Literary MagNet: Abigail Chabitnoy

The author of In the Current Where Drowing Is Beautiful highlights five journals that first published her poems, including Peripheries and the Capilano Review.
Jump to navigation Skip to content
The author of In the Current Where Drowing Is Beautiful highlights five journals that first published her poems, including Peripheries and the Capilano Review.
A curated list of twenty-two literary magazines that pay writers cash for their creative contributions.
The author of What We Fed to the Manticore highlights five journals that published her stories, including the Minnesota Review and Ecotone.
The author on the journals and zines that published essays from their collection, Brown Neon.
The author spotlights five journals that published lyric and narrative poems from her debut poetry collection, The Body Family.
The author reflects on magazines that offered homes to stories in her second collection, Jerks: “All the journals I’ve been lucky enough to publish with celebrate nervy writing.”
Created in response to social uprisings and the pandemic, Lampblack offers direct aid and community to Black writers and publishes an annual magazine that furthers Black literature.
The author reflects on five journals that published essays from their debut collection, Dark Tourist.
The author on five literary journals that published selections from her story collection, Hao.
The author of the new poetry collection Gumbo Ya Ya discusses four journals that first published their work, including BOAAT, TriQuarterly, Southeast Review, and Ploughshares.