Tag: Yasmin Belkhyr

FREE Chapbook contest & editor interview – Honeysuckle Press, DEADLINE: March 1, 2018

Honeysuckle Press is the sister organization of Winter Tangerine and has a similar aesthetic with absolutely stunning artwork and clean, readable website design.  It is “a literary press committed to expanding and redefining human truths by prioritizing the narratives of unsung communities.” Their 2nd annual chapbook contest is […]

FREE Chapbook contest & editor interview – Honeysuckle Press, DEADLINE: March 1, 2018

Honeysuckle Press is the sister organization of Winter Tangerine and has a similar aesthetic with absolutely stunning artwork and clean, readable website design.  It is “a literary press committed to expanding and redefining human truths by prioritizing the narratives of unsung communities.” Their 2nd annual chapbook contest is […]

PAYING/NO FEE Submission call + editor interview – Winter Tangerine, DEADLINE: Nov. 1, 2017

Winter Tangerine is a literary and arts magazine in print and online. They “aim to disrupt the status quo. To amplify the unheard. To account for the unaccounted. To publish the unconventional, confront the uncomfortable, marvel in the mundane.” They’re also currently accepting submissions for their Lineage of […]

FREE Chapbook contest & editor interview–Honeysuckle Press, DEADLINE: Jan. 31, 2017

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO JANUARY 31, 2017 Honeysuckle Press is the sister organization of Winter Tangerine and has a similar aesthetic with absolutely stunning artwork and clean, readable website design.  It is “a literary press committed to expanding and redefining human truths by prioritizing the narratives of unsung communities.” […]

FREE Chapbook contest & editor interview–Honeysuckle Press, DEADLINE: Jan. 31, 2017

DEADLINE EXTENDED TO JANUARY 31, 2017 Honeysuckle Press is the sister organization of Winter Tangerine and has a similar aesthetic with absolutely stunning artwork and clean, readable website design.  It is “a literary press committed to expanding and redefining human truths by prioritizing the narratives of unsung communities.” […]

Trish Hopkinson