Beltway Poetry Quarterly

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Journalist

Poems and Essays:

By Broad Potomac’s Shore: Great Poems from the Early Days of Our Nation’s Capital, Edited by Kim Roberts (University of Virginia Press, 2020)

Decoration Day Poem

Five Poems

Five Poems

Five Poems

Grief

Homing; Come and find me; Singularity: Anne Casey

Introduction to the Sterling A. Brown Tribute Issue

Misty Friday Morning

Prizes

Rick Black translates Rachel Bluwstein

To My Laundress

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

It is sometimes called the City of Magnificent Distances, but it might with greater propriety be termed the City of Magnificent Intentions; for it is only on taking a bird’s-eye view of it from the top of the Capitol, that one can at all comprehend the vast designs of its projector, an aspiring Frenchman. Spacious avenues, that begin in nothing, and lead nowhere; streets, mile-long, that only want houses and roads and inhabitants; public buildings that need but a public to be complete; and ornaments of great thoroughfares—which only lack great thoroughfares to ornament—are its leading features.

— Charles Dickens, 1842, American Notes

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