After Jennifer S. Cheng 1: the sea captured in a glass 2: a homophone for having enough for leftovers, a synonym for abundance 3: the fish, who have already forgotten you. It’s not personal 4: where memory fails, there’s still imagining 5: you. Not as an ocean but outside 6: glass and/or acrylic
Read MoreSonora Review is proud to announce the opening of a new category of submissions: flash prose!
Recently, Sonora Review's 2017-2018 Co-Editor-in-Chief, Patrick Cline, interviewed Brian Evenson, writer of numerous works of fiction and our 2017 Fiction Contest judge.
Congratulations to the winners of the Sonora Review 2017 Poetry, Fiction, and Nonfiction contests!
Hedy Habra has authored two poetry collections, Under Brushstrokes, finalist for the USA Best Book Award and the International Book Award, and Tea in Heliopolis, winner of the USA Best Book Award;
The idea of directing anger and emotion towards the border itself, to not mince words over policy but to distill an emotion and direct it at this dividing line
I think the natural world has an ability to unbury what has been hidden or ignored. Nature won’t give you answers, but it will guide you to them.
By Jon Riccio Rachel Mindell is a writer and teacher from Tucson, Arizona. She works for the Montana Book Festival, the Missoula Writing Collaborative and Submittable. Individual poems have appeared in Diagram, Pool,
Anselm Berrigan will be judging Sonora Review‘s 2017 Poetry Contest. Deadline 4/1. His recent books of poetry include Come In Alone (Wave, 2016) and Primitive State (Edge, 2015). He is the editor
Today we announce the opening of our 2017 contests in poetry, fiction, and nonfiction! Each year, three prizes of $1,000 each and publication in Sonora Review are awarded to a poem or