SELECT SCHOLARSHIP
“Walking in the Virtual City: Gallery, Flânerie, Game.” South Atlantic Review special issue on 21st-century Flânerie, editors Kelly Comfort and Marylaura Papalas. Issue 87.2. Online.
“Embrace the Machines: Online Writing Instructions Towards Preserving Humanity.” Writing in Education. Issue 83. Online.
SELECT CREATIVE WRITING
“Faena.” Hunger Mountain. Issue 25. Spring 2021. Print.
“Grandfather.” Hunger Mountain. Issue 25. Spring 2021. Print.
“Souvenir.” Sweet Tree Review, vol. 5, no. 4. Fall 2020. Online.
“Some days mom pretends my sister was born.” Radar Poetry. Issue 25. Spring 2020. Online.
“Service Times.” Quiddity. Issue 12.2. Winter 2019. Online.
“Psalm.” Written Here: Community of Writers Poetry Review 2017. Summer 2019. Print.
“DeCoy.” The Florida Review. Issue 42.1. Fall 2018. Print.
“Bonds.” Juked. Issue 15. Summer 2018. Print.
“Mythology.” Watershed Review. Summer 2017. Online.
“Exposure.” Watershed Review. Summer 2017. Online.
“After Birth.” Superstition Review. Issue 19. Spring 2017. Online.
“Giving Adoration.” Apple Valley Review. Fall 2016. Online.
“Tonight Nobody Goes to Bed Hungry.” Breakwater Review. Fall 2016. Online.
“Tip.” Ghost Ocean Magazine. Issue 18. Spring 2016. Online.
“Doors of Night.” The Carolina Quarterly. Spring 2016. Print.
“What Wish Under Your Pillow Isn’t Teeth.” Rogue Poetry. Winter 2015. Print.
“Wasp & Pear.” Bacopa Review. Fall 2015. Print.
“The Hook in the Throat Where Breath is Hung.” Artful Dodge, Issue 52. Spring 2015. Print.
“You, Your Body, and Small Information.” Columbia Review. Fall 2014. Print.
“Sounder of Quiet.” Streetlight Magazine, Issue 9. Spring 2014. Online.
“Dickey Ride.” Streetlight Magazine, Issue 9. Spring 2014. Online.
TIP
They are experts, really,
dragonflies,
at ignorant waltz. Raise a hand
and they don’t stop moving
though the music’s over,
festival’s over.
This city has turned
like a page
to blankness
and in you
the tip of something
shakes.
This is why they float
to you, finally,
and listen.
This is something
like treetops
or innards, I suppose.
(Ghost Ocean, Issue 18)