Wednesday, January 07, 2026

Ongoing notes: early January, 2026: Jed Munson, Nick Hedtke + Leilei Chen,

New year, new beginnings. Our small one changed her hair, for example. She now has bangs. I think she looks like Betty from the Archie Comics, or, as spouse suggests, Tina Yothers’ character from those early days of Family Ties (1982-1989). Whatever happens, Aoife is ready to face the day.

Behind on my chapbook reviewing (as I am behind on all things—behind on more things than can be dreamed of, in your philosophy), so attempting to catch up a bit, here.

Brooklyn NY: I hadn’t heard anything from or by American poet Jed Munson since producing a chapbook of theirs a couple of years back, so it was good to get my hands on Vision Sans Seraphim (Brooklyn NY: Beautiful Days Press, 2025), produced as “Beautiful Days Press #11,” although there have apparently been some other titles I’ve missed as well, including the prose collection Commentary on the Birds (Rescue Press, 2023), and chapbooks Portrait with Parkinson’s (Oxeye Press, 2023) and Minesweeper (New Michigan Press/DIAGRAM, 2023), as well as his prior chapbook, Newsflash Under Fire, Over the Shoulder (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2021). Clearly I am quite behind.

O, I heard the choir’s
          down
a voice again
a visa

bounced
or the voice stopped wanting to 

dream this dream. The pews are filled
with benchwarmers, O 

it’s easy
to go out as a heat
            into any old wind (“Centers”)

Composing an exploratory lyric across love, interiority and elements of faith, Vision San Seraphim is a collection set as three sections, each titled “O”—the first two as clusters of extended lyrics, and closing with the title poem. Munson’s poems are stretched, fragmented and gestural, as each poem-section, as most poems or poem-fragments begin with a gesture, an aside, perhaps, that opening “O.” “O, I don’t know this instrument,” the opening poem, “Centers,” begins, “but I’ve been playing it all morning.” There’s such lovely pacing on these pages, in these lines, one that I wouldn’t mind hearing read/performed, how the gestures of the lyric are clearly set on each page. “O I’m no Lazarus. // I’m just kicking // severed fish tails into / the rails just trying to // slip one through the rails [.]”

America, somewhere: I’m intrigued by Nick Hedtke’s chapbook, THE YEARS, produced “in an undisclosed number of copies” by b l u s h in summer 2025, as part of their “i l l i c i t  z i n e s” series. Beyond the fact that author and publisher both reside in the United States, I can’t seem to find anything any more specific than that, which is fine enough, sure. These thirteen poems are interesting for their pacing, their purposeful movement, offering point, point and then point. With titles including “Recurring Themes,” “John Invents Black & Blue,” “Learning to Fly,” “Album of the Year” and “The Frontier Period,” there’s an intriguing element of how Hedtke utilizes these titles as umbrellas or tethers, providing a kind of anchor across the narrative of each piece, some of which he is also completely allowed to ignore. “the music is fading // but still inspiring,” the poem “Blood Fest 2009” writes, “the way we move // these night moves [.]” Or the poem “Animal Sounds,” that begins: “people were asking if I was okay // that’s the power of blood // I used to have long hair // that’s the feeling of sadness // under a camouflage tent [.]” Hedtke’s directions are both straightforward and slightly curved, providing an almost-surrealism, or even a hint of something else, other. There’s so much else composed in the spaces around these short lines.

American Awesome

I had classic experiences 

my shirt off in bed

hanging off the bed a little bit 

if you put every painting on earth side by side

that would be cool 

like loving an animal in the woods you’ll never see

maximum heart

like a brand-new color

Edmonton AB: One of the latest titles by relatively new Edmonton chapbook publisher Agatha Press is Edmonton poet, translator and professor Leilei Chen’s latest, i give birth to my body (2025), a gracefully-produced title in an edition of one hundred copies. As the author’s foreword begins: “the verses here are the traces of a creative mind, of a chronically ailing body exacerbated by long covid. brain fog. fatigue. palpitation. headache. depression. for one day they’re part of me like a conjoined twin. for another they hit hard like a storm in deep mountains. poetry hums and sings. it comes and stays. spontaneously. i feel its healing power, my heart big with gratitude.” The poems here are concise, working slowly and purposefully through a way to reclaim agency. “this rejuvenating form breaks / free from shackles to save its warm heart,” the title poem closes, “to learn the baby steps of walk / with light strides and a tall spine / striving one day to stand on a cloud / a sailing boat on blue water [.]” Chen’s poems are delicate, finely-honed, moving carefully into and across a territory of reclaiming space, some of which hold elements of the moment, the koan, with other stretches pushing at the boundaries of possibility. These are poems that both take and hold time.

different reactions

trauma is common
our reactions are different 

some hide in the cave and turn dark
pity themselves and resent the world 

some learn its workings and grow wise
create poetry and inspire others

Tuesday, January 06, 2026

A ‘best of’ list of 2025 Canadian poetry books

Once more, I offer my annual list of the seemingly-arbitrary “worth repeating” (given ‘best’ is such an inconclusive, imprecise designation), constructed from the list of Canadian poetry titles I’ve managed to review throughout the past year. This is my fifteenth annual list [see also: 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011] since dusie-maven Susana Gardner originally suggested various dusie-esque poets write up their own versions of same, and I thank her both for the ongoing opportunity, and her original prompt. See the full thing over here.

My list this year includes works by: Joel Katelnikoff, Matthew Gwathmey, Michael Boughn, DM Bradford, Eva H.D., Em Dial, Tea Gerbeza, Oana Avasilichioaei, Monroe Lawrence, Sean Howard, Farah Ghafoor, Terese Mason Pierre, J.R. Carpenter, Anna Veprinska, Jake Byrne, Tolu Oloruntoba, Zane Koss, Adam Haiun, Mahaila Smith, Jessica Bebenek, Michael Chang, Jessica Popeski, Karen Solie, Jessi MacEachern, Kyo Lee, Cecily Nicholson, Junie Désil, Hajer Mirwali, Amy LeBlanc, Jeff Derksen, Natalie Lim, Jumoke Verissimo, Paul Vermeersch, Gillian Sze, Melanie Dennis Unrau, Steffi Tad-y, Isabella Wang, Guy Birchard, MA│DE, Qurat Dar, Anna Swanson, Jane Shi, Manahil Bandukwala, Emily Austin, Sabyasachi (Sachi) Nag, Stephanie Bolster, Christina Shah, Natalie Rice, Ronna Bloom, Khashayar “Kess” Mohammadi, Fenn Stewart, Rahat Kurd, Scott Jackshaw, Billy-Ray Belcourt, Drew McEwan, ryan fitzpatrick and Eric Schmaltz.


Monday, January 05, 2026

12 or 20 (second series) questions with Vera Hadzic

Vera Hadzic is a writer based on the unceded territory of the Anishinaabe Algonquin Nation in Ottawa, Ontario. Her poetry chapbook, Fossils You Can Swallow, was published by Proper Tales Press in 2023. She has an Honours BA in English and history from the University of Ottawa, and an MA in English Literature from Queen’s University. Her first full-length book, Several Small Animals Enclosed in a Benedictine Monastery, appeared from Anvil Press in fall 2025.

1 - How did your first book or chapbook change your life? How does your most recent work compare to your previous? How does it feel different?

My first chapbook, Fossils You Can Swallow, was the first time I got a sense that people I didn’t personally know were reading my work, and even owning physical copies of it. There was something very exciting about that, and because it was the first time I had taken a series of poems and worked on editing them into one collected thing, it motivated me to keep thinking about future collections. The same summer that the chapbook was out, I started thinking about my next project, which would become my most recent work, Several Small Animals Enclosed in a Benedictine Monastery. There are definitely similar poems in both works, and similar experimentations with form and subject matter, but I think the tone of the collections as a whole is quite different.

2 - How did you come to poetry first, as opposed to, say, fiction or non-fiction? 

One of the first poems that I remember writing was a Halloween poem about a haunted house for an English assignment in elementary school. We got to open up a document in the computer room and the whole class could work on their poems; I remember that it felt very easy to write, in the sense that the words just kept coming. My experience with poetry has remained similar—either the words don’t come, and I don’t succeed in writing a good poem, or the words come, and I get something I like on the page.

3 - How long does it take to start any particular writing project? Does your writing initially come quickly, or is it a slow process? Do first drafts appear looking close to their final shape, or does your work come out of copious notes? 

My writing initially comes pretty quickly, if I have an idea to run with. What takes longer is finding consistent time to keep writing, if it’s a longer project, or to edit, after I’ve gotten a first draft down. My first drafts often do look close to their final shape, with some exceptions. I find it hard to return to a piece after I’ve written it, so editing takes a strong surge of willpower, or an upcoming deadline (which is more common).

4 - Where does a poem or work of fiction usually begin for you? Are you an author of short pieces that end up combining into a larger project, or are you working on a "book" from the very beginning?

With my chapbook Fossils You Can Swallow, I didn’t intend any of those poems to make it into any kind of larger project until I was gathering them together and seeing how they fit together as a kind of miscellany. But with Several Small Animals, I was definitely working on a book project from the beginning. I actually had the title of the book before I had a single poem in it (including the poem which shares its title with the collection itself!). At the time, I was thinking through images of enclosed spaces like monasteries or convents, and of the ways that bodies are both enclosed and not, and how they can be put in these enclosures, too. It was a title that hit on all of that, and I wanted to keep building those throughlines and themes. For the next year or so, I wrote poems with an awareness of that, seeing what would fit into the manuscript and what wouldn’t.

5 - Are public readings part of or counter to your creative process? Are you the sort of writer who enjoys doing readings?

I love doing readings. I think I just love to stand in front of people and talk. A good reading makes me feel fulfilled; it satisfies something about me that loves to perform. Attending readings, just to hear others read, is also valuable to my process; if I haven’t been writing lately, hearing a good reading will make me want to.

6 - Do you have any theoretical concerns behind your writing? What kinds of questions are you trying to answer with your work? What do you even think the current questions are? 

Right now I keep coming back to two interests that are related. One of them concerns the nature of poetry and of language as a whole. Why is it that poetry as an art form seeks to complicate rather than simplify? What does it mean when poetry fails—is poetry always a failed attempt to say something about the world? My other concern has to do with the body. How does the human body come together, exist, live, love, hurt, and come apart? I’m interested in the body as a kind of container, for emotions and fluids and organs, but also a failing container, one which inevitably lets things slip. In this way, how is it like language?

The “I” in my poems is not always me, but lately I have also been experimenting with writing work that is more personal, and which addresses some of my own psychological and physiological concerns, including anxiety and obsessive compulsions.

7 – What do you see the current role of the writer being in larger culture? Do they even have one? What do you think the role of the writer should be?

I think writers help people feel invested in the world around them. It can be easy to develop a sense of apathy in our day-to-day lives, especially when living under the economic, social, political, and environmental conditions we are living in. It can be easy to feel like there are few individual actions we can take, or that those actions won’t matter in the face of large-scale climate disaster, fascism, genocide, and colonization. I think writers help us to be present. Even when we read books that take us out of our present reality, that are escapist or feel “light”, the act of reading and thinking helps us return to ourselves and remember how implicated we are in everything around us.

8 - Do you find the process of working with an outside editor difficult or essential (or both)?

Essential! I’m often initially unsure about edits, but when I take some time away and return to the piece, I always see that they’re integral to getting the central idea of the poem across. Working with Stuart on Several Small Animals has been such a privilege and has really tightened the collection up in ways that I couldn’t imagine going in. One of my favourite poems in the collection was much weaker before Stuart pushed me to rework it; the final product is, I think, so much stronger than the original attempt, and I’m so grateful for the push from Stuart which got the poem to that point.

9 - What is the best piece of advice you've heard (not necessarily given to you directly)? 

It’s not exactly a concrete piece of advice, but I encountered an idea that’s changed the way I see the world in Jennifer Baker’s course on poetics at the University of Ottawa, when we discussed what makes poetry different than prose. We talked about how poetry has a tendency to obscure what it wants to say. Thinking about what poetry does in the world—creates spaces that move toward meaning, but never quite just hands it to you—has improved my writing, but it has also enhanced the way I live in the world. Many things that are hard to understand feel like poetry, and understanding them in that way gets me closer to expressing what they mean to me.

10 - How easy has it been for you to move between genres (poetry to fiction)? What do you see as the appeal?
    
I have always written both poetry and fiction. I get an idea for a poem, or an idea for a short story, or sometimes an idea for a longer work of fiction, so I don’t usually consciously choose a genre; it’s already embedded in the idea itself. I find it hard to switch between projects in the same day or the same week, regardless of genres!

11 - What kind of writing routine do you tend to keep, or do you even have one? How does a typical day (for you) begin?

I wish I had a writing routine. I have sometimes tried to develop one. When I was on vacation last summer, I wrote a poem every day for three weeks. (Some of these poems ended up in my book, and others were just terrible.) This was great, but I couldn’t keep it up after I got home. Right now, I’m keeping a daily streak of winning at least one game of Spider Solitaire a day (I play on my phone). Unless I’m very inspired, it always takes a long time for me to start writing; I usually need to marinate before I start really thinking.

12 - When your writing gets stalled, where do you turn or return for (for lack of a better word) inspiration?

I’ve become better lately at not feeling guilty when I’m not writing. If the motivation isn’t there, it doesn’t make sense to force it. When I get stalled, I usually need to take time away from what I’m working on, or I can try to read something—anything—to get back into it. However, I’m often not very good at identifying that I’m stalled—I’ll spend hours trying to write which just turn into hours of procrastination. The trick is to turn to something else and let myself come back to the work from another direction. Engaging with language in another medium often makes me want to write again; if that doesn’t work, it just means it’s time to do something else, and wait for the motivation to come back.

13 - What fragrance reminds you of home?

There’s a particular scent of laundry detergent that always reminds me of my family home in Ottawa, and also of my grandparents’ apartments in Belgrade. I once spent five minutes standing in a hallway somewhere on campus at Queen’s University because I could smell this extraordinarily nostalgic laundry smell at that exact spot.

14 - David W. McFadden once said that books come from books, but are there any other forms that influence your work, whether nature, music, science or visual art
?

Yes! Many of the poems in Several Small Animals are inspired by visual art. Some of them I wrote while sitting in art galleries. Sometimes I’m inspired by movement, especially contemporary dance—both by the images that movement and music evoke for me, and by the ways that dance teachers describe the body and its movement, which often leaks into my writing. Science is another important influence for me. I particularly gravitate (haha) towards writing about space, stars, and planetary bodies, largely because my academic work, studying astronomy and astrology in Renaissance plays, has me thinking a lot about the ways we imagine and investigate the universe.

15 - What other writers or writings are important for your work, or simply your life outside of your work?

I find myself to be a very porous writer, in that almost anything that I really enjoy reading will make me want to write in that style. In that sense, reading in general is essential for my work. Kathleen Graber is someone I turn to when I have big ideas about theory or history that I don’t know how to approach. Madeleine Thien’s Do Not Say We Have Nothing is one of my favourite novels, partly for the precision and delicacy of its language. Since I was in middle school, I have loved J.R.R. Tolkien, not just for the scope of his fantasy, but for the delicate and rich way he writes about his world and our world. I am compelled by writing which is lush, but also sharp.

16 - What would you like to do that you haven't yet done?

Learn to surf!

17 - If you could pick any other occupation to attempt, what would it be? Or, alternately, what do you think you would have ended up doing had you not been a writer?

I’d like to work in museums or archives. I volunteered for a few years at a museum at the University of Ottawa, and it made me realize that that was a road I could have gone down.

18 - What made you write, as opposed to doing something else?

I can’t remember what got me started—I just remember always doing it. My mother studied French literature at university, and I think her love of books and language has had a fair amount of influence. Everyone around me always seemed to accept that I could be a writer; I never felt the need to try anything else.

19 - What was the last great book you read? What was the last great film?


I just finished Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, and am currently reading Madeleine Thien’s The Book of Records, which is excellent. I’m trying to carve out time to read uninterrupted. I just recently watched Sinners (2025)—it’s such a compelling film which just moves so quickly and powerfully through its story and its music. I loved it.

20 - What are you currently working on?

I’m rewriting a science fiction novel that I have been working on, on and off, for years: it’s set in space, and is about ballet, cyborgs, and assassins. I’ve been writing a lot of poetry lately, so it’s exciting to be working in prose again.

12 or 20 (second series) questions;

Sunday, January 04, 2026

Happy Birthday, Kate!

My eldest child is thirty-five years old today. How does that happen? Happy birthday!

[Kate at Somerset Square Park circa 2001, Centretown, taking the Polaroids we used for the cover of a book i edited for Insomniac Press, side/lines: a new Canadian poetics]

Saturday, January 03, 2026

new from above/ground press: Barwin, Greckol/Céron, Pirie, Stengel, Spenst, Paige, Lea, Downs, Gaffney + Cannon,

TULIP IS AN AXE, Gary Barwin $6 ; Dark Matter, —Sonja Greckol translation / Materia Oscura, —Rosío Céron / Dark Matter – Diverted, —Sonja Greckol etranstranslation $6 ; Heat Lamp, Pearl Pirie $6 ; Sadie, Jill Stengel $6 ; Ghosted Under the Christmas Tree, Kevin Spenst, with Onjana Yawnghwe, Joshua Pitre, Gary Barwin and Derek DeLand $6 ; miraculous dead things, Salem Paige $6 ; Certain Forces, N.W. Lea $6 ; [OKAY], Buck Downs $6 ;  Lakes of Titan, David Gaffney $6 ;  Grotto, Frances Cannon $6 ; 

published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2025
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy of each


To order, send cheques (add $2 for postage; in US, add $3; outside North America, add $7) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button (above). See the prior list of recent titles here, scroll down here to see a further list of various backlist titles, or click on any of the extensive list of names on the sidebar (many, many things are still in print).

keep an eye on the above/ground press blog for author interviews, new writing, reviews, upcoming readings and tons of other material; and you know above/ground press has a substack now? sign up (for free!) for announcements, and even new features! catch recent/forthcoming interviews with Pearl Pirie, N.W. Lea, Guy Birchard, Jill Stengal, Lillian Nećakov, Cary Fagan, Renée Sarojini Saklikar, Ken Norris, Michael Sikkema, Ben Ladouceur, Nathanael O'Reilly, Micah Ballard, Lydia Unsworth, Amanda Earl, Buck Downs, russell carisse etc.

With forthcoming chapbooks by: Stuart Ross and Jason Camlot, Glenn Bach, Travis Sharp, Noah Sparrow, Grant Wilkins, Mrityunjay Mohan, Robert van Vliet, Ken Sparling, Rose Maloukis, David Phillips and probably others! (yes: others,

AND 2026 SUBSCRIPTIONS ARE NOW AVAILABLE (but you probably already know that,


Friday, January 02, 2026

Cleveland Review of Books, Jamie Tennant + Winnipeg Free Press,

American ex-pat poet Katie Ebbitt was good enough to interview me recently, newly up at the Cleveland Review of Books! That's pretty cool, I'd say. We talked about the book of sentences (University of Calgary Press, 2025) and of some of my activity through above/ground press. Jamie Tennant, master podcaster, had me on recently for a conversation around the new poetry book as well, now posted online. And Winnipeg poet melanie brannagan frederiksen reviewed the same poetry title over at Winnipeg Free Press as part of a group review, alongside new titles by Khashayar "Kess" Mohammadi and Margo LaPierre as well! Thanks so much! You can catch her review at the link, or below, as she writes:

The latest collection from rob mclennan, The Book of Sentences (University of Calgary Press, 198 pages, $20), is rooted in his close attention both to the matter that makes quotidian life and to the semantic components of language. The COVID-19 pandemic, mclennan’s father’s death, the deaths of poets and friends and the emergence into a more fragile and fractured world are rendered in “The plain language of the earth. Our youngest monologues/ the long grass, anticipating mowers. In lockdown the world// is through this window.”

Among the things mclennan is both working out and honouring in the collection are the personal and intellectual losses and legacies. In Burning the dead grass, he uses the remembered “springtime ritual: layers of controlled burn” as an entry point to consider the settler relation to the land: “Monty Reid: No way to distinguish// what one has chosen to remember// from what one has chosen to forget. {…]/ {…] Lineages// the settler descendants do not reference.”

Overall, the book of sentences is a prolonged consideration of the intersection of writing, thinking and life. From the poems called Autobiography, one of which begins, “Neither a short walk nor a short talk. Once upon a time,” to Lecture, on craft, where “Not the first death./ The ways in which we/ swallow form. A crease// of each turned page,” mclennan brings together citation and observation with equal degrees of attentiveness.

Thursday, January 01, 2026

dusie : the tuesday poem,

The Tuesday poem is more than a dozen years old, with new poems by six hundred and sixty-five different authors (so far) since April 9, 2013. For those unaware, I've been curating this weekly poem series over at the dusie blog, an offshoot of the online poetry journal Dusie (http://www.dusie.org/), edited/published by American poet and publisher Susana Gardner.

http://dusie.blogspot.ca/

The series aims to publish a mix of authors from the dusie kollektiv, as well as Canadian and international poets, ranging from emerging to the well established. Over the next few weeks and months, watch for new work by dusies and non-dusies alike, including Ealhwine, Matthew Taylor Blais, Farah Ghafoor, Larry Sawyer, Nicholas Selig, Binoy Zuzarte, Christina Wells, Frances Cannon, Dana Teen Lomax, Susan Robertson, Micha Solomon, Emilie Lafleur, Gage Michael Wheatley, Robin Durnford, Madelaine Caritas Longman, Sarah Wolfson, Patrick O’Reilly, Kiik Araki-Kawaguchi, Amirah Al Wassif, Ben Berman Ghan, Dagne Forrest, Melanie Power, Lisa Fishman, Kristin Lueke and Mike Bagwell,
among many others.

And submissions to this series remain open: send poem(s) and bio as .doc w photo to rob_mclennan (at) hotmail (dot) com with subject line: "tuesday poem submission"

A new poem will appear every Tuesday afternoon, Central European Summer Time, just after lunch (which is 8am in Central Canada terms).

If you wish to receive notices for poems as they appear, sign up here for the weekly email list.

So far, the Tuesday poem series has featured new writing by Elizabeth RobinsonMegan KaminskiMarcus McCannHoa NguyenStephen Collisj/j hastainDavid W. McFadden, Edward SmallfieldErín Moure,Roland PrevostMaria DamonRae ArmantroutJenna ButlerCameron AnsteeSarah RosenthalKathryn MacLeodCamille MartinPattie McCarthyStephen BrockwellRosmarie WaldropNicole Markotić, Deborah PoeKen BelfordHugh Thomasnathan dueckHailey HigdonStephanie BolsterJessica Smith,Mark CochraneAmanda EarlRobert SweredaColin SmithSarah MangoldJoe BladesMaxine Chernoff,Peter JaegerDennis CooleyLouise BakPhil HallFenn Stewart, derek beaulieuSusan BrianteAdeena KarasickMarthe ReedBrecken Hancock, Lea GrahamD.G. JonesMonty ReidKaren Mac Cormack, Elizabeth WillisSusan ElmsliePaul VermeerschSusan M. SchultzRachel Blau DuPlessisK.I. Press,Méira CookRachel MoritzKemeny BabineauGil McElroyGeoffrey NutterLisa SamuelsDan Thomas-GlassJudith CopithorneDeborah MeadowsMeredith QuartermainWilliam Allegrezzanikki reimer,Hillary GravendyckCatherine Wagner,Stan RogalSarah de LeeuwTsering Wangmo DhompaArielle Greenberg, lary timewellNorma ColePaul HooverEmily CarrKate SchapiraJohanna SkibsrudJoshua Marie Wilkinson, Richard FroudeMarilyn IrwinCarrie Olivia AdamsAaron Tucker,Mercedes EngJean DonnellyPearl PirieValerie CoultonLesley YalenAndy WeaverChristine Stewart,Susan LewisKate Greenstreetryan fitzpatrickAmish TrivediLola Lemire TostevinLina ramona VitkauskasNikki SheppyN.W. LeaBarbara HenningChus Pato (trans Erín Moure)Stephen CainLucy IvesWilliam HawkinsJan ZwickyRusty MorrisonJon BoisvertHelen HajnoczkySteven Heighton,Jennifer KronovetRay HsuSteve McOrmondLily BrownDaniel Scott TysdalBeth BachmannHarold AbramowitzSarah BurgoyneDavid James BrockElizabeth TreadwellShannon MaguireMary Austin SpeakerVictor ColemanCharles BernsteinJennifer K DickEric SchmaltzKayla CzagaPaige Taggart,Hugh Behm-SteinbergLillian NecakovLiz HowardJamie ReidJennifer LondryRachel Lodena rawlingsJenny HaysomJake KennedyBeverly DahlenKristjana GunnarsEleni ZisimatosPete Smith,Julie CarrNatalee CapleAnne BoyerAlice BurdickBuck DownsPhinder DulaiBronwen TateAshley-Elizabeth BestNelson BallLaura SimsCassidy McFazdeanPaul ZitsGeoffrey YoungMichael Sikkema,Renée Sarojini SaklikarEmily IzsakMichael RubyKemeny BabineauMairéad ByrneAmy Bagwell, Jamie SharpeDina Del BucchiaEndi Bogue HartiganClaire LaceyGeorge BoweringMuriel Leung,Michael LithgowBrynne Rebele-HenryKate HargreavesCarrie HunterJennifer BakerRita Wong, Kristina DrakeSonnet L’AbbéMontana RayFarid MatukMichael CavutoMark TruscottVirginia KonchanChristine Stewart and Ted ByrneChris MartinJason ChristieMarie BuckGeorge StanleySean BrauneNatalie LyalinDonato ManciniShannon BramerAnne Cecelia HolmesKiki PetrosinoEmily AbendrothMelissa BullBarbara LanghorstSuzanne ZelazoAaron McColloughÉireann LorsungAlexandra OliverKlara du PlessisDaphne MarlattCAConradSarah DowlingSara Renee MarshallSarah FoxNyla MatukCody-Rose ClevidenceBrian HendersonAdrienne Gruberbp suttonLaura WalkerJessica Popeski,Collier NoguesMark GoldsteinZach SavichJacqueline ValenciaGerry ShikataniJennifer StellaMatthew Henriksen, Sharon ThesenSarah Cook, Eryk Wenziak, 신선영 Sun Yung Shin, Ander Monson, Carrie Etter, Sarah Moses, Julia Polyck-O’Neill, Aimee Herman, Christine Stoddard, Aaron Boothby, John Barton, Shazia Hafiz Ramji, Steve Venright, natalie hanna, Melissa Eleftherion, Adam Clay, Jennifer Zilm, Michelle Detorie, Kyle Flemmer, Biswamit Dwibedy, Rebecca Salazar, Ryan Eckes, Kate Siklosi, Lissa McLaughlin, Ashleigh Lambert, Shane Book, Anna Gurton-Wachter, James Meetze, Conor Mc Donnell, Jake Syersak, Domenica Martinello, Stephanie Grey, Christy Davids, Jay Ritchie, Katie Fowley, Emily Sanford, Geoffrey Nilson, Simina Banu, Marty Cain, Chelene Knight, Madhur Anand, Matthew Johnstone, Chia-Lun Chang, Andrew Wessels, Michael Martin Shea, Kimberly Quiogue Andrews and Sarah Blake, Lance La Rocque, Callie Garnet, Kerry Gilbert, Laura Theobald, Felicia Zamora, Eléna Rivera, Christian Schlegel, Janet Kaplan, Stuart Ross, Beth Ayer, Laressa Dickey, Beni Xiao, Annick MacAskill, Jenna Lyn Albert, John Phillips, MC Hyland, Di Brandt, Anthony Etherin, M.H. Vanstone, Sommer Browning, Melanie Dennis Unrau, Madeleine Stratford, Liz Countryman, Jamie Townsend, nina jane drystek, Nicole Steinberg, Lauren Haldeman, Catherine Cafferty, Cath Morris, Kristi Maxwell, Shira Dentz, Taryn Hubbard, Joan Naviyuk Kane, Joel Robert Ferguson, Jane Virginia Rohrer, Elisha May Rubacha, Noah Falck, Rebecca Rustin, Seth Landman, Marvyne Jenoff, Mikko Harvey, Erin Emily Ann Vance, Michael Turner, Heather Sweeney, Tanis MacDonald, Evan Gray, Conyer Clayton, Laynie Browne, Timothy Otte, Tim Atkins, Erin Bedford, Alex Manley, Jen Sookfong Lee, Kirby, Emma Bolden, Ruth Daniell, Lindsay Turner, Brenda Brooks, Rob Winger, Jordan Davis, Avonlea Fotheringham,
Winston Le, Diana Arterian, Manahil Bandukwala, Samuel Ace, Zane Koss, J.I. Kleinberg, Luke Bradford, Sadie McCarney, Shelly Harder, Ariel Dawn, Arisa White, Ian Martin, Charles Rafferty, Andrew Cantrell, Terese Mason Pierre, Guy Birchard, Kimberly Campanello and Léonce Lupette, Franco Cortese, Dale Tracy, Lucy Dawkins, Shannon Quinn, Tom Snarsky, Aja Moore, Paul Perry, Erin Lyndal Martin, Alice Notley, katie o’brien, Chad Sweeney, Nicole Raziya Fong, Emily Lu, Henry Israeli, Jónína Kirton, MLA Chernoff, Wren Hanks, Catherine Graham, Geoffrey Olsen, Jami Macarty, David Groulx, Emmalea Russo, Kyle Kinaschuk, James Hawes, Anne Lesley Selcer, Amelia Does, Franklin Bruno, Matea Kulić, Breanna Ferguson, émilie kneifel, David Bradford, Trish Salah, Astra Papachristodoulou, Amy Parkes, K.B. Thors, JoAnna Novak, Jean Van Loon, Brandon Krieg, Jennifer Wortman, Kim Fahner, Cameron Gearen, Hamish Ballantyne, Diana S. Adams, Bill Carty, Khashayar Mohammadi, Allyson Paty, Mia Ayumi Malhotra, Eli Tareq El Bechelany-Lynch, Ginny Threefoot, Mahaila Smith, Lloyd Wallace, Nicole McCarthy, Jérôme Melançon, Jessica Q. Stark, Jaime Forsythe, SJ Fowler, Emma Tilley, Jake Byrne, Kimberly Alidio, William Vallières, Cecilia Tanburri Stuart, Michael Edwards, Julia Drescher, James Lindsay, Edric Mesmer, Kat Cameron, Brandon Brown, kevin mcpherson eckhoff, Courtney Bates-Hardy, Barry Schwabsky, Tom Prime, Jennifer Falkner, luna ray hall, Endre Farkas, Gregory Betts, Kate Angus, Ren Pike, Helen Robertson, Jack Jung, Nate Logan, Natalie Rice, Emily Brandt, Christina Shah, David Buuck, Ellen Chang-Richardson, Benjamin Niespodziany, Katie Jean Shinkle, Ken Norris, Howie Good, Lesle Lewis, Jaclyn Piudik, Alexander Joseph, Alina Pleskova, Christopher Patton, Nathanael O’Reilly, AM Ringwalt, Allison Pitinii Davis, Carla Harris, Adam O. Davis, Camille Guthrie, Paul Pearson, Andrew Dubois, Trevor Wilkes, Liam Siemens, Saba Pakdel, Moira Walsh, Natalie Jane Edson, Monica Mody, Grant Wilkins, Maw Shein Win, Jade Wallace, Wayne Miller, Meghan Kemp-Gee, Katie Naughton, Julian Day, Evan Nicholls, Therese Estacion, Jessica Laser, Matt Robinson, Ayaz Pirani, Elizabeth Clark Wessel, Sue Bracken, Gregory Crosby, Roxanna Bennett, Jessie Janeshek, Leah Sandals, Lindsey Webb, Robert Hogg, Daniel Owen, Kimberley Orton, Colin Martin, Michael Boughn, Kate Bolton Bonnici, Joey Yearous-Algozin, James Yeary, Ellie Sawatzky, Sharmila Cohen, df parizeau, Shane Kowalski, Rose Maloukis, Andrew Gorin, Vivian Vavassis, Micah Ballard, Angeline Schellenberg, Robbie Chesick, Douglas Piccinnini, Sue J. Levon, Olive Andrews, Matthew Hanick, Ben Jahn, Mary Rykov, Phillip Crymble, Chris Kerr, Sarah Feldman, Ben Meyerson, Jaeyun Yoo, Kirstin Allio, Heather Cadsby, Ori Fienberg, Isla McLaughlin, Nathan Anderson, Margo LaPierre, Chris Banks, Joseph Kidney, Anna Zumbahlen, Jay Stefanik, Clare Thiessen, Kōan Brink, Simon Brown, Dessa Bayrock, Tolu Oloruntoba, Réka Nyitrai, Brad Aaron Modlin, Miranda Mellis, Guy Elston, Jon Cone, Robyn Schelenz, Tara Borin, Emma Rhodes, Peter Myers, Adam Katz, Jessica Gigot, Kyla Houbolt, Michael Betancourt, Isaac Pickell, Emily Tristan Jones, Russell Carisse, Amanda Deutch, Matthew Owen Gwathmey, Lori Anderson Moseman, Caelan Ernest, Kate Spencer, Adriana Oniță, Alana Solin, Eric Weiskott, Lynn McClory, Jason Heroux, Terri Witek, Colin Dardis, Tricia Eddy Woods, Erin Robinsong, Jason Emde, Jerome Sala, Ian LeTourneau, Sandra Ridley, John Levy, Alina Stefanescu, Brandon Shimoda, Yoyo Comay, Lydia Unsworth, Constance Hansen, Barbara Tomash, Ron Silliman, Nicholas Molbert, J-T Kelly, Margaret Ronda, Catherine Rockwood, William Cirocco, Elana Wolff, Iordanis Papadopoulos, Bruce Whiteman, Sonia Saikaley, Summer Brenner, Robert van Vliet, Lock Baillie, Anna Reckin, Kyle McKillop, Mark Valentine, Nico Vassilakis, Isabel Sobral Campos, Maya Clubine, Henry Gould, Noah Berlatsky, Charlene Kwiatkowski, Ted Landrum, Sarah Alcaide-Escue, Ian Seed, Beatrice Szymkowiak, Nicholas Bradley, Megan Nichols, Adam Beardsworth, Concetta Principe, John Elizabeth Stintzi, Asher Ghaffar, Maggie Burton, George Shelton, Gabriel Ojeda-Sague, Karl Jirgens, Naomi Foyle, Joel Chace, Tracy Quan, Neil Surkan, John Stiles, Katie Ebbitt, Patrick Grace, Dawn Macdonald, Marilyn Bowering, Han VanderHart, Joseph Donato, David Harrison Horton, Hannah Siden, Jillian Clasky, Steven Ross Smith, Nikki Wallschlaeger, Mari-Lou Rowley, David Currie, Charlie Petch and Dag T. Straumsvåg, Catriona Strang, Maria Hardin, Beth Follett, Beatriz Hausner, Alison Stone, George Murray, c. a. r. refuse, Carlos A. Pittella, Ellen Boyette, David Martin, Cara GoodwinDominic Dulin, Larkin M. Higgins, Siân Killingsworth, Sean Howard, Louise Akers, Lillian Nećakov and Gary Barwin, Fiona Tinwei Lam, Jennifer May Newhook, Jill Stengel, Lisa Pasold, Marc Perez, Mandy Sandhu, Susan GevirtzPaul Corman-RobertsLauren PeatMichael Chang, R. Kolewe, Ashley D. Escobar, Colin Browne, Paul Ryudo Lampert, Diana Manole, arien wolf, Ronna Bloom, Babar Khan, Conal Smiley, Marita Dachsel, Kit-Xgwelemc Kennedy, Mark Laba, Chris Johnson, Nicole Mae, Brendan H. O'Connor, Eva Haas, Jamella Hagen, Ian Lockaby, Sunnylyn Ballard Thibodeaux, Holly Loveday, Lisa McCabe, Jessie Jones, Salma Hussain, Dani Spinosa and Tom Jenks.