- March-April 2024 issue
- Newspaper style format
- Contemporary poetry and literary prose
- In continuous publication since 1972!
Featuring
- Catherine Barnett: Envoy • Fugit inreparabile tempus: • Untitled • Triumph of Dionysos and the Seasons
- Tina Cane: Les Pensées Sont des Flowers
- Chard deNiord: Second Paradise
- Cassie Donish: The Question of Surviving This
- Cindy Hill: The Volta: The American sonnets of Coleman and Hayes, and the Sicilian School sonnets of da Lentini
- Darla Himeles: I Carry You
- Omotara James: Sundays v. Bruce. Queens, NY. August, 2023. • Ruthless
- Sally Keith: Spent • Spirit Guide • Blindspot
- David Kirby: What Ray Charles Says
- Laren McClung: Blood Moon, Eclipse
- Erin McCoy: The art of syntax • Incredible magic
- Matthew Minicucci: Decision [de-, caedere-, Latin]
- Tolu Oloruntoba: Ways to Describe an Asteroid
- Maya Pindyck: Already
- Rachel Richardson: Smother
- David Roderick: Four Poems from Jackalopes, Inc.: The Joseph Cornell App • The Patriotism App • The Doomsday App • The Bridge App
- Jason Schneiderman: Ambiguities of the Second Person in English Language Fiction and Poetry
- Natalie Shapero: Big Mistake. Big. Huge. • Remember My Decision for One Day • Individual Normal Hill • I Tune My Body and My Brain to the Music of the Land • Push Down and Turn
- Alina Stefanescu: Apostrophe in Storm
- Nathanael Tagg: Liberty State Park Walkway • I Want to Go Home
- Han Vanderhart: "Singing in the Outhouse" - Frank Stanford, labor, and Southern listening
- Fritz Ward: What It Is
- Jim Whiteside: The Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living
- A. Light Zachary: "If You're Not Your Own Favourite Poet Then What Are You Doing?" - A. Light Zachary interviewed by Trevor Ketner.
The world’s most exciting poetry-reading experience, The American Poetry Review is dedicated to reaching a worldwide audience with a diverse array of the best contemporary poetry and literary prose. APR also aims to expand the audience interested in poetry and literature, and to provide authors, especially poets, with a far-reaching forum in which to present their work.
The American Poetry Review has been in continuous publication since 1972 and has presented the work of over 8,000 writers. With a newspaper-like print format, it's an everyday poetry portal you can tuck under your arm and read on the go.