Opportunities for sharing your work abound. This page is updated frequently - please check back often.

Ongoing Projects (no deadline)| January | February | March | April | May | June | July | August | September | October | November | December 

Deadline for NZPS Magazine, a fine line:  7 October

Best New Zealand Poems 2011

Ongoing (Final deadline: 19 December)
Bernadette Hall, the editor of this year's Best NZ Poems (2011), is asking poets to send her a copy of any poems that are published in the year, January to early December. Please send the material as an attachment, Word document. Include the location of its publication, title, date, page number, IBSN number etc (as appropriate). E: bernadette.hall@vuw.ac.nz

Writer in Residence, Auckland

Application deadline: 10 October
The Michael King Writers' Centre is calling for applications from New Zealand writers for four supported residencies in 2012 that aim to support New Zealand writers and promote development of high-quality writing through an opportunity to devote themselves to a major project.

Writers selected get free accommodation at the Michael King Writers' Centre in Devonport, use of the writer's studio and stipend. There are four residencies:

1. The Summer Residency, eight weeks from January 9 (stipend $8,000);

2. The Autumn Residency, eight weeks from March 14 (stipend $8,000);

3. The Maori Writer's Residency, eight weeks from May 16 (stipend $8,000);

4. The University of Auckland Residency, six months from July 12 (stipend/salary of $30,000), to coincide with the University's second semester.

1, 2 & 3 are open to emerging or established writers. 4 is for an established author to benefit from an academic environment. Writers must be working on a specific project in fiction, poetry, drama or non-fiction.

Open to all, and residencies are supported by Creative New Zealand. For details and an application go to www.writerscentre.org.nz/how_to_apply.php.

The centre is also able to assist writers who don't qualify for its supported residency programme. A second bedroom is let at a modest rate to visiting writers who need a quiet place to work. For further information please call manager Karren Beanland -ph/fax 09 445 8451 or send an e-mail to administrator@writerscentre.org.nz.

Voice Workshop, Wellington

Thursday 20 October, 7.30pm-10.30pm
The Band Rotunda, Oriental Parade (beneath the Fisherman's Table restaurant)

Want to read your poetry in public and worried that you'll dry up? The NZ Poetry Society presents Harry Laing, Australian poet and teacher. Harry will be leading a workshop aimed at giving you confidence to share your work at open mics, guest readings, or any other event where you might be called upon to 'stand and deliver'. Even if you are already doing this, the course will help you enhance your public performance.

Cost is $60 ($50 for NZPS members). Places are strictly limited, so book soon by contacting Laurice Gilbert: info@poetrysociety.org.nz

Writer in Residence, Hamilton

Applications close: 21 October
Each year the University of Waikato invites applications for the position of Writer in Residence, tenable for twelve months normally from February. The emolument is currently $45,000, jointly funded by the University of Waikato and Creative New Zealand. The position is open to poets, novelists, short story writers, dramatists, and writers of serious non-fiction. The appointment will be made on the basis of a record of publications of high quality.

The Writer is required to live in Hamilton during the tenure of the award. There are no teaching or lecturing duties attached to the award, the sole purpose of which is to give the writer the freedom to write. It is expected the Writer will participate in the cultural life of the University. On occasion the writer will be able to take up residence in and make use of the Michael King Writers Retreat in Opoutere.

Ref. 310218. All enquiries to Dr Sarah Shieff, ph 07 8562889 x8425, email: sshieff@waikato.ac.nz.

Master of Creative Writing, Massey University

Applications close: 31 October
Massey lecturers understand that writers need diversity to survive and grow which is why the School of English and Media Studies offers a Master of Creative Writing (MCW) paper that covers multiple genres.

Students can study fiction, poetry, playwriting, screenwriting or creative non-fiction in a programme that differs from others due to variety and because it is distance learning.

The full time extramural programme consists of a 120-credit thesis for students who have completed papers in creative writing at undergraduate and honours level.

Students are supervised by the well qualified and respected team of tutors made up of published and award winning writers and practising teachers Thom Conroy, Angie Farrow, Ingrid Horrocks and Bryan Walpert.

"This is a paper for established writers that have a Bachelor of Arts with Honours, Postgraduate Diploma in Arts or equivalent in Creative Writing, plus a suitable portfolio of published work," said Dr Farrow. These prerequisites also set it apart from other Master's programmes.

The programme was launched at the end of last year and this year's students are coming to the end of their first year of study.

Entry closes on 31 October 2011 for the 2012 enrolment and there is a compulsory writers' residential course in June/July at Palmerston North.

For more information on the course go to: www.massey.ac.nz/massey/learning/programme-course-paper/programme.cfm?prog_id=93463

REM Magazine - submissions

Deadline: 1 November
Our interest is in experimental aesthetic. Poetry and fiction should challenge contemporary literary systems. Likewise, we seek clever, insightful articles on experimental film, books, literary theory, interviews and creative happenings in the community.

We accept poetry, fiction, non-fiction, essays, images, reviews on film, books, art, comics, graphics or installations. Cross genres, cross medias are welcome. At the moment, we cannot accept sound-files or moving picture files.

Poetry: visual, free-form, concrete, asemic, vispo - this medium is flexible, so experiment! Send up to five poems. Short stories: 1500 words MAX. Images must be at a minimum resolution of 300DPI.

For submission guidelines see http://remmagazine.net/submissions/

The New Writer magazine, Prose and Poetry Prizes 2011 (USA)

Closing date: 30 November
Established in 1997, one of the major annual international competitions for short stories, microfiction, single poems, poetry collections, essays and articles; offers cash prizes as well as publication for the prize-winning writers in The Collection, special edition of The New Writer magazine. Back copies of recent issues of The Collection are available at the TNW website as well as single copies of the latest issue (current copy) TNW 106: http://www.thenewwriter.com/subscribe.htm

Further information on the annual Prose & Poetry Prizes including guidelines and entry fees at: http://www.thenewwriter.com/prizes.htm
Writers can enter online at our secure credit card server at: http://www.thenewwriter.com/entryform.htm
Or, the entry form can also be downloaded from that page on the website and sent in the post with your entry.

The winners of the 2010 Prose & Poetry Prizes are listed on this webpage: http://www.thenewwriter.com/prizewinners.htm

Silver Boomer Books - Call for Submissions (USA)

Submission Period: 1 December 2011-30 March 2012
A new Silver Boomer Books anthology will deal with the theme of widowhood. Working title is: On Our Own -- widowhood for smarties.
Please visit http://silverboomerbooks.com/submissions.html and read all the way to the end of the page for full guidelines. Note that the new anthology is scheduled to be released in late 2012. As always, we want your poems and short essays on the theme, but don't forget that short fiction is also welcome. 

Writers Retreat, Golden Bay

A large, quiet Lodge on land bordering The Kahurangi National Park in Golden Bay is at present unused and offered  (for a low rental) to writers looking for quiet surroundings in what is considered to be one of the most beautiful places in NZ. Available for short term rental (1-6 months) while you work on a project. Details and photos of the lodge can be found on the Lodge's facebook page: facebook : Happisam Lodge.

Rental will be around $120 - $140 a week plus power, negotiable in hardship cases. There is no phone in the Lodge (but there is coverage on the Telecom mobile network, not Vodafone) and therefore no broadband. No TV. Average Radio reception. Its incredibly quiet and peaceful. For enquiries email melwanda@ihug.co.nz

Writers Retreat, Wairarapa

New Pacific Studio: artist residency in historic house next to wildlife centre 20 mins north of Masterton, invites applications from writers for weekend (3 night $90) or weekday(4 night $110) residencies. Sleeps 7 in main house and cottage, ideal for workshops. Fine library, internet connection.

www.newpacificstudio.org  email newpacificstudio@xtra.co.nz

10X10 (UK)

An irregular email magazine, containing 10 poems by 10 poets. After publication the poems are republished as part of the Poetry Kit Magazine. To be considered for 10x10 please send up to six poems to info@poetrykit.org, using the subject line "submission 10x10" 

Caught In The Net Featured Poet Series (UK)

CITN is a two weekly email mag with an online archive. Dedicated to presenting the best in contemporary poetry CITN currently is featuring an individual poet in each edition.

To be considered please send one poem, plus a bio to info@poetrykit.org with the subject heading "CITN Submission"

Website: http://www.poetrykit.org/pkl/CITN/caughtin.htm

Danse Macabre (USA)

An online journal with a slightly quirky look that's worth investigating. See: http://dansemacabre.art.officelive.com/default.aspx

Eclecticism - e-zine submissions (Australia)

Eclecticism is an Australian e-zine determined to present the work of a growing creative community. It is free to download and read. As the name suggests, Eclecticism aims to draw a diverse range of creative minds, styles and genres. The first issue was released late July 2007. Each issue has themed and open sections, and we are currently seeking contributions from writers of prose and poetry, illustrators/artists, and beat-musicians. Eclecticism is free - a non-profit e-zine that hopes to showcase current writers, expose emerging writers and artists and provide an avenue for those with one or two stories within them. It is available to download (PDF format) from the website. Readers are encouraged to subscribe to the e-zine to build its fan base and be the first to receive notification of each issue's release. - Craig Bezant [Editor] on behalf of Eclecticism. http://www.eclecticzine.com

The Electronic Poetry Network (USA)

The EPN is Looking for Your and Your Poems
If you wish to have your poems considered for The Electronic Poetry Network, please send 5-10 short poems (no longer than about 50 words each) to ccolon@shreve-lib.org The poems do not need to be haiku. They just need to be short and suitable for the general public. Previously published poems are acceptable. The poetry on the Electronic Poetry Network is displayed all day or all weekend long on an electronic message board, which is located on the first floor of the Main Branch of Shreve Memorial Library, Shreveport, Louisiana. We also post the poems on our newly updated web site: http://www.shreve-lib.org/images/Poem.htm The site features a week's worth of poems. In addition, the "Poem of the Day" is e-mailed to poetry lovers in our 20-branch library system. http://www.shreve-lib.org/poemofday.htm

the fib review (online, USA)

The Fibonacci poem is a short poetry 6-line poetry form that is based on the structure of the Fibonacci sequence. For those unfamiliar with the Fibonacci Sequence, it is a mathematical sequence in which every figure is the sum of the two preceding it. Thus, you begin with 1 and the sequence follows as such: 1+1=2; then in turn 1+2=3; then 2+3=5; then 3+5=8 and so on. The poetry sequence therefore consists of six lines of 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, and 8, with each number representing the number of syllables that a writer places in each line of the poem. For literary purposes the standard sequence usually stops at 8 syllables, but many poets have experimented with poems that go well into higher digits, or poems that are a reversed sequence. As a literary device, it is used as a formatted pattern in which one can offer meaning in any organized way, providing the number sequence remains the constancy of the form.

The subject of the Fibonacci poem has no restriction, but the difference between a good fib and a great fib is the poetic element that speaks to the reader. No longer just a fun form to write as a math student, the poets who write good Fibonacci poems have replaced the ‘geek' with the poet.

You may submit to The Fib Review by sending your Fibonacci poems, narratives, or experiments to musepiepress@aol.com.

Make sure that what you send is your best work. Please also make sure to type in the subject line "For The Fib Review." Submit the poems only in the body of the e-mail in plain text. No submission e-mails will be accepted with attachments. If for some reason your work is long and attachments might be necessary, contact the editor, Mary-Jane Grandinetti, at the above e-mail address first so that a plan can be formulated to receive your submission.

The Fib Review will accept submissions year-round and will publish accepted submissions in three issues to be published over the course of a calendar year.

Fractured West (USA)

Fractured West, a new journal of flash fiction, prose poetry, microfiction, sudden fiction, vignettes, and short short stories, seeks submissions up to 500 words for its premiere issue. Enter by email. Send only one entry and wait for a decision before sending another. Submissions accepted year-round. Editors say, "We like: Honesty, fury, humiliation, and unusual beauty; stories that hurt to write, that are uncomfortable to read; literary, genre, and experimental/non-narrative works." See website at http://fracturedwest.com/

The Great American Poetry Show (USA)

- is a hardcover serial poetry anthology open year-round to submissions of poems in English on any subject and in any style, length and number with a SASE. Email poems only by one attachment to: info@tgaps.net. We have three editors who can handle a lot of submissions. So please send us a lot of poems.

If we do not accept your poems, please send us another group to go through. Simultaneous submissions and previously published poems are welcome. Response time is usually 1-3 months but can take much longer if we get sidetracked doing other things in our busy lives. If you submit poems to us and don't hear back from us in three months, please contact us to find out what's happening with your submission.

Each contributor receives one free copy of the volume in which his/her work appears. Volume 2 is scheduled to appear in June, 2009. Please take a look at our website where you can preview Volume 1 of TGAPS and also purchase a hardcover copy for $US35 or an ebook copy for $US7.50. *The ebook is priced especially low for use in poetry and creative-writing classes. * Also take a look at our links page with hundreds of interesting sites to visit. And please use our message boards where you can view interviews, reviews, essays, articles, and recommended poetry books. Larry Ziman - tgaps

Volume 2 of the Great American Poetry Show is now taking submissions by email info@tgaps.net and by regular mail at:

The Great American Poetry Show
P.O. Box 69506
West Hollywood, California 90069

Check out the colourful website at www.tgaps.net

Hue & Cry

Hue & Cry, whose founding editor is Chloe Lane, is the hot new 'literary slash art journal' on the book scene in New Zealand, established in 2007. Guidelines can be found on the website: http://www.hueandcry.org.nz/about.html

 

The International Association of Poets, Essayists & Novelists (IAPEN) - call for submissions (India)

The IAPEN, India, sponsored international literary journal Kohinoor invites poems, short stories, book reviews, research papers and interviews globally from reputed scholars with short literary achievements, for publication. Email for prompt reply: arbind442002@yahoo.co.in or kohnoor@rediffmail.com (sic)

Interlitq (USA)

The International Literary Quarterly, formerly publishing by invitation only, is now open to unsolicited submissions. Details at: http://interlitq.wordpress.com/2011/01/16/interlitq-now-considering-unsolicited-submissions/ The journal itself is at: http://interlitq.org/ Our own Siobhan Harvey is one of the Contributing Editors.

Iota (UK)

Iota welcomes submissions, annual subscriptions from individuals and institutions as well as purchases of single issues.

Further information is available on the Iota website here: http://www.iotamagazine.co.uk/

Postal submissions, correspondence, and purchase orders should be sent to:
Iota Magazine
PO BOX 7721
Matlock
DE4 9DD

e: info@templarpoetry.co.uk

Ka Mate Ka Ora: A New Zealand Journal Of Poetry and Poetics

An online magazine which publishes two issues per year (September and March). Contributions of theoretical and analytic essays, comment, extended reviews, archival research, and close reading are welcome at any time. Ka Mate Ka Ora is edited by Murray Edmond, with Assistant Editors Hilary Chung and Michele Leggott. Please send to m.edmond@auckland.ac.nz and, for guidance with style, consult the Ka Mate Ka Ora site at www.nzepc.auckland.ac.nz/kmko
* Readers can now subscribe to a Ka Mate Ka Ora journal newsletter. Email Murray Edmond for more information. 

The Lumiere Reader looking for submissions

The Lumiere Reader (www.lumiere.net.nz/reader) is seeks submissions of previously unpublished short fiction and poetry "of all styles and subject matter" for a regular creative writing feature. Fiction submissions should be no longer than 2000 words, and poetry submissions no more than five poems. The Lumiere Reader's books section is edited by 2006 MA graduate Amy Brown, who also co-edited Turbine 06 and was a major contributor to Salient's book review pages in 2007. Email amycbrown@myfastmail.com with any questions or submissions. (IIML newsletter)

MAI Review, Call for submissions from Writers on Māori and Indigenous Development

The Journal aims to publish quality material that contributes to the body of knowledge about Māori and Indigenous development. It aims to do so in a way that also assists in advancing the capabilities of Māori and Indigenous people who are engaged in research and scholarly training. The Journal is totally electronic and features articles, peer commentaries, reports, a workshop corner, along with opportunities for posting comments and for engaging in online dialogue.

A key objective is to focus on knowledge that facilitates and fosters capacity and capability building for Māori and Indigenous people. This focus is seen as encompassing pre-doctoral and doctoral levels and beyond to include career development, leadership and mentoring.

A parallel objective is to provide material that supports capability building and assists researchers and students whatever the context of their work. Such contexts will include local, Iwi, institutional, national and international perspectives.

A particular objective is to disseminate information and ideas relating to capability building as widely as possible and in a way that encourages discussion and sharing through the MAI Korero section of the Journal.

There are three main issues per year (April, August, December). These issues may be supplemented by special issues from time to time. www.review.mai.ac.nz

POETRY:

So, now MAI Review Journal will move into the field of poetry submitted by indigenous poets...submitted to the Poetry Editor at rapatahana@hotmail.com - up to four previously unpublished poems, please. Our first issue featuring poetry was in August 2010, and work from poets such as Robert Sullivan, David Eggleton, Briar Wood, Doug Poole, Serie Barford, Brian Potiki, Reihana Robinson, Michael O'Leary...the aim is to also publish in hard copy.

Other Poetry (UK)

Go to http://www.otherpoetry.com/ Other Poetry is published three times per year, welcomes new and established poets, and accepts e-mail enquiries. Writer's guidelines are online and payment is £5 (US$9.66). There is no restriction on theme, subject, length, or style. Allow six weeks for a reply.

Poems Wanted

Poesy, a quality focused wholesale company producing gourmet food products, requires poems. "As our name suggests, as well as being about food we are about poetry. We combine the two by placing small cards containing poems inside the packets of food we produce. We have the potential to publish a large amount of poems in this way and are welcoming submissions.The poems need to be 10 lines or less. We pay anthology rates." For more information contact Alex at alex@poesy.co.nz

Poetry24 (UK)

... is a contemporary cureent affairs poetry blog, launched by Martin Hodges and Clare Kirwan. The aim is simple: to publish news-related or topical poetry that reflects what's happening in the world, or current affairs.

See details at: http://poetry-24.blogspot.com/

Poetry Ark (USA)

Literary forum edited by Dirt Press founder Brian Lemond and writer William Keens offers over $2,000 in prizes for poems featured on the site, as determined by reader vote. Previously published work accepted. The work they accept is more sophisticated than the typical offerings at amateur poetry forums. http://www.poetryark.org/ 

Poetry Sz: demystifying mental illness

Submissions accepted year-round.
We are calling for original, previously unpublished poetry written by people who have experienced mental illness. Poems of all topics and styles are welcome. Website: http://poetrysz.blogspot.com Submission guidelines at http://www.poetrysz.blogspot.com/2006/04/submission-guidelines.html

Send 4-6 poems and a short bio in the body of your email to poetrysz@yahoo.com

Prima Storia

A new literary and art magazine is calling for innovative and talented writers of good quality to contribute. The web-site is: http://primastoria.com/. It is a web journal and the editors are enthusiastic and committed. One of the co-editors, William Robertson, is the son of NZPS member and 2nd Prize winner of our 2008 International Poetry Competition (Open Section), Elizabeth Robertson.

Public Programme Opportunities, Auckland 

Public Programmes at Auckland Art Gallery, Toi o Tâmaki would like to offer New Zealand writers, poets, authors and illustrators of children's books the opportunity to either launch, read or draw from their new publication at the Gallery.

The readings would be -
• either located in the exhibition spaces or in the Art Lounge at our relocation site - the New Gallery, corner of Wellesley and Lorne Streets
• free to the public
• ideally scheduled on a Sunday to maximize an audience.

The Gallery offers to -
• promote the event via our html eNews email newsletter (currently going out just over 11,000 subscribers)
• design and print a colour promotional A4 flyer for our information desk and for you to distribute to your own network as either a hard copy or electronically as a pdf.
• list the session on our website
• sell any publications with no commission

As part of our public programmes you would have free access to the Art Lounge, which has a screen, data projector, DVD player and laptop connection.

We also run KidsClub, a one hour children's programme for 5 to 10 year olds, every Sunday at 11am and 2pm. This is an excellent arena in which to conduct readings of children's book or illustration demonstrations and of course encourage the purchase of the books.

Please note that to be part of a public programme any launch, reading etc must occur between 10am to 5pm and be free and open to the public.
After 5pm access to any Gallery space comes under the jurisdiction of our venue hire coordinator.

If you would like to be involved please contact Kim as soon as possible: Kim O'Loughlin, Curator, Public Programmes, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tâmaki ph 09 307 7476 e kim.oloughlin@aucklandcity.govt.nz

Shot Glass Journal (Online, USA)

Submissions are welcome year-round.
You may submit to Shot Glass Journal by sending any short poetry that is under sixteen lines to musepiepress@aol.com Short poetry can include short form poetry, free verse and prose poetry. Prose poetry should not exceed ten lines. All poems must be the original, unpublished work of the submitter.

Make sure that what you send is your best work. Please also make sure to type in the subject line "For Shot Glass Journal." Submit the poems only in the body of the e-mail in plain text. No submission e-mails will be accepted with attachments. If for some reason attachments might be necessary, contact the editor, Mary-Jane Grandinetti, at the above e-mail address first so that a plan can be formulated to receive your submission. www.musepiepress.com/shotglass

Shot Glass Journal will accept submissions year-round and will publish accepted submissions in two issues to be published over the course of a calendar year.

Takahe

Published three times a year. Publishes short stories, poetry and art by established and emerging writers and artists as well as essays and interviews (by invitation), and book reviews in these related areas. "Grants from Creative New Zealand Toi Aotearoa have enabled us to make a small payment to local writers and poets for work published. Overseas contributors receive a year's subscription to the magazine." Guidelines: http://www.takahe.org.nz/submissions.php

Tabletop Greeting Cards (USA)

We are representing a Greeting Card company who is interested in reviewing writings for publication on greeting cards. We are looking for freelance writings capable of writing highly original and creative submissions on friendship, family, special occasions, positive living, and other topics one person might want to share with another person. Submissions may also be considered for inclusion in printed book anthologies. We pay up to $300 per poem for all rights to publish it on a greeting card and $50 if your poem is used only in an anthology. Please note that this is a call for submissions rather than a traditional position. We are looking for authors who have the ability to express emotion into words that other people don't always know how to express. If you feel that you have the necessary skills please email us a short poem on love for a hypothetical Greeting Card for lovers. Please note that your poem will not be used, or distributed in any way unless we offer you the job and decide to use the poem on an actual greeting card.
http://www.freelancejobopenings.com/job/1a5b2cce9003d0497d63b8dc11b8e7a5/?d=1&source=rss_page

The Threepenny Review (USA)

Quarterly Literary Magazine. Critical articles should be about 1500 to 3000 words, stories and memoirs 4000 words or less. Pays $US400 per story or article, $US200 per poem. Go to: http://www.threepennyreview.com/submissions.html 

Tuesday Poems

The Tuesday Poem is an initiative that creates a kind of open-mike session in cyberspace each Tuesday morning. Poets post poems first thing in the morning (or last thing Monday night) then link to each other and ‘pop in and out of each other's poems all day', as initiator Mary McCallum describes it, as well as being visited by other readers. Mary's inviting other poets to join in: visit the blog at www.tuesdaypoem.blogspot.com to find out how.

Tyneside Poets - Call for submissions from New Zealand Poets

Poet Dave Freeman, in association with the NZPS, invites New Zealand poets to submit to the Tyneside Poets blog: "The 'we' is me and fellow blog editor Keith Armstrong. We met back in the mid-1970s through a group of writers styling themselves as the Tyneside poets. We produced a reasonably regular journal, Poetry North East, and performed readings in pubs, clubs, at festivals and on local radio. The group ran its course and we all moved on to other things. A few of us continued writing and maintained informal links. Then a couple of years ago www.poetrytyneside.blogspot.com was born, initially to archive on-line material from PNE, copies of which are archived at Durham University. However, we soon began to use the blog as a vehicle for former Tyneside Poets to post current work as well.

"From the 1970s onwards the TP had international connections in Europe, so as I was going to NZ it seemed a good idea to form links there as well. Thus our invitation for submissions. Hopefully it will be fruitful collaboration."

Send 2 or 3 poems in a Word attachment to: tynesidesubs@hotmail.co.uk As always, we advise you to visit the site before submitting, to see what kind of poetry they publish.

Weirdyear Daily Flash Fiction (USA)

Online journal publishes flash fiction, poetry, and hybrid experimental fiction on a daily basis. Humor, fantasy, sci-fi, and other genres are welcome. Website: http://www.weirdyear.com/

Wet Ink (Australia)

Australian based journal Wet Ink accepts submissions on a regular basis. Poets who have work accepted are paid ($50). All submissions have to be previously unpublished and not currently under consideration elsewhere. Submissions should be made in hard copy, but if a piece is accepted you will be asked to re-send it as a MS Word document by email. For poetry:

• Please send no more than three poetry submissions.
• Only hard copies considered.
• Include a cover letter with the title of your work plus all contact details for each submission.
• Put your name on the cover letter but NOT on the poem.
• Include date and line count.
• Text should be in Times New Roman 12pt.

Submission criteria appear here: http://www.wetink.com.au/assets/pdfs/Wetink_submit_write.pdf

Writers' standard form covering letter should be used with submissions: http://www.wetink.com.au/assets/pdfs/Wetinkcoverletter.pdf

 

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