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Sweet on the pandemic

Hi Sweet writers & readers,

Just wanted to let you know that we are open for submissions, and reading already-submitted work diligently, if often slowly. It is strange to live through such a world-changing experience as this pandemic, to be in the midst of it and know just how huge it is, to be observant and thoughtful and wonder just what sort of changes may come. At the same time as we’re surviving day-to-day, we’re inevitably seeing this thing as writers—following themes and phrases, trying to make sense of it all through words.

I know one question I have as a writer is just how tired editors may become of poems that refer to the pandemic, so I thought I’d address that issue as far as Sweet’s poetry submissions go: honestly, we’re still looking for the poems we like best, regardless of topic. If you’re sending us new work, it will inevitably be affected by the pandemic, no matter what it’s about. The dread, the uncertainty, the confinement—it will underlie poems even if you’re writing about your childhood. If you’re writing specifically about the pandemic, that’s ok too, as long as you’re turning it over/around/inside out, making art of it.

If it’s work that only makes sense if read within a short time of a specific news event, however, you’re better off finding one of the several current events poetry venues that are out there on the internet. Several have popped up specifically to deal with the art we cannot help but make about the COVID-19 pandemic.

We hope that some of the work you read in Sweet may sustain you during this bizarre and difficult time. We are grateful for the work you send in to us to consider, and glad there are so many fine writers out there.

–Katie Riegel, Editor & Poetry Editor

Sweet Connections: Diane Joy Schmidt

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Diane Joy Schmidt
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet: “Instructions for How to Be Popular in Seventh Grade” and “Spider
Issue: 11.2

HEADSHOT cropped-Diane-J.-Schmidt-column-photo-IMG_0157-1 - Diane Schmidt

Find Her:
Facebook
Twitter
Linkedn

As a writer and photographer covering social, ethical and environmental issues of the Southwest, Diane can be found in New Mexico. You can also find out more about her on her website.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

I graduated with an M.F.A. dual degree in Screenwriting and New Media from Antioch University Santa Barbara in December, 2019, a very new and wonderful low-residency MFA program with a very low faculty-student ratio. My two graphic narrative pieces published in Sweet were made during the New Media portion of that dual degree, and they recently were respectively awarded Second place for Poetry and Honorable Mention for Short Story by the New Mexico Press Women Communications Contest. “Instructions” was first written one afternoon in Santa Fe during a Lauren Camp writing workshop prompt. I also had a piece published in Geometry Journal v. 5 in New Zealand, “The Encounter: Budapest,” about missed cues between a Holocaust survivor and a young American woman visitor. It also won, a first place for writer/photographer in the NMPW contest, and is viewable from my website.

At Antioch I then also finished a first draft of a screenplay – something I never thought I’d do! I am now working on its revision. I discovered that with my background in journalism and photojournalism, that screenwriting is exactly the medium that works for me. That is what is keeping me busy right now. I also have been writing some film reviews.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

Finishing my first screenplay, with a second in my sights.

Who is your favorite author?

Ohh. Right now, Nabokov’s “Speak Memory.” It awakens my awarenesses.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

Isaac Babel’s “Red Cavalry,” stories by Babel who, when told to get more life experience by his mentor Maxim Gorky, spends some months as a reporter riding with the Cossack cavalry in 1918 Russia, and witnesses pogroms and other brutalities, while hiding his Jewish identity and his dismay. Babel was later shot by Stalin. Also, a brilliant and inspiring film from the New German Cinema movement, “Bagdad Cafe,” directed by Percy Adlon, set outside Las Vegas, NV.

What inspires you to write?

Deadlines!!!!

What are you reading right now?

The War of Art – a handy how-to on getting through walls.

What is your favorite sweet?

With my stories, I originally posted Coconut Squares, a recipe my mother saved for her Ort meetings. But when I actually made them, I couldn’t stop eating them – the sugar content sent me into a spiral- So, instead, I will recommend a recipe for Potato latkes, pictured here with Teddy Bear, whose story is also prominently featured in my screenplay. It can be served with applesauce or sweet jam and yoghurt (or sour cream), and is a great recipe these days if you happen to have a few potatoes and an egg left in the cupboard!

Potato Latkes - Diane Schmidt

Thank you, Diane, for taking the time to reconnect with us. Congratulations on your awards. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Are you a contributor who wants to be a part of Sweet Connections?  Come fill out our form!

 

Sweet Connections: Alyse Knorr

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Alyse Knorr
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet: “Welcome Poem”
Issues: 6.1

Horiz - Alyse Knorr

Find Her:
Facebook

Alyse is an assistant professor of English at Regis University and co-editor of Switchback Books. You can also find out more about her on her website

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?
Since my Sweet publication, I gained a position as an assistant professor of English at Regis University–my dream job! I also published a few books, took over the editorship of Switchback Books, and had a baby (the latter feels like my biggest accomplishment lately since raising with my 17-month-old is definitely my most exciting daily challenge!).

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’m currently working on a nonfiction book telling the story of a first-person-shooter video game–how it was developed, what its legacy has been since its initial release, and what it tells us about violent video games in general.

Who is your favorite author?

Elizabeth Bishop

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

My favorite book is The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood

What inspires you to write?

I’ve always been most inspired to write by my relationships. I write to process something a friend told me, or to think through what it means to be a new wife or new parent, or what it means to be grieving the loss of a loved one.

What are you reading right now?

There There by Tommy Orange

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What is your favorite sweet?

My favorite sweet is a Heath Cookout milkshake! What can I say–I’m a true Southerner at heart. : )

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Photo by William Rogers

We had to look that one up…never heard of Cookout before!  Now we gotta try one!

Thank you, Alyse, for taking the time to reconnect with us. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Are you a contributor who wants to be a part of Sweet Connections?  Come fill out our form!

Sweet Connections: Brian Baumgart

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Brian Baumgart
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet“What Happened on the Nine O’ Clock News,” “Rules for Loving Right,” and “49th Mailing to Colin Firth- A Sestina”
Issues: 1.1, 5.1, and 8.1

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Brian can be found wandering the halls of North Hennepin Community College (just outside the border of Minneapolis) or enjoying the outdoors at his house just a few miles north when he’s not freezing during the winter months. You can learn more about Brian by visiting his website.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

I’ve had a number of poems published since I was published in Sweet (and since Sweet Publications released my chapbook). Some are here: https://briandbaumgart.wixsite.com/website/published-selections, but I also have a poem coming out this summer in the eco-anthology, Rewilding: Poems of the Environment, from Split Rock Review and Flexible Press.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I’ve completed a poetry manuscript that’s out making its publisher rounds, titled Naked in Public, or Kiss Me Goodnight, but what’s currently keeping me up at night is the novel I’m working on that initially sprung to life in 2006 as a short story, but then demanded several hundred more pages. It’s inspired by modern and ancient folklore, both of which guide the movement of the book.

Who is your favorite author?

Like so many others, I don’t have a favorite, but I’ve recently been digging into more Octavia Butler, so maybe she’s my current favorite. Ilya Kominsky destroyed me with Deaf Republic, too.

What is your favorite poem/essay/book?

Again, no favorites, but I’ve now read and re-read Lindsay Lusby’s Catechesis: a postpastoral a dozen times in the past few months. It’s a lovely collection that incorporates visual poetry with written poetry, and it plays with the horror genre of pop culture, including persona poems relating to The Silence of the Lambs and the Alien films. Jennifer Givhan’s new novel, Trinity Sight, will also blow you away.

What inspires you to write?

Fear. Sometimes it’s my own fear, whether that’s fear of not being able to say the things I feel must be said, or the fear I have of not speaking up for others. But often it’s the fear others have: the fear of the world around them. Sometimes it comes out as anxiety, and is completely internal, but other times it arrives as cruelty to others. I write because I fear that this cruelty can get worse. Okay, I also write from joy, but if there’s one thing I’ve learned—there isn’t—it’s that many people struggle sharing their joy—sometimes I’m one of those people.

What is your favorite sweet?

I think my favorite is the Filipino dish, biko, which is a sweet rice cake. The sugar boils and browns on top; it’s thick and gooey, and when cooked just right… Sorry, keyboard has drool on it.

Biko

Thank you, Brian, for taking the time to reconnect with us. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

AWP 2020 – San Antonio

Come visit Sweet: A Literary Confection at the AWP conference in San Antonio, Texas. This week, from Wednesday March 4th to Saturday March 7th, Sweet booth #1121 is featuring a variety of chapbooks for purchase, with author signings scheduled throughout the conference. 

Our chapbook and broadside lineup this year includes:

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Kindling by Lisa Laughlin

The remaining copies of our inaugural 2017 Flash Nonfiction Contest winning chapbook are available for purchase. Get this beautiful book before it’s gone.

   

 

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Borderlines by Jill McCabe Johnson

Jill McCabe Johnson’s lyric essay, “Borderlines” dives into memory and water. In poetic prose, Johnson fragments a moment in her life, seeking to understand and uncover the innocence of childhood and the dark shadows that ever follow. 

 

 

All Of Us - Cover

 

All of Us—Sweet: The First Five Years edited by Katherine Riegel

If you’re looking for a great poetry anthology, look no further! 

 

 

 

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Lady in Ink by R. Claire Stephens

Still our most popular book, Lady in Ink is a mystery, the kind that everyone is trying to solve every minute of their lives: “Why did I do that? Why in God’s name did I do that?”

 

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After the Night, a comic by Jarod Roselló

This comic details a father’s struggle with the demands of raising his little girl. In a heartwarming sketched style, Roselló candidly retells his own experiences and lessons learned on the importance of patience, love, and family.  

 

 

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Body of Starlight by Melissa Carroll 

Carroll explores the female body and its connection to the cosmos, shirking conventional ideas of beauty and physicality with sometimes tragic, often witty meditations on Eastern philosophy and Western superficiality. Characterizing womanhood as both supremely divine and hopelessly mortal, Carroll chronicles her experiences, observations, and opinions with intimate detail.

 

All of these are available in the Sweet Shop online if you can’t make it to San Antonio this year.

New to the Sweet lineup this year – Come check out this Sweet graphic chapbook:

Project Play Image

 

Press Play by Edward Gunawan, illustrated by Elbert Lim 

 “Press Play” recounts one person’s story of fighting depression and anxiety in simple, elegant prose and black and white images.

 

Stop by and say hello to us at booth #1121!

 

Sweet Fan Mail: Elizabeth (Liz) Scott

Dear Liz,

My grandfather died while I was reading This Never Happened. He was a traditional man—he liked sitting on front porches and he believed “Sure” was an unacceptable answer to a question because every question deserved a “Yes” or a “No.” During every holiday get-together, the matriarch of the family, his aunt and my great-great aunt, always led us in prayer. Every Christmas, he gave every family member a single two-dollar bill with the year written in red scrawl. I’m sorry to say I’ve misplaced many of these bills.

Read full review here!

Sweet Connections: Renée E. D’Aoust

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Renée E. D’Aoust
Title of Pieces Published in Sweet: “Gratitude is my Terrain: Maybe” and “Bark Wing”
Issues: 8.2 and 9.3

DAOUST_annualDachshundparadeKrakow Poland

Find Her:
Instagram
Twitter

Renée lives in Switzerland with her rescue dachshund Tootsie and her husband. Last year, Renée had book reviews, interviews, and dog essays appear in Big Other, Fourth Genre, Rain Taxi, and The Rupture. Renée teaches online at Casper College and North Idaho College. You can learn more about Renée by visiting her website.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

I’m most proud of my dedicated daily reading and writing practice. Since my Sweet publications, I’ve focused on reading as the foundation of writing. This grew out of intense problems with a memoir that made me physically ill to write, and which I finally set aside after too many years of wrangling it to smithereens, feeling like a loser, and failing to make art out of my brother’s suicide. It made me sick trying to make art out of that loss. I felt intense relief when I stopped trying to write that memoir. My health improved. I’ve thought a lot about a professor with whom I studied during undergrad who insisted we had to write our deepest darkest secrets if we wanted to be fearless writers; otherwise, don’t bother, we couldn’t, wouldn’t, cut it. This dude ate oranges during workshop and had his wife deliver our stories to class because every week he forgot our stories at home. That’s what he thought of our stories: forgettable. As a man over forty, he was perhaps unaware of how writing your darkest secrets might be actually physically unsafe for some of us, and how it might retrigger trauma. There was no discussion of how to care for one’s self while writing the darkness, just the sense if you couldn’t hack it, you shouldn’t write at all. I thought his damaging dictum were pathetic, but it was shocking to realize recently how much of his bullshit I had consumed as part of my beliefs about writing—and how many of his words lived on in me as dude-gremlins. Lately, when I show up at the page, fully present, well, that’s sweet success.

Can you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

I took an online course last year from one of your editors—Katie Riegel—that really jump-started my excitement about dog writing because Katie is such a supportive, insightful editor and teacher. (If you’ve been wounded by workshops, study with Katie; she’s a healer!) I finished several dachshund essays in her course. My super-senior tube of fur Tootsie is my writing muse. I am currently obsessed with dogs in literature.

But, again, lately what I find most thrilling about writing is the way close reading great books makes one a more fully realized writer. A few recent reads: Ibram X. Kendi’s Stamped from the Beginning: The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America. Alyson Hagy’s Scribe. Hagy is a consummate artist. Every word, a choice. Same with Jo Scott-Coe and her nonfiction book Mass: A Sniper, A Father, and a Priest.

I’m also incredibly excited that my former mentee Sophia (and now colleague!) through AWP’s Writer-to-Writer program has a memoir: Sophia Kouidou-Giles, Return to Thessaloniki—published by Tyrfi Press in Greek and forthcoming in English from She Writes Press in 2021. It’s inspiring to see the fruition of Sophia’s intense labor.

Who is your favorite author?

Two current favorites: Holly M. Wendt and Masha Gessen. I want everyone to read Circe by Madeline Miller. I always return to Tolstoy’s War & Peace and Homer’s The Iliad. My favorite work of dog literature is Tibor Déry’s Niki: The Story of a Dog, translated by Edward Hyams.

What inspires you to write?

The possibility of creating art brings me great joy. I lost four special writer friends in 2019: each was central to my writing life, and I feel their absence acutely.

My undergraduate literature professor Robert A. Ferguson, who assured me I had it in me to write books. And Michael Steinberg and Ned Stuckey-French, two incredibly generous and kind writer-teacher-editors. Mike’s and Ned’s dedication to creative nonfiction has definitely influenced and inspired my approach to writing and to teaching. Both were incredibly kind and generous to me and to my work, and that kind of dialogue feels essential. And my dear friend and poet Danna Ephland—like me, also a former dancer. When it was still my M.F.A. thesis, Danna edited my book Body of a Dancer. She edited it again prior to publication by Etruscan Press, and then after publication she set up readings and workshops. After my mum died (my mum was also a writer), Danna was one of the writers I would phone or email in desperation or excitement about a word choice or an image fail or a creative possibility. I’m indebted to her. I miss her.

These writers inform and inspire my current writing practice.

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What is your favorite sweet?

Since we live in Switzerland, I am devoted to Swiss chocolate: Sprüngli and Max Chocolatier and Chocolat Stella are my current favorites. Chocolat Stella makes fabulous vegan chocolate, and their Ticino stores are full of essentials for writing toolkits.

Thank you, Renée, for taking the time to reconnect with us. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

Sweet Connections: Lisa Rhoades

Each week we will be connecting with our contributors showing where they have been, where they are now, and what’s up for the future.

Name: Lisa Rhoades
Title of Piece Published in Sweet: “The Words at Hand”
Issue: 10.1

1580216365775_lisa29116865196518663532.jpgFind Her:
Instagram
Lisa can be found either on Staten Island or in Manhattan. Her Staten Island days are her writing days. Though when Lisa’s in the middle of a new poem she can be found scribbling on several forms of transportation and through her lunch break. You can learn more about Lisa by visiting her website.

What are some major accomplishments you have had since your Sweet publication?

Publishing at Sweet marked the happy start of a time period in which several individual poems found their literary homes online and in print and which culminated with the publication of my second full length collection, The Long Grass, at Saint Julian Press. (February, 2020). screenshot_20200128-075811_dropbox8184810032584443672.jpgCan you tell us about a current/ongoing project that you’re excited about?

There was a long dry spell for me following my first collection, so I’m happy to say that the project I’m excited about right now is simply WRITING! The landscape of southern Missouri where my father grew up and where I spent most childhood summers, and of the north shore of Staten Island where I currently live are the site of several new poems, but it’s too early to tell if they will remain a focus.

Who is your favorite author?

I’m so in love with Ross Gay right now—The Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude and the Book of Delights. I love and aspire to the lyric, to the deep “yes” at the end of a poem that brings it all together.

What inspires you to write?

What inspires me to write is often another poem, which is another way of saying human relationships and the conversations between us in person and across time. And I suppose given how many of the poems in the second book are about mothering, I should also probably admit that the complicated work of parenthood gives me more ground than I can possibly cover.

What is your favorite sweet?

My favorite sweets are the ones I make for others and are seasonal in their delight: pecan pie at Thanksgiving; my grandmother’s white fruitcake and datebread every Christmas; King Cake during Mardi Gras season; and iced sugar cookies for spring and Easter. The cookie recipe is crazy simple, leaving you with plenty of energy for decorating.
Cut out cookies:
Cream one stick of butter with one cup of sugar. Beat in one egg, one tsp vanilla, ½ tsp salt, 1/2 tsp baking powder and 2 cups all purpose flour. Form into a disc, double wrap in plastic wrap and chill until ready to use. Roll out to desired thickness, cut with a favorite shape, and re-chill before baking until golden in a 350 degree oven. Baking on a silpat or parchment paper keeps them from sticking. Cool completely on a baking rack, store in an airtight container until decorated. Regarding decorating, buttercream is my favorite icing, but if you’re going for looks, you have to accept royal.

Thank you, Lisa, for taking the time to reconnect with us. We look forward to seeing more of your work in the future!

 

 

 

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