Interview with Lee Rossi

Author of “Real Food in an Imaginary Garden” and “Ode to a Standing Hair Dryer” (Volume XXX, 2026)

When did you realize you wanted to write? 

It wasn’t until I was almost forty that I realized that my desire to write was something more than an itch. There were so many other itches which wanted scratching—making  money, having a decent relationship, traveling a bunch—I didn’t know how important writing could be. But once I sat in on my first poetry workshop, a ten-week course through UCLA Extension, it became clear to me that writing was the thing that would nourish me and sustain me through life.

Is what you write now the same as what you wanted to write when you started?

Yes. I always wanted to be a poet. I’ve written stories, essays, reviews and interviews, but I always come back to poetry. Poetry allows me to explore the mystery of language, to discover and impose meaningful patterns on experience.

What is a favorite piece that you wrote? What is a favorite piece that you’ve read?

I love all my children, but I have a special place in my heart for my first significant publication, a prose poem that appeared in The Sun over thirty years ago, a piece about my estrangement from my sister called “Janet the Cow.”

Continuing with the bovine theme, the first book of contemporary poetry I ever bought was called Diary Cows by Ron Koertge. I still love that book and especially the title poem, its daring rejection of self-importance in poetry.

How have other authors influenced your own writing and style?

I’ve never trusted my own voice—so self-important, so borderline arrogant. So I find other poets / poems that speak to me, and try to imitate them. The list is long and includes: Shakespeare, Keats, Dylan Thomas, Stephen Dunn, Lynn Emanuel, Kim Addonizio, Tony Hoagland, Miłosz, Zbigniew Herbert, James Merrill, etc., etc., etc. The point is that there are so many good poets (past and present) and you can learn from all of them.

How does using technology—Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, or even just your phone—influence how you write?

I grew up with typewriters. The electric typewriter was a major boost to my productivity. Then came word processing. I still see my computer as a glorified typewriter. (Yes, I am an old fogey!!) Facebook, Insta and the rest just irritate me. They’re a drain on my interest and energy.

What advice would you give an aspiring writer who wants to put their work “out there”? 

Be patient. If you stick with writing, if you write your truth, people will start to listen. It may not be what you imagine (the literary world is very dynamic), but if you show up, you will be seen. Maybe not in New York (unless you live in New York) but wherever you live. Know the writers in your locale. Support them. And get a day job.

What have your experiences been like interacting with the publishing world? How about with student editors working on literary journals? 

it’s strange. I’ve been publishing for almost forty years and the cast of characters keeps changing. Magazines that I use to depend on to take my poems either go out of operation or change personnel. But even the kindest, more responsive editors don’t always take what I send. That used to bother me, but not anymore. I figure they have priorities that change with every issue. I need to accept that the world (even the publishing world) does not exist for my enjoyment and gratification.

As for student editors, I try to accept their relative lack of experience. I trust that they have read a lot and that they have a sense not just of what they like but of good writing in general. I’ve usually found student editors to be as helpful and generous as the pros.

Where do you typically seek inspiration and guidance for your work?

I read a lot. The daily online anthologies, like Poetry Daily and Only Poems. In years past I’ve read for the Northern California Book Awards, sixty-plus books published by Northern California poets in the past year. I also try to go to readings and open mics. I find that hearing a poem makes an even greater impact than just reading it.

How do you feel about having your writing appear and read alongside other works in a literary collection? 

Love it! Besides keeping me apprised of the competition, it reminds me that I’m part of a community of writers. Also it tells me how an editor or group of editors views me in relation to other contemporary writers.

If you could have a drink or a chat with any living author, who would it be? Why? 

Hard question. I can think of three, but that’s off the top of my head. Tongo Eisen-Martin, because he’s so smart and fierce, and because I adore his politics. Barbara Hamby, because her language is so electric; it’s like when you’re three-years-old and stick your finger in a socket. And finally Diane Seuss; again, the language, she’s the closest thing we have to a Keats or Fr. Hopkins.

Do you have any professional advice for prospective authors seeking to be published? What did the process of getting your first published work look like?

Don’t be afraid to do it yourself. This is especially true for poets. My first book came out of poets’ collective in Los Angeles. I’d been typesetting and doing layout and paste up for magazines and books from the collective and finally it was my turn. Sweat equity it’s called in real estate. It works in poetry as well.

The White Field

Congratulations to Douglas Cole, winner of the 2021 American Fiction Award and CLR contributor, on his forthcoming publication from Unsolicited Press (Sept. 2026), The White Field, a “strange, sharp, morally complicated literary crime novel about a man newly released from prison and the machinery waiting to drag him back in. It is part prison-release story, part industrial fever dream, and part social critique of the American systems that confuse survival with failure.”

Author Insight: What have your experiences been like interacting with the publishing world? How about with student editors working on literary journals?

I’ve had mostly positive experiences. Form rejections (and I’ve received a lot of them) are hard, but occasionally, I get an editor who might really see my work, even as they reject it. And sometimes I’m met with enthusiasm. This is always gratifying. As for student editors, I think there’s a curiosity and wonder present that perhaps more mature editors have lost.

-Joshua Zeitler, “Anna No, Anna No,” Volume XXX, 2026

Young people are going to be the readers of tomorrow and the publishers and editors of tomorrow. I love knowing what resonates with students and younger editors. It is a gift to work with student editors.

-Lynn Levin, “Amanda the Vigilant,” Volume XXX, 2026

Pretty much everybody I’ve interacted with in the publishing world has been nothing short of dedicated, passionate, and amazing. I feel lucky when someone sees what I’m seeing, feels what I’m feeling, and it’s always reaffirming to hear that someone wants to publish you.

-Nicholas Barnes, “twenty-eight pomegranates” & “belonging,” Volume XXX, 2026

I was a student editor on a literary journal. I have also worked for a major publishing house, so this feels a bit ironic for me to answer. I have not been a writer published by a major house, but the micropress that has published me as a writer, Grandma Moses Press, was an absolute dream to work with and all of the editors I have worked with for literary sites and journals have been kind, caring, and dedicated. It’s a tough, cold world out there, but once you do break through, in my experience, you find kindness and love.

Susan Melinda Morée, “The Fog Sounds: A Tragedy in Less Than One Act,” Volume XXX, 2026

I enjoy student editors working with journals. They tend to be risk takers who appreciate writing that bumps against norms.

-Scott T. Hutchison, “Bowls of My Father’s Anger,” Volume XXX, 2026

Interview with Cal Freeman

Author of “*(for Simon Perchik)” (Volume XXX, 2026)

When did you realize you wanted to write? 

I was in 7th grade. At the time I was listening to the band Nirvana and wanted to be a songwriter. I got the idea that poetry would help me become a better lyricist, so I started reading poets and writing my own poems.

Is what you write now the same as what you wanted to write when you started?

Yes, in that I write poetry still, but I think back then I imagined myself being more of a musician and songwriter than a poet. I still write songs for my band, The Codgers, but I really don’t feel like myself unless I’m engaging with poetry most days.

What is a favorite piece that you wrote? What is a favorite piece that you’ve read?

“A Woman on a Green Front Porch,” which was recently published by the brilliant poet and editor, Natalie Solmer, in The Indianapolis Review, is one that is really personally important to me. It recounts memories of my mother reciting poems on the porch of my childhood home in Detroit and has some intertextual qualities where I list poems and fictions that have impacted my writing.

I’ve been obsessed with King Henry IV parts 1 and 2 lately, especially the character Falstaff. There’s something so endearing and sad about an insecure drunk who masks insecurity with brilliant phrasings. There’s also something about a big talker in a barroom padding their resume, rubbing elbows with royalty. I’m sure there are other settings where such lovely, democratizing bombast exists, but I’ve spent so many hours playing music in west Detroit Irish pubs and have known many Falstaffs through the decades that I really enjoy those two plays more than I should.

How have other authors influenced your own writing and style?

I’ve been really influenced by the associative parataxis I find in poets like Rae Armentrout and Fanny Howe, both poets who trust their readers to make connections. Larry Levis has influenced me in terms of how he lets a poem be expansively narrative and also how he has such a deep allegiance to place. Robert Lowell’s poetry has taught me much about autobiographical writing, both how to do it in poems and how not to do it in a cautionary way.

How does using technology—Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, or even just your phone—influence how you write?

I still write with pen on paper when I put my poems through their initial drafts. There’s a necessary slowing down that accompanies this approach, but I have used the notes function on my phone to capture thoughts and images that end up in poems later. I have Instagram and Facebook, and the best things about those platforms is seeing what friends are writing as their work comes out in journals. 

What advice would you give an aspiring writer who wants to put their work “out there”? 

Don’t overthink it too much and cast a wide net; send out a lot in other words and don’t read too much into rejection. With that being said, only send to journals that are publishing work you actually like. Pour yourself into the craft though and spend time with drafts of poems; if there’s care and time put into the craft, those poems will find homes.

What have your experiences been like interacting with the publishing world? How about with student editors working on literary journals? 

I’ve been lucky to have had mostly positive experiences, especially with my current press, Cornerstone, which features several gifted student editors. As someone who cut his teeth working as a student-editor of Mid-American Review I think it’s great when presses and journals get student editors involved.

Where do you typically seek inspiration and guidance for your work?

I am lucky to have some wonderful responsive readers. I often send work to the poet Michael Lauchlan, who is a wonderfully thoughtful and generous reader. My wife, the fiction writer and essayist Sarah Pazur, is also often an early reader. I was also really lucky to have the poet Kevin Cantwell in my family, and his insights and advice have been crucial for me. Richard Tillinghast has been a wonderful mentor in recent years, and I’ve been really inspired by the cool prompts he’s given me. Taking walks in the Detroit River/Lake Erie watershed with the writer Peter Markus and his dog Moonshine has been a huge source of inspiration the last few years. Early on, my uncle Patrick O’Neill really encouraged me and his poems still inspire me too.

How do you feel about having your writing appear and read alongside other works in a literary collection? 

It’s great! Of course, when I see some of the talented accomplished folks in some of the anthologies and journals I’ve been in, I can get a bit of impostor syndrome, but I think that’s a healthy thing at the end of the day.

If you could have a drink or a chat with any living author, who would it be? Why? 

I’m getting beers with the poet and fiction writer Steve Hughes next week, so that’ll be a good time. I’m really curious to meet David Dodd Lee in person. I loved his book The Bay and feel like we’d have a good visit if we were ever in the same place to grab a shot and beer. I love this line in his poem, “Fur”: We were surveilled in / a dive bar last night in the middle of winter // by a carpenter ant who then fell into my / mug of beer… 

Do you have any professional advice for prospective authors seeking to be published? What did the process of getting your first published work look like?

I’d say worry first about writing the kind of work you want to read; what kind of writing doesn’t yet exist that you’d like to read. Aim for that. I think if we bring ourselves to write according to this principle, it’ll find a home. I’d also say that once you have work you’ve invested in, send it out to a bunch of places, keeping careful records of course should you have to withdraw a piece. Finally, don’t compare and despair.

My first real publication was a long poem about Henry Ford and the labor movement in Dearborn/Detroit that came out with The Minnesota Review. It was a poem I’d spent two years writing and revising while in grad school at Bowling Green. I’d sent it around to a few places and gotten form rejections, so it was a real thrill when it got accepted and they did a wonderful job with it.

How do you manage writer’s block?

I don’t really believe in it. I think it’s merely the inability to allow ourselves to write nonsensically or badly. So I guess I get around it by letting myself write badly.

What do you think makes a story or poem “good”?

It’s so nebulous, but I think most poems I like avoid anatomically erroneous figurations involving the heart.

Is there a book, story, or poem that changed your perspective on the world? If so, did it influence your writing and/or the way you write?

Jerry Dennis’ book The Living Great Lakes changed the way I viewed and understood the region where I was born and raised, namely Southeastern Michigan. That book provided me a lexicon that could name and describe the places I move through in my daily life and raised the stakes for me in terms of what place-based writing can achieve.

Recent contributor wins international poetry prize!

Congratulations to Maria McLeod, scholar, writer, and poet, on her poem, “A Destiny We Welcomed,” winning second place in the prestigious Fish Poetry Prize! The competition draws entries from around the world, and this year Maria’s poem was judged and selected by former U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins out of 1, 706 submissions—once more, congratulations, Maria!

Maria’s excellent interview with former contributor Evan Morgan Williams about his most recent collection, The Divide: Stories (Cornerstone Press), can be found in our 2026 issue—check it out!

Volume 31: Ready. Set. Go!

We are still celebrating the release of our positively spectacular 30th volume—which means of course we should keep the party going, right? So, okay, umm…let’s go #31! Our submission window is now open through September 30th. We cannot wait to publish another incredible collection of poetry, prose, and possibility texts from around the globe. Please check out our Submission Guidelines and/or Submittable and reach out with any questions.