Nightingale & Sparrow

Category: News

  • Letter from our Founding Editor

    Hello, dear readers, contributors, submitters, authors, and anyone else who supports our little literary corner. Now that we’ve entered the second half of 2023, I wanted to take a moment to share some personal reflections and provide insight into the workings of all things Nightingale & Sparrow.

    First and foremost, I’d like to express my deep gratitude to each and every one of you who has been a part of our journey since the very beginning. It’s incredible to think about how far our little corner of the literary world has come. Your unwavering support and passion for our magazine, press, and imprints have been the driving force behind its success.

    However, I feel it’s essential to be transparent about some challenges I’ve been facing, which might impact operations in the coming months (if you’ve been working us directly, you may know it already has). As you know, N&S prides itself on nurturing and showcasing exceptional literary talent, but life sometimes presents unexpected hurdles.

    Over the past few years, I have been dealing with various health issues, ranging from chronic diagnoses to more targeted crises. These have, at times, caused delays and challenges in maintaining our publishing schedule. It’s been a difficult balancing act, but I want to assure you that my dedication to Nightingale & Sparrow remains unwavering.

    As much as I wish I could personally handle every aspect of our front-facing work, it has become increasingly challenging. Please know that I am doing my best to manage our outstanding projects and backlog while ensuring the highest quality for each publication.

    When I first began Nightingale & Sparrow, I was the only one doing every possible task behind the scenes, from formatting our publications to promoting titles both new and from our existing shelves. I’ve been so lucky to have some amazing team members join the lit mag and, though on a more limited scale, a few helping hands with N&S Press.

    We’re actively working to intitiate a new round of recruitment and have some more volunteers on board. Like so many others, 2020 and its aftermath threw us into disarray and led some members of our team to need to move on from N&S. For context, we have myself and our lit mag editorial team handling all aspects right now, including production, communications, and social media

    In light of my health constraints, I am actively exploring ways to optimize our processes and maintain open communication with our wonderful authors and other “birds in our nest.” I want to ensure that every project receives the attention it deserves, even if it requires some adjustments to our timelines—as some may have noticed, a few of our early 2023 titles have been waiting in the wings for their times to shine.

    All this being said, thank you for being an integral part of our literary family. Your presence and appreciation for our endeavors keep us inspired to shine even in the face of challenges. As we journey through the rest of this year and onward, we’ll strive to keep our spirits high and present you with outstanding publications that resonate deeply.

    Juliette Sebock,
    Founding Editor

  • 2020 Chapbook Shortlist

    Back in 2020 (one of the most hectic years many of us have experienced), N&S opened for our second chapbook submissions period. Between the global chaos and issues that hit closer to home, our decisions for these and other pending submissions have been a long time coming.

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—compiling this list was made incredibly difficult by the quality of each and every manuscript. With every batch of submissions we receive, we’re faced with the inevitable heartbreak of having to turn away work that speaks to us. We truly wish we could accept all of the below titles and more!

    As always, manuscripts were reviewed without identifying information, so it was especially exciting to find that a few of our former contributors were the authors behind these works—and even more so to discover several names that are entirely new to us here at N&S!

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll make our final selections, which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press.

    • Aquarius Rising – Bernadette R. Giacomazzo
    • BEHIND THE GHOST METROPOLIS – Asper Blurry
    • Bough Break – Jessica Hudson
    • inside the pale – Christine Brooks
    • knick-knacks/ things no one is saying – Sarah Jean Valiquette
    • Melodies of the Oppressed – Chris L. Butler
    • A Moon in Gemini – Rachel Boury Baxter
    • The Moon is never as bright as it appears – Marchell Dyon
    • Myalgic Encephalomyelitis – Miriam Hilmi
    • Relapses of spiny desires – Eleni Cay
    • A Sorrow of Ghosts – Amanda Crum
    • The Unaccounted for Circles of Hell – Lynne Schmidt
    • Water Damage – M.E. Gallucci
    • We Could Be Free – Mollie Williamson
  • 2020 Chapbook Longlist

    Back in 2020 (one of the most hectic years many of us have experienced), N&S opened for our second chapbook submissions period. Between the global chaos and issues that hit closer to home, our decisions for these and other pending submissions have been a long time coming.

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—compiling this list was made incredibly difficult by the quality of each and every manuscript. With every batch of submissions we receive, we’re faced with the inevitable heartbreak of having to turn away work that speaks to us. We truly wish we could accept all of the below titles and more!

    As always, manuscripts were reviewed without identifying information, so it was especially exciting to find that a few of our former contributors were the authors behind these works—and even more so to discover several names that are entirely new to us here at N&S!

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll create our shortlist of chapbooks before choosing our final selections, which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press.

    • apparitions of you and me – jessie caitlin bullard
    • Aquarius Rising – Bernadette R. Giacomazzo
    • Ave Mater Militantis – Sarra Culleno
    • BEHIND THE GHOST METROPOLIS – Asper Blurry
    • Bone Memory, Moon Tissue, Blood Medicine – C.T. McClintock
    • Bough Break – Jessica Hudson
    • Built on Broken Bedrock – Wendy Humphries
    • Days Disowned by Memory – Israel Bonilla
    • inside the pale – Christine Brooks
    • JOAN:ARC – Preston Smith
    • just a few words – Jim Young
    • knick-knacks/ things no one is saying – Sarah Jean Valiquette
    • La Revedere – Adela Sinclair
    • Melodies of the Oppressed – Chris L. Butler
    • A Moon in Gemini – Rachel Boury Baxter
    • The Moon is never as bright as it appears – Marchell Dyon
    • The Morning After – Diane Payne
    • Myalgic Encephalomyelitis – Miriam Hilmi
    • Postcolonial Memory – Nibras Malik
    • Pout – Aishwarya Javalgekar
    • Relapses of spiny desires – Eleni Cay
    • ROCD Around the Clock – Rota
    • A Sorrow of Ghosts – Amanda Crum
    • Sunbath – Amara George Parker
    • TACTICS OF A SHORELINE – Avleen K Mokha
    • Terrestrial Songs – Peggy Landsman
    • The Unaccounted for Circles of Hell – Lynne Schmidt
    • Water Damage – M.E. Gallucci
    • We Could Be Free – Mollie Williamson
    • When the floods came – alison armstrong
    • A Year After the Divorce – AE Hines
  • A Quick Update

    Hello, friends!

    For those who may not follow our Twitter/social media feeds, we wanted to note here on the website, too, that we’re currently behind on many of our efforts. Unfortunately, our EIC has been dealing with severe health issues, sidetracking many N&S tasks, particularly with the Press (while our lit mag has a wonderful team of volunteers behind it, our Press and its imprints are primarily a one-woman show).

    Behind the scenes, we’re working to heal, as well as catch up on pending submissions, queries, projects, etc. We’re also working to strengthen and build the N&S team to ensure there’s always someone available to keep us moving forward, regardless of any illness or other obstacles.

    In the meantime, please bear with us as we get back on track. We may not be able to respond to individual inquiries very speedily, but know that we see your messages and are doing everything in our power to get N&S flying once more.

  • Update: Reproductive Rights Anthology

    Hello from Vociferous Press!

    As you may know, we’ve had a reproductive rights anthology planned for quite some time. Some wonderful submitters have trusted us with their work and we’ve truly loved considering each piece.

    Like so many, though, 2020 hit us pretty hard. For our team, it’s been largely a struggle to stay afloat personally, much less in volunteer endeavours like this. As a result, the project’s largely gotten pushed to the backburner—and for that, we apologise.

    We’re incredibly passionate about this cause and excited to share that we’re finally getting back on track with the anthology. We are currently finalising decisions with responses heading to our submitters as soon as possible. From there, we’ll be preparing a proof copy of the book for contributors to review in early May, with the final anthology launching on 26 July.

    We can’t know what’s still to come in 2021, but we fully intend to prioritise this project as much as possible. We’re so grateful to the submitters who’ve been so incredibly patient with us over the past months and are excited to showcase some incredible work this summer!

    As always, thank you. We couldn’t do the work we do without submitters/contributors, readers, and others supporting us and N&S as a whole.

    Project Curators: Juliette Sebock and Lynne Schmidt

    reproductive rights anthology

  • 2020 Full-Length Shortlist

    This past spring, N&S opened for full-length manuscript submissions. Despite the chaos across the globe, we were thrilled to receive thousands of pages of poetry and other genres to consider for 2021-2022 publication.

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—compiling this list was made incredibly difficult by the quality of each and every manuscript. With every batch of submissions we receive, we’re faced with the inevitable heartbreak of having to turn away work that speaks to us. We truly wish we could accept all of the below titles and more!

    As always, manuscripts were reviewed without identifying information, so it was especially exciting to find that a few of our former contributors were the authors behind these works—and even more so to discover several names that are entirely new to us here at N&S!

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll choose our final selections which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press through 2022.

    The Shortlist

    Larkspur Queen and Other Songs – Megan Leonard

    Life is But a Moment in Time – Essie Dee

    Maybe Birds Would Carry It Away – Christopher Woods

    Mothership – Emily Uduwana

    Out of Time – Aiden Heung

    River Ghosts – Merril D. Smith

    Sea Me – Adwaita Das

    STRANGERS IN LOVE – Rebecca Ruth Gould

    Too Much World, Not Enough Chocolate – Peggy Landsman

    We Could Be Lovers – Kim Malinowski

  • 2020 Full-Length Longlist

    This past spring, N&S opened for full-length manuscript submissions. Despite the chaos across the globe, we were thrilled to receive thousands of pages of poetry and other genres to consider for 2020-2021 publication.

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—compiling this list was made incredibly difficult by the quality of each and every manuscript. With every batch of submissions we receive, we’re faced with the inevitable heartbreak of having to turn away work that speaks to us. We truly wish we could accept all of the below titles and more!

    As always, manuscripts were reviewed without identifying information, so it was especially exciting to find that a few of our former contributors were the authors behind these works—and even more so to discover several names that are entirely new to us here at N&S!

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll create our shortlist of full-lengths before choosing our final selections, which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press through 2021.

    The Longlist

    Ave Mater Militantis – Sarra Culleno

    cups in the cupboard – Clarissa R. Sutton

    I Hear Your Music Playing Night and Day – Dave O’Leary

    In Between Places: A Memoir in Essays – Lucy Bryan

    Lamplight in the Fog – Daniel Mark Patterson

    Larkspur Queen and Other Songs – Megan Leonard

    Life is But a Moment in Time – Essie Dee

    Mark. – Shannon Frost Greenstein

    Maybe Birds Would Carry It Away – Christopher Woods

    Mothership – Emily Uduwana

    Open Zero – Sophia Naz

    Out of Time – Aiden Heung

    River Ghosts – Merril D. Smith

    Sea Me – Adwaita Das

    STRANGERS IN LOVE – Rebecca Ruth Gould

    Thirty Years – David Hay

    Too Much World, Not Enough Chocolate – Peggy Landsman

    Uproot the Hobbling Magic – Hibah Shabkhez

    We Could Be Lovers – Kim Malinowski

    We Will Meet the Sun Again – Kevin A. Risner

  • 2020 Best of the Net Nominations

    Nightingale & Sparrow is excited to announce our nominations for this year’s Best of the Net anthology!

    Because our print and digital issues are published simultaneously, our quarterly issues aren’t eligible for this opportunity. However, as online exclusives, our micropoem selections are!

    And so, without further ado, we present our Best of the Net nominations, in no particular order:

    Groove – Tanasha Martin

    I’m coiled vinyl, find my groove Your needle drops Pierces my heart The stylus skips On velvet lips Dazed in the spin That finds no end Pierces my heart Your needle drops I’m smooth vinyl, found my groove

    Vs. – Amanda Crum

    Under skies colored gunmetal and nectarine you lifted your hand palm up to show what gentleness lived there and I who had been cracked in the world’s fist found sweet sanctuary

    Myalgic Encephalomyelitis – Miriam Hilmi

    Inflamed brain ebbing at the shores of sanity; myalgic encephalomyelitis. They enter my sanctuary a cacophony of relentless noise oscillating through my spine seeping into every nerve, unravelling into a furnace of sensation.

    To Grill American Antichuchos – Jesus Garay

    My heart is in pieces soaked from the sweat I come from, willingly placed on the grill I’ve known as a child - cured by the sun that sears it whole.

    Carrion – Ellora Sutton

    The crows were claiming their eyes, their silver coins, their scythes mining for the good stuff. Their wings beat a polyphony, dies irae, and you, in the maw of the night, pointing to the sky saying look at all those angels.

    Marsvindur – Carolyn Agee

    Wolves claw the door, boreal fangs stained bloodless blue. Watch. Watch. Through paned windows. Mark corporeality swathed in snow soft as steel.

  • 2020 Microchapbook Shortlist

    Despite being open for just two weeks, we were absolutely blown away by the interest in our microchapbook submissions for 2020-2021 publication. We were worried that the formatting might be too restrictive for many prospective submitters (and it certainly did trip up a few along the way), but we were thrilled to have plenty to read.  In total, we received 70 manuscripts, with nearly 750 pages of material!  From this, we selected 24 manuscripts for our longlist and, from that, have selected the below shortlist, from which we’ll select our final choices for publication.

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—each stage of this process becomes more difficult as we select pieces from a phenomenal group of chapbooks.

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll choose our final selections, which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press between March 2020 and January 2021.

    The Shortlist

    A letter from your sheets // if your sheets could speak – Elizabeth Kemball

    Bouquet of Fears – Noa Covo

    echoes – Heather Parker

    ephemeral – Samantha Rose

    My Friend, Grief – Cat Woodbury

    Natalie – Keana Aguila Labra

    Night-Split Dreams & the Green-Eyed Fly – W. E. Pasquini

    Queer Girl Falls – Lannie Stabile

    She Flocks Away – Leona Wilde

    the time when I – Tia Haynes

    The Book of Likes – Heather Sweeney

    Tryst – Eileen Farrelly

  • 2020 Microchapbook Longlist

    Despite being open for just two weeks, we were absolutely blown away by the interest in our microchapbook submissions for 2020-2021 publication. We were worried that the formatting might be too restrictive for many prospective submitters (and it certainly did trip up a few along the way), but we were thrilled to have plenty to read.  In total, we received 70 manuscripts, with nearly 750 pages of material!

    We are so grateful to each and every author who sent in their work—compiling this list was made incredibly difficult by the quality of each and every manuscript.

    Manuscripts were reviewed without identifying information, so it was especially exciting to find that a few of our former contributors were the authors behind these works—and even more so to discover several names that are entirely new to us here at N&S!

    From the following manuscripts, we’ll create our shortlist of 12 microchapbooks before choosing our final selections, which will be published by Nightingale & Sparrow Press between March 2020 and January 2021.

    The Longlist

    A letter from your sheets // if your sheets could speak – Elizabeth Kemball

    Bouquet of Fears – Noa Covo

    Cold Feet Scars – Rene Mullen

    dizzy – Grace Sullivan

    echoes – Heather Parker

    ephemeral – Samantha Rose

    Flickering Light Post – Nicky Gutierrez

    Let Fall, Like Dreams Beloved – M. Shayne Bell

    Love – Jaundré van Breda

    My Friend, Grief – Cat Woodbury

    Mythweaver – Madison Zehmer

    Natalie – Keana Aguila Labra

    Night-Split Dreams & the Green-Eyed Fly – W. E. Pasquini

    Oddbody – May Chong

    Queer Girl Falls – Lannie Stabile

    Re-WILDing – Eliot North

    She Flocks Away – Leona Wilde

    the time when I – Tia Haynes

    The Book of Likes – Heather Sweeney

    The Other Side of the Fence – Hibah Shabkhez

    Tripping Up the Stairs – Richard-Yves Sitoski

    Tryst – Eileen Farrelly

    Vincent – Paul Brookes

    Winterlunes – Rachel B. Baxter