Volume 10, Chapter 12 | October 2023

Image by Marc Schlossman

Dear writers, readers and friends,

We are here with the final issue of Visual Verse. The end of an era; the start of a new one. At this moment, Visual Verse has published 11,234 pieces of original writing from 3,330 writers all over the world. We are yet to learn of another publication that can boast such a prolific output and the myriad of styles, perspectives and ideas that Visual Verse enshrines. Indulge us while we say a few words from the heart, announce the legacy plans for Visual Verse and introduce our image and writers for this month.

From Preti Taneja:

Ten years ago I couldn’t get published. I had a novel draft and over 30 rejections for it. I went to Berlin to see my friend, Kristen. She sat me down over bagels and told me to stop feeling sorry for myself. The first thing I needed was an editor (she was right). The second thing was a project that would remind me why the process of making art is more important than the outcome, that there is joy in community, and that writing is nothing but attempts to say – and sometimes we need a prompt to achieve that. Of course, she was right. She had a project in its infancy with the designer, Pete Lewis, and it needed an editorial collaborator. That’s how Visual Verse was born. Kristen would select the images, I would commission the lead writers, Pete would design a beautiful website and together we would curate a free literary space that people could be inspired by, and surprise themselves with. Its generative constraints: the hour, the word count, would provide a gentle pressure. The image would
be the starting point…

In that first month, we received about 30 submissions. Every day I’d get up and check the inbox, read and publish. Since then, the community has grown to over 150 submissions a month. The team has grown, too, with a rotation of volunteers, assistant editors and guest curators who have stepped in to help out and bring their own eye to the site.

We are so grateful for the camaraderie and commitment you have all shown. Some of you post each month and we’ve got to see your work develop and become familiar with your style. There are names in the archive who were unpublished or relatively unknown when they first submitted but have gone on to become some of the most exciting and award-winning writers working today: Isabel Waidner, Ashley Hickson Lovence, Eley Williams, Nisha Ramayya, Glen James Brown, Will Harris, Megan Hunter, So Mayer, Adam Biles, Alex Pheby, Maame Blue; there are poets such as Sandeep Parmar and Richard Georges, Karthika Nair and Rachel Allen, Anthony Anaxagorou and Inua Ellams, Rishi Dastidar and respected names in international literature: Niven Govinden, Kate Briggs, Jennifer Croft, Nikesh Shukla, Ivan Vladislavić, Chika Unigwe and more. Long after we stop publishing, the list provides a testimony to early 21st Century writing and aesthetics, our concerns, hopes and responses to political moments from the
Johnson-Trump-Modi era, the Black Lives Matter movement and the avoidable tragedy of the Grenfell Fire to the stress of the global pandemic: it offers a treasure box to explore.

The images and writings within Visual Verse are testimony to a decade that has seen so much, and to the group of writers who have defined it. Many of the poems and short stories you’ll find collected in anthologies by writers on our site began life as VV experiments and have grown into bigger things. As my own life has changed with house moves, writing and publishing two books, beginning full-time teaching and more, the writers of Visual Verse have been constant friends. Reading the site each month never fails to refresh my creativity; it helps to remember that when we face the blank page we are all in the same moment of fear and potential as each other…

From Kristen Harrison:

“We are all in the same moment of fear and potential as each other…” – I love this sentiment from Preti. It epitomises the pain and beauty that artists share and the glue that has bound our unique community for ten years. I am blessed to have had this project take root the way it has and to have become connected to so many brilliant minds. My own art does not exist unless it is in conversation with others and the rare alchemy that brought myself, Preti and Pete together, to create conversations with you, is something that I will spend my life searching for again. The holy grail of creativity.

Visual Verse has survived the past few years thanks to the incredibly generous time and energy of our editors Isabel Brooks and Lucie Stevens, and editorial assistants Zaynab Bobi and Ashish Kumar Singh. These people, and those who volunteered before them (Tam Eastley, Jordan Fleming, Luke Smith, Nahda Tahsin, Wes White to name a few), have been the lifeblood of Visual Verse during a period of grueling external challenges. Their work enabled us to continue publishing an incomparable quantity of writing each month and I will be forever grateful to them.

To that end, I have handed over our final issue to our current team of editors so that you can see their extraordinary talents for yourself. The image prompt is a detail from a documentary photograph by our long-time friend and patron, photographer Marc Schlossman (https://www.marcschlossman.com/) . It is abstract and challenging; chosen to push your writing boundaries one last time. As Ashish said, this image is as much about what is unseen as what is seen. I relish these kinds of images as they frustrate the heck out of you writers, and ultimately yield the best and most unexpected writing. The brilliant responses from our leads are proof.

We begin, on page 1, with our co-founder Preti Taneja (https://twitter.com/PretiTaneja) . Preti is a writer and activist. Her first novel We That Are Young (https://www.galleybeggar.co.uk/paperback-shop/we-that-are-young) (Galley Beggar Press/ AA Knopf), is a translation of Shakespeare’s King Lear, tracking the rise of fascism in contemporary India. It won the 2018 Desmond Elliott Prize and was shortlisted for the Folio Prize, the Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize and the Prix Jan Michalski. It is published in translation worldwide. Her second book is Aftermath (https://www.andotherstories.org/aftermath/) (Transit Books/And Other Stories), a creative non-fiction lament on trauma, terror, prison and grief, following the London Bridge terror attack in 2019. It was a Book of the Year in the New Yorker, the New Statesman and The White Review, and was shortlisted for the British Book of the Year. Aftermath is the winner of the 2022 Gordon Burn Prize awarded ‘for literature that is forward thinking
and fearless in its ambition and execution’.

Isabel Brooks (https://twitter.com/izzy_maude14) has just finished an MA in Creative Writing at UEA, and is half way through a novel. She read English at Cambridge and grew up in Suffolk. Her astute editorial judgement has been a huge asset to Visual Verse and it is a thrill to finally be able to showcase her brilliant writing.

Ashish Kumar Singh (https://twitter.com/Ashish_stJude) (he/him) is a queer Indian poet whose work has appeared in Passages North, The Bombay Literary Magazine, Grain, Chestnut Review, Fourteen Poems, Foglifter, Atlanta Review and elsewhere. Currently, he serves as an editorial assistant at Visual Verse and a poetry reader at ANMLY.

Zaynab Iliyasu Bobi (https://twitter.com/ZainabBobi) , a Nigerian-Hausa poet, artist, and photographer from Bobi, is currently an undergraduate at Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto. She is the author of the forthcoming chapbook Sixteen Songs of Loss (Sundress Publications Chapbook Competition, 2023).

Lucie Stevens (https://twitter.com/LucieStevens_) , who has been my right-arm woman since 2015, isn’t able to contribute this month as she has a big UN editing job consuming her, but I want to say a special thank you to this remarkable and talented woman. Her skill and mindset have kept the car on the road when the rain is pelting, visibility is low and the driver (me) is unfit to be behind the wheel… so to speak! Thank you, Lucie.

The Future of Visual Verse:

A collection of art and words such as ours cannot simply disappear. We are thrilled to announce that Visual Verse will be taken into the archive at Newcastle University’s Newcastle Centre for the Literary Arts (http:// https://www.ncl.ac.uk/ncla/) (NCLA) in the UK, which Preti is Director of. We’re grateful to the School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics for recognising the incredible resource the archive offers, and working with us to preserve it. Thanks to this support, the Visual Verse website will remain online at visualverse.org for the foreseeable future so you can continue to read, enjoy, teach with and be inspired by it. You can also continue to access (and link to) your work in the archive (https://visualverse.org/images) . There are no active plans to publish new issues of Visual Verse but that is not to say it won’t happen.

All copyright to your work remains with you. But if you do republish your VV-inspired pieces elsewhere, we hope you’ll give us a wave!

So, this is a thank you, dear readers. It has been a beautiful journey and we’re so proud to have shared it with you. We will write again at the end of the month, once publishing of the final 100 pieces is complete.

Kristen and Preti
and the VV crew

Autumn Writing Challenge 2022 Winners

Autumn Writing Prize:
Announcing the Winners and Shortlist

Home


Dear writers, readers and friends,

Some of you have already seen the news over on Twitter – the winners of our Autumn Writing Prize have been announced and we are so thrilled with the four winning pieces. Congratulations to our winners:

Excavating by Ankh Spice (https://twitter.com/seagoatscreams)
Ouch by Mims Sully (https://twitter.com/MimsSully)
Kinfolk by Robin Houghton (https://twitter.com/robinhoughton)
Exotic does not mean beautiful? by Osahon Oka (https://twitter.com/osahonoka)

We are also delighted to reveal the complete shortlist giving you another 16 pieces to enjoy over the weekend. These pieces were chosen, through an anonymised judging process, from a total of 141 submissions. Congratulations (in no particular order) to:

Toy Totem by Kelly Bennett (https://www.instagram.com/kellybennettbooks/)
Before the Beginning by Preeth Ganapathy
The witch considers her three transformed memories by Sarah-Jane Crowson (https://twitter.com/Sarahjfc)
Claw Hog by Hamish Gray @HamishM_Gray (https://twitter.com/HamishM_Gray)
Indeterminate in Autumn by Patricia Furstenberg (https://twitter.com/PatFurstenberg)
Early Morning by Carlos Ochoa @MrCarlos8a (https://twitter.com/MrCarlos8a)
Yet, to by Larry Winger @allendalediary (https://twitter.com/allendalediary)
Ruthless by Joanna Busza
Of Distances by Marie Isabel Matthews-Schlinzig (https://twitter.com/whatisaletter)
The Other Side of Us by Andrew Lasher
Transit by Thomas Petty (https://twitter.com/tomspetty8)
Kitchen Observation by Cindy Faughnan (https://twitter.com/faughnanc)
Cups of Other References by J Daniel West (https://twitter.com/archaeologyBoy)
An Abundance of Caution by Valerie Bence (https://twitter.com/BenceValerie)
A Love Story in Pantoum by Allison Renner (https://twitter.com/AllisonRWrites)
Anonymity by Jacinta Barton

Read them all at visualverse.org (https://visualverse.org/) .
This prize wouldn’t have been possible without the expertise, knowledge and patience of our fantastic judging team. We extend our gratitude to the brilliant Isabel Brooks, Jay Délise, Victoria Gosling and head judge and co-founder, Preti Taneja.

Thank you all and stay tuned for our November edition in which we celebrate our ninth birthday!

From Kristen
and the VV Team

Volume 09, Chapter 03 | January 2022

Image by Dee Mulrooney
Dear writers, readers and friends,

We made it! Another year over, a new one begins, and to celebrate we present our first issue of Visual Verse for 2022. This one comes with a large dose of gratitude. After another challenging year we are ever more grateful to you, our community of readers and writers, for continuing to deliver exciting, challenging work. This past November were were especially floored by your responses to our inaugural writing competition. Thank you for helping us build our unique publication, woven together with your voices and ideas.

We have been thinking and talking about the vocabulary around beauty and joy. Our editorial team recently had an illuminating discussion about how much easier it is to access vocabulary around pain and suffering than vocabulary around beauty and hope. A common misconception is that a poem needs to mine the darkness to be truly moving. But joy can move us just as powerfully. We need to work a little harder to find the words but the words are there. So, how about this: for your January submission, challenge yourself to explore the vocabulary around beauty, joy, hope and/or optimism. Help us create an issue full of words that will lift us up and carry us into 2022 with a skip in our step.

To inspire you, some of our team have shared the writing that bring them joy:

Lucie Stevens, our Sydney-based Deputy Editor, recommends Walt Whitman’s ‘Song of Myself’, specifically section 46: https://poets.org/poem/song-myself-46. She says “It’s an oldie, but a goodie, and one I return to often.”

Isabel Brooks, our UK-based Deputy Editor, has four joyful poems to share:
“Hope” is the Thing with Feathers (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/42889/hope-is-the-thing-with-feathers-314) by Emily Dickinson
My Heart (https://poetrysociety.org/poetry-in-motion/my-heart) by Frank O’Hara
Still I Rise (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/46446/still-i-rise) by Maya Angelou
Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude (https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/58762/catalog-of-unabashed-gratitude) by Ross Gay

And Jordan Fleming, our NYC-based editorial assistant, recommends some longer reads: Resignation by Nikki Giovanni, Walking Our Boundaries by Audre Lorde, The Perfect Ease of Grain by Toni Morrison and Le sporting-club de Monte Carlo (For Lena Horne) by James Baldwin.

So now, without further ado: this issue invites you to respond to a magnificent, layered image by Berlin-based Irish artist Dee Mulrooney (http://deirdre-mulrooney.com/) . Dee’s work is peppered with little whispers of ancestors, folklore and femininity. Take your time with it as there is much to see.

Launching us into the new year is a reflection on friendship by Allie Coker (https://www.facebook.com/alliecokerauthor) . Allie holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Queens University of Charlotte. She has taught creative writing courses and also worked as an editor. Her second book, a novella titled The Last Resort (https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-last-resort-allie-coker/1138584134) , was published in January 2021. She was selected for a Virginia Center for the Creative Arts residency, as well as a Wildacres residency. She is a member of the North Carolina Writers Network and shares a home with her two rescued hairballs, Bob and Queen, in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

On page 2, Yen Ooi (https://www.yenooi.com/) invites you to relax. Yen is a writer-editor-researcher who explores East and Southeast Asian culture, identity and values. Her projects aim to cultivate cultural engagement in our modern, technology-driven lives. She is a PhD candidate at Royal Holloway, University of London looking at the development of Chinese science fiction by diaspora writers and writers from Chinese-speaking nations. Yen is narrative director and writer on Road to Guangdong (https://shop.excalibur-games.com/products/road-to-guangdong) , a narrative-style driving game. She is author of Sun: Queens of Earth (novel) and A Suspicious Collection of Short Stories and Poetry (collection). She is also co-editor of Ab Terra, Brain Mill Press’s science fiction imprint. When she’s not got her head in a book, she lectures, mentors and plays the viola. Her latest book, Rén: The Ancient Chinese Art of Finding Peace and Fulfilment
(https://uk.bookshop.org/books/ren-the-ancient-chinese-art-of-finding-fulfilment-through-the-world-around-you/9781787398221?aid=7145) will be available in February 2022.

Page 3 offers a thought-provoking piece by Simon Costello (https://twitter.com/simoncostello13 ) . Simon’s poems have appeared in bath magg, The Stinging Fly, The Rialto, Magma and The Irish Times. In 2021, he won The Rialto Nature and Place Poetry Competition and was selected for the Poetry Ireland Introductions Series. He lives in Co. Offaly, Ireland.

And now, dear writers, it’s over to you. We look forward to seeing what our January image and bonus writing challenge inspire.

Just a reminder to both long-term contributors and new members of the fold: write 50-500 words in one hour, responding to the image. Please only submit one piece per month. Due to the volume of submissions we receive, we will only review your first submissions each month. All subsequent submissions are removed from our system, so make sure the piece you submit is the one you want us to consider.
And don’t forget to submit by the closing date and time. Submissions close midnight (UK time) on January 15th. You can find our full submission guidelines here (https://visualverse.org/submission-guidelines/) . Good luck and happy writing!

The image is the starting point, the rest is up to you.

With love and new year wishes from the VV team.

Kristen, Lucie, Preti, Isabel, Tam, Nahda, Jordan, Aimee and Anna.
Follow us on Twitter

@visual_verse (https://twitter.com/visual_verse)
@ (https://twitter.com/yenooi ) yenooi (https://twitter.com/yenooi )
@simoncostello13 (https://twitter.com/simoncostello13)

Follow us on Instagram
@visualverseanthology (https://www.instagram.com/visualverseanthology/)
@lady_literateur (https://www.instagram.com/lady_literateur/?hl=en)
@deemulrooney (https://www.instagram.com/deemulrooney/?hl=en)

Volume 08, Chapter 12 | October 2021

Image by Nickhil Jain

Home


Dear writers, readers and friends,

We are delighted to announce the winners of our first ever Autumn Writing Prize. These four pieces have been selected from an astounding 279 entries:

WINNERS

T18.0XXA – Breathing Obstruction by K Roberts
Head judge, Preti Taneja, says: “It is very hard to use this device of forward slashes without them distracting from the feeling of the piece, instead becoming part of its focus, language and its drama. But the piece’s marriage of content and form, and its response to the image, its play with time, trauma and with ways of representing emotion is moving and accomplished and in the true spirit of Visual Verse.”

Liebe Radioaktive Damen und Herren by Clio Velentza
Preti says: “The everyday made extremely vivid, gothic and strange, yet populated with everyday fears of being made responsible, feeling ridiculous, being invisible and hypervisible – and being special but also normal. This writer understands loneliness and desire for connection that cities can offer. I loved the sudden turning point and yet the central protagonist continues her refrain. Ambitious and achieved.”

Movement by Mitra Visveswaran
Preti says: “I chose this for its imagery and its onomatopoeia – an art difficult to master – and its handle on the circularity of things gives it a self-reflexivity. Another piece about falling through wormholes, but very distinct from the other one.”

Stunted by Benedict Welch
Preti says: “I liked this one for its sense of a person coming to terms with their own strangeness, their own story – refusing to give up childhood habits but adapting them to a new self. I thought the nesting of characters and mother-child relationship well achieved; the child locked inside the poem while the reader is strung along in the narrative.”

SHORTLIST

Congratulations also to the shortlisted writers (in no particular order) whose work greatly impressed the judges:

Pandora by Corinne Lawrence
Why I Kept Losing My Keys by Hannah Whiteoak
A Mechanism Far Too Finely-Wrought by Ankh Spice
The Day of the Hanging Key by K. J. Watson
The Key to it All by Marilyn A. Timms
The Art of Looking by Emma Hynes
Putting the Tin Lid In It by R. J. Kinnarney
Anamorphosis by Ella Skilbeck-Porter
Fob by Sarah-Jane Crowson
Family Recipe by Jude Higgins
Little Lena by Sallie Anderson
Separate Floors by Ceinwen E. C. Haydon

Special mention to Marion Clarke for the very punny Fishy Tale–A Haibun, which gave us a belly laugh.

The judging process was anonymised and our committee applied the same principles that guide our selections on Visual Verse each month. That is, unearthing pieces that hit these three characteristics (what our editors call “the Golden V”):

1. Accomplished, high-quality writing
2. Masterfully evokes the image
3. Innovative and/or brave

Our four winners and our shortlist hit the Golden V, but so did many of the other submissions. In fact, we started to compile a “Special Mentions” list but it became far too long. There were so many wonderful moments and beautiful interpretations among the submissions. So, this is to say, congratulations to every writer who submitted to this competition. We hope that you surprised and impressed yourself, just as you did us, and that you will continue to write in extra-ordinary ways.

The October issue is now open for submissions. A selection of entries from the competition will be published throughout October so please do not re-submit. For those who did not enter the competition, you know what to do: the image is the starting point, the text is up to you.

With thanks and congratulations from the VV Editorial team and judging committee:
Preti Taneja (Head Judge) with Kristen Harrison, Isabel Brooks, Lucie Stevens, Tam Eastley and Nahda Tahsin.

Follow us

@visual_verse (https://twitter.com/visual_verse)