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pays. So far this year, I’ve had two poems accepted by two magazines I’ve been trying to get into for ages. Years in fact. Happy just isn’t the word!

The first one is Magma, a UK-based magazine publishing three themed issues a year, each with a different editor. The theme of the issue my poem will appear in is ‘Work’ due out next month, and was inspired by a bee colony that took refuge on the side of the building where I work while it scouted for a new home. I took the draft to one of my poetry groups and half-hardheartedly included it in the suite of poems I submitted. When told it had been longlisted late last year I was thrilled, as this was the furthest any of my poems had got with Magma. So, you can imagine my reaction when it made the final cut.

The second publication is Cordite, an online magazine here in Australia based in Victoria. Like Magma, Cordite has themed issues, with the occasional no-theme one, and a different editor each time. My poem, ‘Every other Friday’, appeared in the ‘Monster’ issue edited by Nathan Curnow this month and was published on my brother’s birthday, which was apt seeing as he featured in it. This is quite an old poem that I wrote back when we were living in London and again, I included it in my submission on the off-chance it might resonate. It did.

So, is this luck, timing or perseverance? I think all three. Poetry is incredibly subjective and what one editor disregards, another selects. I remember a blog by Kim Moore, a UK-based poet, who shared her experience of finally getting into The Rialto. The message is, never give up.  And the irony is, I’m appearing in the next issue of Mslexia, another magazine I’ve been trying to get into for years, albeit with one sentence about this very thing.

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J V Birch

Singing in the shallows

The Amphibian Literary Journal

for the culturally amphibious

Whitmore Press

Publishers of fine contemporary Australian poetry

Claw & Blossom

human nature, natural world

Poetry in Process

Understanding poetic process from inspiration to final edit

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Where poetry meets purpose

Wakefield Press

Wakefield Press blog

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Poetry from a body shaped like a question mark.

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an independent, international literary magazine

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Short fiction, non-fiction and poetry

mistakenforarealpoet

odd posts from an occasional poet (or vice versa)

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Cath Drake writing & communications

This site has been archived. Please head over to: https://cathdrake.com/

The Bell Jar

Projects and news from UK writer Jo Bell