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Calls for Submissions

Drunken Boat seeks work for a special section: Librotraficante and the New Latino Renaissance.

In solidarity with the Librotraficante movement, sparked by Arizona’s HB2281 and the Tucson Unified School District’s resulting ban of Mexican American Studies, Drunken Boat seeks work by creators of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, spoken word, and experimental/mixed media that honors our country’s Latino heritage. The portfolio embraces quantum demographics, which, in the words of Librotraficante founder Tony Diaz, “pinpoint and celebrate the bridges that already exist between us.” Submissions will be considered through this lens of cultural intersection as it pertains to the New Latino Renaissance. Submit

Drunken Boat seeks poems that engage with debt: the friction between desire and limits, the intersection of ownership and obligation.

Poems need not be limited to the political. Special attention will be given to work that considers form when exploring this theme. Limit three poems. Submit

Click here for more details.

Radha Says

The final collection by award-winning poet Reetika Vazirani, published by Drunken Boat.

Excerpt | Purchase | Review

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by Poetry Editor Tamiko Beyer from Meritage Press

RELEASE PARTY SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27th (details)

The poetic sequence bough breaks sets out to interrogate queer motherhood, implications of gender, and the politics of adoption.

“Tamiko Beyer understands the uncanny spirit of the lullaby. She wields her lyric power deftly, taking words like ‘being, ‘parent,’ and ‘poet,’ and splintering their meaning. She skillfully breaks and resets form, creating poems that are terse, tender and ultimately, enduring.”
—Tisa Bryant

“Tamiko Beyer does not separate the experience of a gendered body from genres of thought. This writing lies down between poetry and theory and makes a bed there, a bed of textured experience and fabulous rhythms.”
—Kazim Ali


by DB Blogger & Contributor Sommer Browning from Birds, LLC

Sometimes I think Sommer Browning is a James Wright for the basic cable generation, at others the gorgeously deformed lovechild of H.D. and Groucho Marx. What I mean is I cannot categorize these poems, and that’s the highest compliment I can give any poetry.
—Mathias Svalina

The first hundred copies sold come with a fake, unpoisoned, tattoo designed by Sommer Browning.

RELEASE PARTY FRIDAY, JANUARY 28th (details)


by DB12 poet Gray Jacobik from CavanKerry Press

A highly personal memoir in verse from acclaimed poet Gray Jacobik, LITTLE BOY BLUE charts the intertwined lives of the poet and her son, born under difficult circumstances when Jacobik was only eighteen. Calling it “a poem with twenty-three movements,” Jacobik moves backward and forward through time to explore the mistakes, grievances, chronic turbulence—and small, infrequent moments of redemption—that have marked the relationship between mother and child. With fierce honesty, Jacobik examines her mistakes and lapses as a mother, seeking a form of expiation through the eloquent and aching expression of her imperfect love.


by DB12 Nonfiction Author Michael Hemery from Silenced Press

No Permanent Scars reads how creative nonfiction should read: Like fiction. Like nonfiction. Like memoir. Like humor. Like literature. Like life. It’s about childhood, adulthood, the neighborhood and what it means to be a kid, a parent, a teacher, a human. Michael Hemery illuminates an honest working-class existence, offering both the sober realities of class discrimination and the humor and love of family. Intertwined with serious issues such as suicide, alcoholism, abuse, religion, and immigration, Hemery also endures a painfully slow and often naive coming of age (he once mistook an obvious prostitute for an office supply store employee). This is going to be the best book you’ll read this year.

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Published Jan 28, 2011 - Comments Off

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