Episode 51: Litmag special with Ari Baum-Hommes, Tania Nwachukwu, & Corinne Manning
Today we bring you readings from three excellent independent literary magazines: NOÖ, Synaesthesia, and Moss, with short prose from Ari Baum-Hommes, a poem from Tania Nwachukwu, and an excerpt from a short story from Corinne Manning. (Read the rest of that story here.)
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As always, if you’d leave a rating & review in iTunes, your life will be, litmag-like, full of diverse writing with a coherent point of view, interspersed with provocative moments of visual art.
Ari Baum-Hommes is originally from the mystical land of Western Massachusetts. Her fiction has appeared in Two Serious Ladies and Right Hand Pointing. She lives in Minneapolis now, near many, many lakes. twitter: @going_homes
Tania Nwachukwu is a Nigerian writer born and raised in London. She is a member of the Barbican Young Poets collective. Her work has been published in various publications, and performed to audiences across the UK and Nigeria. When she’s not writing, she’s on Skyscanner plotting her next escape. TaniaNwachukwu.Tumblr.com
Corinne Manning is the founding editor of The James Franco Review, an online journal dedicated to the visibility of underrepresented artists. Her writing has appeared in such publications as Story Quarterly, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, The Nervous Breakdown, The Oxford American, Arts & Letters, and Lit Hub, and as a chapbook through alice blue review’s Shotgun Wedding Series. She co-runs The Furnace Reading Series in Seattle, teaches for Writers in the Schools, and is a 2016 Jack Straw Writers Fellow. http://corinnemanning.tumblr.com/
NOÖ Journal is a free literary print/online journal distributed all over. We are invested in making inclusive and collaborative community in independent literature and art. We put out guest-edited issues called NOÖ Weeklies that in no way can be said to come out weekly.
Synaesthesia Magazine is an online literary and arts magazine, criss-crossing senses worldwide. The magazine aims to engage writers and artists in an exploration of the senses, publishing poetry, short stories, creative nonfiction, photography and artwork. We set a theme for each issue, and encourage a multi-sensory response to each theme.
Moss is a journal of Northwest writing, dedicated to bringing Northwest literature to new audiences and exposing the emerging voices of the region to new readers, critics, and publishers. Moss is a community-first project; every issue is made available online for free, we don’t charge submission fees, and we pay every writer we publish. In January, we released our first print anthology, which is now available on our website and in select bookstores.