Meet the Poetry Contributors for Issue 33

Our editors are hard at work building Issue 33 of Superstition Review, which will launch May 1. This issue features ten poets: Anastacia Renee, CD Eskilson, Ian C. Williams, Lindsey Schaffer, Megan J. Arlett, Patricia David-Muffett, Rachel Mallalieu, Sara E. Hughes, Shehrbano Naqvi, and Tatiana Dolgushina.

Anastacia-Reneé (She/They) is a queer writer, educator, interdisciplinary artist, playwright, former radio host, TEDX speaker, and podcaster. She is the author of Here In The (Middle) Of Nowhere, Side Notes From The Archivist, (v.) and Forget ItSidenotes from the Archivist was selected as one of “NYPL Best Books of 2023,” and, The American Library Associations (RUSA) “Notable Books of 2024.” Anastacia-Reneé served as Seattle Civic Poet during Seattle’s inaugural year of UNESCO status as well as Hugo House Poet-in-Residence, and Jack Straw Fellowship Curator. Her work has been anthologized and published widely.

CD Eskilson is a trans poet, editor, and translator living in Arkansas. They are a recipient of the C.D. Wright/Academy of American Poets Prize, as well as a Best of the NetBest New Poets, and a Pushcart Prize nominee. Their debut poetry collection, Scream / Queen, is forthcoming from Acre Books.

Ian C. Williams is an Appalachian poet and the author of Every Wreckage (2024 Fernwood Press). His work has been included in Fourteen Hills, Moon City Review, Salamander, and Appalachian Review, among others. He is the editor-in-chief for Jarfly: A Poetry Magazine. Williams lives with his wife and two sons in Fairmont, West Virginia.

Lindsey Schaffer is the author of City of Contradiction (Selcouth Station) and Witch City (dancing girl press, forthcoming). Her work has appeared in The Eunoia Review, Reservoir Road Literary Review, and elsewhere. Lindsey has received scholarships and fellowships from the Indiana Writers Workshop, AWP, the City of Bloomington, and the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University. She serves as a poetry editor for Variant Literature.

Megan J. Arlett was born in the UK, grew up in Spain, and now lives in New Mexico. The recipient of two Academy of American Poets Prizes, her work has appeared in Best New Poets 2019, Best New British and Irish Poets, Gulf Coast, The Kenyon Review, New England Review, Passages North, and Prairie Schooner, among others.

Patricia Davis-Muffett (she/her) holds an MFA from the University of Minnesota. Her chapbook, Alchemy of Yeast and Tears, was published in spring 2023. Her work has won honors including Best of the Net nomination and second place in the 2024 Joe Gouveia Outermost Poetry Contest (selected by Marge Piercy), and appears in Best New Poets, Atlanta Review, Whale Road Review, Calyx and About Place, among others.

Rachel Mallalieu is an emergency physician and mother of five. She is the author of the chapbook A History of Resurrection (Alien Buddha Press 2022). Some of her recent work is featured or forthcoming in Nelle, Chestnut Review, Whale Road Review, and DIALOGIST.

Sara E. Hughes is a Massachusetts-born poet. She received an honorable mention for the American Poets College & University Prize in 2022. She is a 2022 Wild Seeds Writer’s Retreat Fellow and a 2022 Aspen Words participant. Sara is the recipient of the 2021 Elaine V. Beilin, Howard Hirt, and Marjorie Sparrow Awards of Framingham State University. Sara’s work is forthcoming in Obsidian: Literature & Arts in the African Diaspora. Sara is a fellow at Randolph College’s MFA program.

Tatiana Dolgushina is a Soviet immigrant, born in Soviet Russia and raised in Ukraine, Argentina, Chile, and the United States. This multilingual and multicultural identity is central to her work. Her chapbook, Carried/in our language was a finalist for the Vinyl 45 Chapbook Prize and is forthcoming from YesYes Books in 2025. A graduate of the Oregon State MFA, her writing is forthcoming or has been published in Beloit Poetry Journal, Rattle, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Hunger Mountain, New Farmer’s Almanac, the other side of hope, Collateral, and elsewhere.

Meet the Art Contributors for Issue 33

Our editors are hard at work building Issue 33 of Superstition Review, which will launch May 1. This issue features art from six award-winning artists: Dixie Salazar, Kathy Peterson, Slav Nedev, Kelly D Villalba, Rodney Rigby, and Nam Hoang Tran.

Dixie Salazar is an artist and writer who has shown her work extensively in the Central Valley of California also in San Francisco, Merced, Las Vegas, Oregon, and New York. She has had numerous one-person shows in Fresno, and also Merced, Turlock, and Monterey. A major show at Arte Americas in Fresno in 2006 explored Mayan symbolism in her painted collages. Dixie shows throughout California. Her latest one-person show took place at the Fig Tree Gallery in Fresno, CA. in 2021. Dixie has a studio/gallery at 654 Van Ness in downtown Fresno. She also is a published poet with seven books of poetry, the latest from Stephen F. Austin University Press called “Crosshairs of the Ordinary World” in 2023. She has also published two novels. In 2023, Dixie received a California Arts council Fellowship for her artwork.

Kathy (K. Alma) Peterson is a painter and poet. Her paintings are abstract mixed media. She has a Studio Arts minor BA from the University of Minnesota. Her MFA in Poetry is from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She has published two books of poetry with Blaze Vox Books. She lives in Florida.

Slav Nedev is a freelance artist born in 1967 in Sofia, Bulgaria, where he lives and works. Through his body of work, he explores a wide range of styles and media, including painting, digital art, objects, sculptures, and installations. His latest projects examine the interplay between the inner and outer world and those eternal principles that, even if intangible, make the phenomena as we know them. Slav is currently curating a group show set to open in November 2024 and working on two solo shows scheduled for 2025.

Kelly D Villalba is a visual artist based in Los Angeles, California. In her art practice, she creates unique sculptural artworks to reimagine the idea of the traditional coiled basket. Kelly uses fiber and found material to create funky forms emphasized by contrasting colors and vivid patterns. Through her use of coiling, a weaving technique originated by Black and Indigenous artisans, she creates imaginative soft sculptures for a contemporary audience.

Rodney Rigby is the Author/Illustrator of several children’s books, all published by Hyperion, New York. He also Illustrated Paul Muldoon’s The Last Thesaurus. His Art has been shown in the US, UK and Europe. For the past year Rodney has been Artist in Residence at his local library in Liverpool. Helping make art more accessible to adults and children alike. 

Nam Hoang Tran is a multidisciplinary artist based in Orlando, FL. His work appears or is forthcoming in Posit, The Brooklyn Review, ANMLY, New Delta Review, Tagvverk, Always Crashing, and Diode, among others. With Henry Goldkamp, he co-edits TILT – a journal of intermedia poetics.

Meet the Interview Contributors for Issue 33: Part 2

Our editors are hard at work building Issue 33 of Superstition Review, which will launch May 1. This issue features interviews with eight award-winning authors. Here we are featuring the four authors, whose interviews are being conducted by Phoebe Nguyen. The authors are: Christina Vo, Diana Khoi Nguyen, Lisa Ko, and Sally Wen Mao.


Christina Vo is a writer, who currently works in development for Stanford University. She previously worked for international organizations in Vietnam and Switzerland and also ran a floral design business in San Francisco. She is the author of one previous memoir, The Veil Between Two Worlds (She Writes Press). Vo resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico.


A poet and multimedia artist, Diana Khoi Nguyen is the author of Root Fractures (2024) and Ghost Of (2018), which was a finalist for the National Book Award. Her video work has been exhibited at the Miller ICA. Nguyen is a MacDowell and Kundiman fellow, and a member of the Vietnamese artist collective, She Who Has No Master(s). She’s received an NEA fellowship and awards from the 92Y “Discovery” Poetry and 2019 Kate Tufts Discovery contests. She teaches in the Randolph College Low-Residency MFA and is an Assistant Professor at the University of Pittsburgh.


Lisa Ko is the author of The Leavers, a novel which was a finalist for the 2017 National Book Award for Fiction and won the 2016 PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction. Her writing has appeared in Best American Short Stories 2016The New York TimesBuzzFeedO. Magazine, and elsewhere. She has been awarded fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the MacDowell Colony, among others. Born in Queens and raised in Jersey, she lives in Brooklyn.


Sally Wen Mao is currently an MFA candidate at Cornell University. The recipient of fellowships from Kundiman and Bucknell Seminar for Younger Poets, she has poems in Cave Wall, Another Chicago Magazine, Hayden’s Ferry Review, Copper Nickel, and Crab Orchard Review, among others. Her work has won first place in the 2010 Rhino Poetry Journal Editor’s Prize.

Meet the Interview Contributors for Issue 33: Part 1

Our editors are hard at work building Issue 33 of Superstition Review, which will launch May 1. This issue features interviews with eight award-winning authors. Here we are featuring the four authors, whose interviews are being conducted by Madelynn Paz. The authors are: Elwin Cotman, Gina Chung, Zara Chowdhary, and Elizabeth Camarillo Gutierrez. Read more about the authors below.


Elwin Cotman was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where the post-industrial landscape greatly influenced his love for myth and adventure. He is the author of three prior collections of speculative short stories: The Jack Daniels Sessions EPHard Times Blues, and Dance on Saturday, which was a finalist of the Philip K. Dick Award. Cotman holds a BA from the University of Pittsburgh and an MFA from Mills College.


Gina Chung is a Korean American writer from New Jersey currently living in Brooklyn, New York. A recipient of the Pushcart Prize, she is a 2021-2022 Center for Fiction/Susan Kamil Emerging Writer Fellow and holds an MFA in fiction from The New School. Her work appears or is forthcoming in The Kenyon ReviewCatapultGulf CoastIndiana ReviewIdaho ReviewThe RumpusPleiadesF(r)iction, and Wigleaf, among others, and has been recognized by several contests, including the American Short(er) Fiction Contest, the Los Angeles Review Literary Awards, and the Ploughshares Emerging Writer’s Contest.


Zara Chowdhary is a writer and lecturer at the University of Wisconsin. She has an MFA in creative writing and environment from Iowa State University and a master’s in writing for performance from the University of Leeds. She has previously written for documentary television, advertising, and film. She lives in Madison, Wisconsin with her partner, child, and two cats.


Elizabeth Camarillo Gutierrez was born and raised in Tucson, Arizona, as a second-generation immigrant. She
graduated from high school at the top of her class and, in 2018, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with
a degree in philosophy, politics, and economics. She worked as a banking analyst at Wells Fargo and is now a
product manager at a big tech company, where she uses her background and knowledge to empower communities.
She has been featured on NPR’s Latino USA and delivered a viral TED Talk on finding opportunity and stability in
the United States while examining flaws in narratives that simplify and idealize the immigrant experience. She lives
in Brooklyn, New York.

Internships for ASU Students

Superstition Review

Internship Opportunities with Superstition Review 

Superstition Review is the online literary magazine produced by creative writing and web design students at Arizona State University. Founded in 2008, the mission of the journal is to promote contemporary art and literature by providing a free, easy-to-navigate, high quality online publication that features work by established and emerging artists and authors from all over the world. We publish two issues a year with art, fiction, interviews, nonfiction, and poetry. We also enjoy honoring all members of our Superstition Review family by maintaining a strong year-round community of editors, submitters, contributors, and readers on our blog and social networks.

Trainees

Trainees will register for a 3 credit-hour ENG 394 course. The course will offer a study of the field of literary magazines.

Upon successful completion of ENG 394, trainees will enroll in ENG 484 and become active interns with the magazine.

  • All work is done completely online.
  • We welcome interns from all fields.
  • Applications are accepted on a rolling basis.
  • Internships are now available for ASU Online students and graduate students.

What Interns Say:

“This class has been a huge eye-opener for me and I feel so lucky to have had the opportunity to work in the publishing and editing industry before graduating.”

“The skills I learned have given me a huge amount of confidence as I begin my search for a job, and I’m so glad this course was available.”

“I feel I got a great internship experience that will help me post graduation.”

Superstition Review Submissions Open

Superstition Review is open to submissions for Issue 33. Our submission window closes January 31st, 2024 at 11:59 p.m.

Our magazine is looking for art, fiction, nonfiction, and poetry submissions. You can submit here.

Ensure you read all guidelines before submitting. Do not submit previously published work. Simultaneous submissions are permitted, but please alert Superstition Review to a piece’s potential publication elsewhere. Submissions are able to be withdrawn and part of a submission can be withdrawn if a note is added in submittable.

View Issue 32 of Superstition Review to understand the type of work our literary magazine publishes.

Meet the Interns Continued, Pt. 4

This semester, Superstition Review is highlighting the Editors producing Issue 32. On Dec. 1st, readers will be able to view content that these interns have worked to compile over the course of the semester.


Meet John-John O’Connor, issue 32 art editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
JO:
After graduation I am looking to apply to law school.

SR: What are you currently reading?
JO:
The Stand by Stephen King.

SR: What is one place you’d like to travel to?
JO: Oaxaca, Mexico


Meet Jonathan Gillespie, issue 32 advertising coordinator


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
JG:
To either enter education or business administration.

SR: What are you currently reading?
JG:
Blood Meridian.

SR: What is one place you’d like to travel to?
JG: The Netherlands.



Meet Hope Kan, issue 32 social media manager

SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
HK: I plan to go into publishing and editing and pursue a Masters program.

SR: What are you currently reading?
HK:
I am currently reading The Great Shark Hunt by Hunter S Thompson

SR: Describe your perfect Saturday morning.
HK: Go on a hike, have a yummy breakfast, and enjoy a productive couple hours before seeing friends!


Be sure to read Issue 32 of Superstition Review launching December 1.

Meet the Interns Continued, Pt. 3

This semester, Superstition Review is highlighting the Editors producing Issue 32. On Dec. 1st, readers will be able to view content that these interns have worked to compile over the course of the semester.



Meet Zoe Soderquist, issue 32 blog editor

SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
ZS:
I plan on getting my Master’s in Technical Communication at the Polytechnic campus and becoming a technical writer (hopefully at a software company!)

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
ZS:
I love gaming, embroidery, watching movies, working out, biking, and watching YouTube.

SR: What is your favorite midnight snack?
ZS: Anything sweet! I have a massive sweet tooth. Probably a drumstick (the vanilla fudge kind with peanuts) or some popcorn (properly buttered and salted movie theater style).


Meet Carolyn Combs, issue 32 interview editor


SR: What are you currently reading?
CC:
I’m reading Oathbringer by Brandon Sanderson which is part of a longer fantasy series. I’m also reading Therapon by Dan Beachy-Quick and Bruce Bond!

SR: What is one place you’d like to travel to?
CC:
I really want to travel to Spain, specifically Castilla, I’ve always been fascinated with Don Quijote so I’d love to visit some of the sites from Cervantes’s tales.


Meet Alyssa Samson, issue 32/31 content coordinator


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
AS:
After graduation, I plan to pursue my passion for the English Literature field through editing, content writing and public relations. Eventually, I plan to return to university to complete my Master’s in English Literature in hopes of becoming an undergraduate professor.

SR: What is your hidden talent?
AS:
I have spent many years working in different fields with animals and it is a huge passion of mine. Being able to understand animals and their embodied communication is very important to me. I am very grateful for all of the experiences I have been able to accumulate with animals over the years.

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
AS: I have so many ways I enjoy spending my time. My hobbies include listening to music, working out, sewing old clothes to give them a new life, going on walks with my dog, and binge watching many different TV shows.


Meet Rich Duhamell, issue 32 student editor-in-chief, issue 31/30 interview editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
RD:
Master’s degree in Library Sciences at UA

SR: What are you currently reading?
RD:
Burning Down the House by Charles Baxter

SR: What is your hidden talent?
RD: I cross stitch in 25pt, meaning 25 stitches per inch and 625 stitches per square inch. Miniscule and very detailed, a nightmare to do with stiletto nails, yet I get by and still enjoy it


Be sure to read Issue 32 of Superstition Review launching December 1.

Meet the Interns, Continued Pt. 2

This semester, Superstition Review is highlighting the Editors producing Issue 32. On Dec. 1st, readers will be able to view content that these interns have worked to compile over the course of the semester.


Meet Daniel Gernant, issue 32 poetry editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
DG:
I plan on finding a career in editing young adult novels.

SR: Describe your perfect Saturday morning
DG:
My perfect Saturday morning would be to sleep in as long as I need, make lunch/breakfast, and play video games with my friends.

SR: What is one place you’d like to travel to?

DG: I’d love to visit Greece and Italy to see the architecture.


Meet Charlise Bar-Shai, issue 32 art editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
CB:
I’m undecided about what field of journalism I will enter after college, but right now I’m leaning on becoming an investigative journalist for NPR. I also plan to move to California (if I can afford it).

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
CB:
I’m a visual artist. I’ve been drawing seriously and consistently since 7th grade, and I often post my finished pieces to my Instagram. I’m also a huge music lover, so I collect records (I have about 60). I also love to write short stories, play video games and make crafts. Recently, I’ve also been learning to sew and knit. Basically, I love doing anything creative.


Meet Eden Smith, issue 32 fiction editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
ES:
I hope to promote beautiful writers and their work through a career in publishing.

SR: What are you currently reading?
ES:
I have been chewing at “The Count of Monte Cristo” since mid-June.

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
ES: Hiking in the Superstition Mountains, reading, coffee tasting.


Meet Emma Raimondo, issue 32 social media manager


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
ER:
Write and work!

SR: What are you currently reading?
ER:
I’m currently reading Real Estate by Deborah Levy.

SR: What is your hidden talent?
ER: I’m great at placing famous doppelgängers.


Be sure to read Issue 32 of Superstition Review launching December 1.

Meet the Interns, Continued

This semester, Superstition Review is highlighting the Editors producing Issue 32. On Dec. 1st, readers will be able to view content that these interns have worked to compile over the course of the semester.


Meet Nataley Walker, issue 32 advertising coordinator


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
NW:
After graduation, I plan to pursue my passion for writing as well as a career in editing.

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
NW:
I love writing, reading, drawing and playing instruments (flute, piccolo, tenor sax, piano and more). I also love spending time with my family, and it’s so much fun going rock climbing, bouldering and paddleboarding with my siblings.


Meet Greg Richardson, issue 32 nonfiction editor


SR: What are you currently reading?
GR:
A lot. But I’m currently working on “Sure, I’ll Join Your Cult” by Maria Bamford.

SR: What is your hidden talent?
GR:
I’m a decent roller skater.

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
GR:
Cooking, working out and seeing the libraries of the world.

SR: Describe your perfect Saturday morning
GR:
Coffee, a bowl of cocoa puffs and a SpongeBob marathon.


Meet Antonio Folcarelli, issue 32 fiction editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
AF:
I plan on attending graduate school and becoming a creative writing professor.

SR: What are you currently reading?
AF:
“The Picture of Dorian Gray” by Oscar Wilde.

SR: What are some of your hobbies?
AF:
Tabletop games (e.g. D&D), cooking breakfast and collecting used books.


Meet Bryan Lurito, issue 32 nonfiction editor


SR: What are your plans for after graduation?
BL:
Editing for a publication company.

SR: What are you currently reading?
BL:
“Dog is Love” by Clive Wynne

SR: What is one place you’d like to travel to?
BL: The Great Barrier Reef.


Be sure to read Issue 32 of Superstition Review launching December 1.