Beltway Poetry Quarterly

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Resources
    • Artist Residency Programs
      • AIR
      • Colony
      • Retreat
      • Literary
      • Media
      • Performing
      • Visual
      • Appalachian South
      • Asia, Africa, Australia, The Middle East
      • British Isles
      • Deep South
      • France
      • Germany
      • Great Lakes
      • Mid-Atlantic
      • New England
      • Pacific
      • Plains
      • Rocky Mountains
      • Scandinavia
      • Southwest
      • The Rest of Europe
      • The Rest of North and South America
    • Community Outreach
    • Conferences & Festivals
    • Grants
    • Journals
    • Libraries
    • Member Organizations
    • Miscellaneous
    • Museums
    • New Books
    • Reading Series
    • Small Presses
  • Poetry News
  • About Us
    • Mission
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Staff, Partners, & Volunteers
    • Awards & Press
  • Poetry Archive
  • Current Issue

Jewish Issue

Poems and Essays:

A Jewish Cemetery in Büdingen, Germany

Baltimore Sun

Because I Could Mumble Some Words

Big Bang

Bones

Cemetery

Golem Event

Introduction to The Jewish Issue

Max and Frieda’s Guide to Fine Dining for Sexagenerians

Michelangelo’s David

Mirrors

My Jacob

Perspective from My Parents’ Bed

Reunion/Teshuvah

Revisionist History

Rodeo, North Dakota

Schmaltz

Shoes of the Dead

Spacer

Survivor’s Song

Swing It

The Mechanical Jew

Three Poems

Three Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Two Poems

Wiedergutmachung

Woman’s Home

logoBeltway Poetry Quarterly is an award-winning online literary journal and resource bank that originated in Washington, DC and the surrounding Mid-Atlantic region. We are now a global beltway, encircling the epicenters of major metropolises everywhere.

Random Quote

Washington has certainly an air of more magnificence than any other American town. It is mean in detail, but the outline has a certain grandeur about it. The women dress a good deal, and many a village belle, who is not even receivable in her own county, passes here, for a prodigy, on consequence of political rank. It is amazing how politics colours every thing–Vulgarity is made genteel, dullness, clever, and infamy honest, by means of its magic.

— James Fennimore Cooper

see more…

Follow us on:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter