellen Glasser: Selected Poems (2019), Staying Afloat During a Plague (2021), and Crow Songs (2021) are her recent collections. To learn more about the poet and her work, visit www.janeellenglasser.com.
Howie Good's newest poetry collection, Heart-Shaped Hole, which also includes examples of his handmade collages, is available from Laughing Ronin Press.
Yannah Guda is currently a political science student at the Ateneo de Manila University. She was previously the editor-in-chief and head of the English literature department for SCREEVE, Colegio de Sta. Rosa Makati’s school magazine. In her spare time, she is an avid reader of queer novels and a creative writer who puts queer characters in the center of her love stories, her family dramas, her gritty, historical fictions, and even her meditative, literary pieces. All she wants to do, at the end of the day, is write stories that make hearts bleed, and above all else, keep on beating. twitter: @shadeandart
Peycho Kanev is the author of twelve poetry collections and three chapbooks, published in the USA and Europe. His poems have appeared in many literary magazines, such as Rattle, Poetry Quarterly, Evergreen Review, Front Porch Review, Hawaii Review, Barrow Street, Sheepshead Review, Off the Coast, The Adirondack Review, Sierra Nevada Review, The Cleveland Review, and many others. His new book of poetry, titled A Fake Memoir, was published in 2022 by Cyberwit press.
Karen Kilcup, a New Englander with long farming roots, is the Elizabeth Rosenthal Excellence Professor of American Literature, Environmental & Sustainability Studies, and Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies at UNC Greensboro. Her forthcoming poetry collection, The Art of Restoration, was awarded the 2021 Winter Goose Poetry Prize, and her forthcoming chapbook, Red Appetite, received the 2022 Helen Kay Chapbook Poetry Prize. Two other collections are also forthcoming: Black Nebula (a chapbook, this year) and Feathers and Wedges (a full-length volume, in April 2024).
Elena Kostenko ( b.1983 in USSR, Kazakhstan) is a multidisciplinary nomad, currently settled in Brittany, France. She works in such media as ceramics, video, analog photography, and texts. For the past three years, Elena has been exploring the phenomenon of belonging and integration into a new environment outside of social or cultural boundaries. In her research, she employs clay, earth, plants, clothing, and fabric, things that the human body is in contact with. She collects ground samples from areas where she once lived and integrates them into her works. Her video essay Grounding reproduces this process, in which the interaction with materials is central. Since 2019, Elena has been a member of the international collective Notes on Hapticity. She studied contemporary art at Leiden University (The Netherlands), the Royal Academy of the Hague (The Netherlands), and the Herzen University of St. Petersburg (Russia).
Anna Krutchenko was born in 1986 in Russia and is now based in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. Anna began making art in 2019. She earned a degree in painting and teaching from an art college and successfully finished a contemporary art training course at the British Higher School of Art & Design. Following the start of the war in Ukraine, Anna moved to the United States.
Janis La Couvée (she/her) is a writer and poet with a love of wild green spaces, dedicated to conservation efforts in Campbell River, Canada–home since time immemorial to the Liǧʷiɫdax̌ʷ people. Her work is published by New York Writers Coalition, Pure Slush, Paddler Press, Feral Poetry, Van Isle Poetry Collective, Island Writer, Humana Obscura, and pocket lint. Find her at janislacouvee.com Twitter: @lacouvee Facebook: JanisLaCouveeOnline
Alexander Limarev, freelance artist, mail art artist, poet, visual poet, and curator from Russia/Siberia, has participated in more than one thousand international projects and exhibitions. His artworks are part of private and museum collections of seventy-two countries, and his art and poetry have been featured in various online publications, including Expoesia Visual Experimental, Undergroundbooks.0rg, Boek861, Tip of yhe Knife, Bukowski Erasure Poetry Anthology (Silver Birch Press), Briller Magazine, Brave New Word Magazine, Simulacro, Zoomoozophone Review, Iconic Lit, Caravel Literary Arts Journal, Metazen, Maintenant, The Broken Plate, The Gambler Mag, New Feathers Anthology, Degenerate Literature, Tuck Magazine, Ekphrastic Review, Sonic Boom Journal, Mush/Mum Mag, Utsanga, Bateau Ivre, Killer Whale Journal, Angry Old Man Magazine, and more.
Joan McNerney’s poetry has been included in numerous literary magazines, such as Seven Circle Press, Dinner with the Muse, Moonlight Dreamers of Yellow Haze, Blueline, and Halcyon Days. Four Bright Hills Press anthologies, several Poppy Road Review journals, and numerous Kind of A Hurricane Press publications have accepted her work. She has four Best of the Net nominations and her latest titles are The Muse in Miniature, Love Poems for Michael, and At Work, all available on Amazon.com.
Lawrence Miles is a poet living in White Plains, New York. He has recently been published in Poets Live Fourth Anthology, 2022 New Generation Beats Anthology, and Four Feathers Press’s Sounds of Southern California: Poetry of Music.
Michael Penny has published five books and has been published in over forty literary journals. He lives on an island near Vancouver, British Columbia.
Marc Pietrzykowski lives and works and writes in Niagara County, New York, USA. He has published various and sundry poems, stories, and essays, as well as ten books of poetry and three novels. His most recent book of poems, sanctum, and sci-fi novel, Burnout!, were released November 2018. You can visit Marc virtually at www.marcpski.com.
Deborah Purdy is the author of Mermaids in the Basement (dancing girl press) and Conjuring an Epiphany (Finishing Line Press). Her work has appeared in Cleaver Magazine, The American Poetry Journal, Mom Egg Review, Heron Tree, and other publications.
Lisa Rua-Ware is a poet in central Massachusetts. Her work has appeared in San Pedro River Review, Muddy River Poetry Review, and Lily Poetry Review. When she’s not chasing her two rambunctious kids, she works as a technical writer.
Orleans Saltos is a freelance illustrator and aspiring writer. She is the daughter of immigrants, and grew up in a small community in southeastern Louisiana. She now lives in Berkeley, California, with her family and many dogs and cats. Despite being a Californian now, she still slips a “y'all” in most sentences and travels as much as she can to her parents’ home continent. She enjoys working in a variety of art styles and writing genres. Her work features diverse characters with a range of ages and backgrounds.
Karen Schnurstein’s poetry has appeared in print and online publications, including Bi Women Quarterly. She holds a B.A. in creative writing and resides in South Bend, Indiana. Find out more about her and her work at https://www.karenschnurstein.info/
Annette Sisson’s work has appeared in Valparaiso Poetry Review, Birmingham Poetry Review, Glassworks, Rust and Moth, The Citron Review, The Lascaux Review, Glassworks, Cider Press Review, and many others. Her book Small Fish in High Branches was published in 2022 (Glass Lyre); her chapbook A Casting Off in 2019 (Finishing Line). She was a Mark Strand Scholar for the 2021 Sewanee WC and 2020 BOAAT Fellow. Her poems have received several nominations for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize, and she won The Porch Writers’ Collective’s 2019 poetry prize. Among other contest placements, she was shortlisted for the 2021 Fish Poetry Prize, longlisted for the 2021 Frontier New Voices contest, and shortlisted for the 2022 Lascaux Prize.
Jaime Speed (she/her) lives, works, and plays in Saskatchewan, Canada. Her work has been published in The Rat’s Ass Review, Hobo Camp Review, Anti-Heroin Chic, Psaltery & Lyre, Channel, New Feathers Anthology, The Wild Word, Eunoia Review, Flora Fiction, Neologism Poetry Journal, and The Pine Cone Review, along with numerous others journals, collections, and anthologies. Her prose poetry was selected for Best Small Fictions 2021 by Sonder Press. Find Jaime (and her poetry and other creative whims) on Instagram @jjspeed_r.
J. M. Summers was born and still lives in South Wales. Previous publication credits include Another Countryfrom Gomer Press. The former editor of a number of small press magazines, he has published one book, Niamh, a collection of prose and poetry.
Miles Varana’s work has appeared in Typehouse, The Penn Review, and Passages North. He has worked previously as a staff reader and managing editor at Hawai’i Pacific Review. Miles currently works for WKBT News in La Crosse, Wisconsin, where he does his best to be a good millennial despite disliking tandem bike rides.
Diane Webster’s work has appeared in El Portal, North Dakota Quarterly, Verdad, and other literary magazines. She had a micro-chap published by Origami Poetry Press in 2022 and 2023 and was nominated for Best of the Net in 2022.
Eve Young is a writer living in West Yorkshire.
Noah Berlatsky (he/him) has a poetry collection forthcoming from Ben Yehuda press and chapbooks forthcoming from above/ground, LJMcD Communications, and Origami Poetry Project. He tweets too much at @nberlat and scribbles longer at Everything Is Horrible (https://noahberlatsky.substack.com/).
Jennifer Bisbing is an award-winning book editor and photographer, originally from the Midwest, and pays respect to the Apsáalooke, Tséstho’e, and Séliš peoples, the traditional custodians of the Montana land she lives on today. Raised by a renowned forensic scientist, Bisbing’s murder mystery Under the Pines reveals childhood memories of trips to the crime lab. With family dinner conversations notoriously leading to murder cases, it’s no surprise her forthcoming poetry chapbook (Finishing Line Press) has a few lingering villains. She currently writes for Montana Quarterly, edits for several national and international publishers, and can be found online at jenniferbisbing.com.
Jude Brigley is Welsh. She has been a teacher, an editor, and a performance poet. She is now writing more for the page. She has a chapbook of poems, Exchanges (Thynks Press), and her work has appeared in various magazines, including Otherwise Engaged, Blue Nib, Sylvia, and Scissortail.
Paul Brucker, a marketing communications writer, lives in Mt. Prospect, Illinois, “Where Friendliness is a Way of Life.” He put a lid on poetry writing when he went to the Northwestern University grad ad school in a questionable attempt to learn how to think like a businessman and secure a decent income. Nevertheless, he has succumbed to writing poetry again.
Beverly M. Collins is the author of the books Quiet Observations: Diary Thought, Whimsy and Rhyme and Mud in Magic. Her poems and short stories have appeared in publications based in the USA, England, Ireland, Australia, India, Berlin, Mauritius, and Canada, both in print and online. She was the winner of a 2019 Naji Naaman Literary Prize in Creativity (Lebanon), was twice nominated for the Pushcart Prize, was a prize winner for the California State Poetry Society, and one of three winners of the June 2021 Wilda Morris Poetry Challenge (Chicago). Her photography can be found on Fine Art America products, Shutterstock, iStock/Getty images, Adobe Stock, and more. To see more of her work, go to her website: https://beverlym-collins.pixels.com.
Jeffrey Dreiblatt is a poet, visual artist, and volunteer firefighter. His poetry and artwork have appeared in the New Feathers Anthology, Pinhole Poetry, Cathexis Northwest Press, and other publications. He lives in Copake, New York.
D. Dina Friedman has published widely in literary journals, including Rattle, The Sun, Chatauqua, Mass Poetry, Hawaii Pacific Review, Crab Orchard Review, and has received two Pushcart Prize nominations. She’s the author of two young adult novels: Escaping Into the Night (Simon & Schuster) and Playing Dad’s Song(Farrar, Straus, and Giroux) and one chapbook of poetry, Wolf in the Suitcase (Finishing Line Press). Her short story collection Immigrants is forthcoming from Creators Press this fall, and a second chapbook of poetry, Here in Sanctuary, Whirling, is scheduled for publication by Querencia Press in 2024. She has an MFA from Lesley University and taught for many years at the University of Massachusetts–Amherst. Visit her website www.ddinafriedman.com and her blog on living a creative life in a creatively challenged universe at https://ddinafriedman.substack.com.
George Freek's poem “Enigmatic Variations” is currently nominated for Best of the Net. His poem “Night Thoughts” is also nominated for a Pushcart Prize. His collection Melancholia is being published by Red Wolf Editions.
Jane Ellen Glasser’s poetry has appeared in numerous journals, such as The Hudson Review, The Southern Review, The Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Georgia Review. In the past she served as the poetry critic for The Virginian-Pilot, poetry editor for the Ghent Quarterly and Lady Jane’s Miscellany, and co-founder of the nonprofit arts organization and journal New Virginia Review. She won the Tampa Review Prize for Poetry for Light Persists (2006), and the Poetica Publishing Chapbook Contest for The Long Life (2011).Jane Ellen Glasser: Selected Poems (2019), Staying Afloat During a Plague (2021), and Crow Songs (2021) are her recent collections. To learn more about the poet and her work, visit www.janeellenglasser.com.
Howie Good's newest poetry collection, Heart-Shaped Hole, which also includes examples of his handmade collages, is available from Laughing Ronin Press.
Yannah Guda is currently a political science student at the Ateneo de Manila University. She was previously the editor-in-chief and head of the English literature department for SCREEVE, Colegio de Sta. Rosa Makati’s school magazine. In her spare time, she is an avid reader of queer novels and a creative writer who puts queer characters in the center of her love stories, her family dramas, her gritty, historical fictions, and even her meditative, literary pieces. All she wants to do, at the end of the day, is write stories that make hearts bleed, and above all else, keep on beating. twitter: @shadeandart
Peycho Kanev is the author of twelve poetry collections and three chapbooks, published in the USA and Europe. His poems have appeared in many literary magazines, such as Rattle, Poetry Quarterly, Evergreen Review, Front Porch Review, Hawaii Review, Barrow Street, Sheepshead Review, Off the Coast, The Adirondack Review, Sierra Nevada Review, The Cleveland Review, and many others. His new book of poetry, titled A Fake Memoir, was published in 2022 by Cyberwit press.
Karen Kilcup, a New Englander with long farming roots, is the Elizabeth Rosenthal Excellence Professor of American Literature, Environmental & Sustainability Studies, and Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies at UNC Greensboro. Her forthcoming poetry collection, The Art of Restoration, was awarded the 2021 Winter Goose Poetry Prize, and her forthcoming chapbook, Red Appetite, received the 2022 Helen Kay Chapbook Poetry Prize. Two other collections are also forthcoming: Black Nebula (a chapbook, this year) and Feathers and Wedges (a full-length volume, in April 2024).
Elena Kostenko ( b.1983 in USSR, Kazakhstan) is a multidisciplinary nomad, currently settled in Brittany, France. She works in such media as ceramics, video, analog photography, and texts. For the past three years, Elena has been exploring the phenomenon of belonging and integration into a new environment outside of social or cultural boundaries. In her research, she employs clay, earth, plants, clothing, and fabric, things that the human body is in contact with. She collects ground samples from areas where she once lived and integrates them into her works. Her video essay Grounding reproduces this process, in which the interaction with materials is central. Since 2019, Elena has been a member of the international collective Notes on Hapticity. She studied contemporary art at Leiden University (The Netherlands), the Royal Academy of the Hague (The Netherlands), and the Herzen University of St. Petersburg (Russia).
Anna Krutchenko was born in 1986 in Russia and is now based in Greenville, South Carolina, United States. Anna began making art in 2019. She earned a degree in painting and teaching from an art college and successfully finished a contemporary art training course at the British Higher School of Art & Design. Following the start of the war in Ukraine, Anna moved to the United States.
Janis La Couvée (she/her) is a writer and poet with a love of wild green spaces, dedicated to conservation efforts in Campbell River, Canada–home since time immemorial to the Liǧʷiɫdax̌ʷ people. Her work is published by New York Writers Coalition, Pure Slush, Paddler Press, Feral Poetry, Van Isle Poetry Collective, Island Writer, Humana Obscura, and pocket lint. Find her at janislacouvee.com Twitter: @lacouvee Facebook: JanisLaCouveeOnline
Alexander Limarev, freelance artist, mail art artist, poet, visual poet, and curator from Russia/Siberia, has participated in more than one thousand international projects and exhibitions. His artworks are part of private and museum collections of seventy-two countries, and his art and poetry have been featured in various online publications, including Expoesia Visual Experimental, Undergroundbooks.0rg, Boek861, Tip of yhe Knife, Bukowski Erasure Poetry Anthology (Silver Birch Press), Briller Magazine, Brave New Word Magazine, Simulacro, Zoomoozophone Review, Iconic Lit, Caravel Literary Arts Journal, Metazen, Maintenant, The Broken Plate, The Gambler Mag, New Feathers Anthology, Degenerate Literature, Tuck Magazine, Ekphrastic Review, Sonic Boom Journal, Mush/Mum Mag, Utsanga, Bateau Ivre, Killer Whale Journal, Angry Old Man Magazine, and more.
Joan McNerney’s poetry has been included in numerous literary magazines, such as Seven Circle Press, Dinner with the Muse, Moonlight Dreamers of Yellow Haze, Blueline, and Halcyon Days. Four Bright Hills Press anthologies, several Poppy Road Review journals, and numerous Kind of A Hurricane Press publications have accepted her work. She has four Best of the Net nominations and her latest titles are The Muse in Miniature, Love Poems for Michael, and At Work, all available on Amazon.com.
Lawrence Miles is a poet living in White Plains, New York. He has recently been published in Poets Live Fourth Anthology, 2022 New Generation Beats Anthology, and Four Feathers Press’s Sounds of Southern California: Poetry of Music.
Michael Penny has published five books and has been published in over forty literary journals. He lives on an island near Vancouver, British Columbia.
Marc Pietrzykowski lives and works and writes in Niagara County, New York, USA. He has published various and sundry poems, stories, and essays, as well as ten books of poetry and three novels. His most recent book of poems, sanctum, and sci-fi novel, Burnout!, were released November 2018. You can visit Marc virtually at www.marcpski.com.
Deborah Purdy is the author of Mermaids in the Basement (dancing girl press) and Conjuring an Epiphany (Finishing Line Press). Her work has appeared in Cleaver Magazine, The American Poetry Journal, Mom Egg Review, Heron Tree, and other publications.
Lisa Rua-Ware is a poet in central Massachusetts. Her work has appeared in San Pedro River Review, Muddy River Poetry Review, and Lily Poetry Review. When she’s not chasing her two rambunctious kids, she works as a technical writer.
Orleans Saltos is a freelance illustrator and aspiring writer. She is the daughter of immigrants, and grew up in a small community in southeastern Louisiana. She now lives in Berkeley, California, with her family and many dogs and cats. Despite being a Californian now, she still slips a “y'all” in most sentences and travels as much as she can to her parents’ home continent. She enjoys working in a variety of art styles and writing genres. Her work features diverse characters with a range of ages and backgrounds.
Karen Schnurstein’s poetry has appeared in print and online publications, including Bi Women Quarterly. She holds a B.A. in creative writing and resides in South Bend, Indiana. Find out more about her and her work at https://www.karenschnurstein.info/
Annette Sisson’s work has appeared in Valparaiso Poetry Review, Birmingham Poetry Review, Glassworks, Rust and Moth, The Citron Review, The Lascaux Review, Glassworks, Cider Press Review, and many others. Her book Small Fish in High Branches was published in 2022 (Glass Lyre); her chapbook A Casting Off in 2019 (Finishing Line). She was a Mark Strand Scholar for the 2021 Sewanee WC and 2020 BOAAT Fellow. Her poems have received several nominations for Best of the Net and the Pushcart Prize, and she won The Porch Writers’ Collective’s 2019 poetry prize. Among other contest placements, she was shortlisted for the 2021 Fish Poetry Prize, longlisted for the 2021 Frontier New Voices contest, and shortlisted for the 2022 Lascaux Prize.
Jaime Speed (she/her) lives, works, and plays in Saskatchewan, Canada. Her work has been published in The Rat’s Ass Review, Hobo Camp Review, Anti-Heroin Chic, Psaltery & Lyre, Channel, New Feathers Anthology, The Wild Word, Eunoia Review, Flora Fiction, Neologism Poetry Journal, and The Pine Cone Review, along with numerous others journals, collections, and anthologies. Her prose poetry was selected for Best Small Fictions 2021 by Sonder Press. Find Jaime (and her poetry and other creative whims) on Instagram @jjspeed_r.
J. M. Summers was born and still lives in South Wales. Previous publication credits include Another Countryfrom Gomer Press. The former editor of a number of small press magazines, he has published one book, Niamh, a collection of prose and poetry.
Miles Varana’s work has appeared in Typehouse, The Penn Review, and Passages North. He has worked previously as a staff reader and managing editor at Hawai’i Pacific Review. Miles currently works for WKBT News in La Crosse, Wisconsin, where he does his best to be a good millennial despite disliking tandem bike rides.
Diane Webster’s work has appeared in El Portal, North Dakota Quarterly, Verdad, and other literary magazines. She had a micro-chap published by Origami Poetry Press in 2022 and 2023 and was nominated for Best of the Net in 2022.
Eve Young is a writer living in West Yorkshire.