Barrelhouse Reviews: Another Word for Hunger by Heather Bartlett
The speaker doesn’t necessarily want her hunger, or maybe just doesn’t always feel comfortable always carrying it, stoking its fire.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Hearing Test by Eliza Barry Callahan
As hearing tests and various attempts at treatment consume her life, the narrator seems removed from time, set apart from it.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Everywhere the Undrowned by Stephanie Clare Smith
When I finished, I felt I had been washed clean, that I had sloughed off something old and heavy.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Attachments by Lucas Mann
If Mann’s intent in writing Attachments could be distilled into one phrase, fatherhood as multitude may fit.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Horse Show by Jess Bowers
How many horses are too many horses? Suddenly, I'm thinking about horses more than I ever have.
Labor of Love: Barrelhousing with Courtney LeBlanc
For the third interview in my series on writer-publishers, I got in contact with the brilliant Courtney LeBlanc, whose most recent collection is Her Whole Bright Life. I first met Courtney when I hosted her for reading in the Fall of 2023 at the bookstore I ran in Orlando, Florida. She is one of those writers that is instantly memorable, funny, and leaves the room a little brighter than when she entered it (even if her poetry is raw and at times heartbreaking.)
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Ill-Fitting Skin by Shannon Robinson
How to escape? The collection’s ending offers a clue. The thing that saves her, the thing that gives her wings, is opening her eyes.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Lady Wing Shot by Sara Moore Wagner
What becomes evident in Wagner’s collection is the bloody costs of our collective heritage, and how we pay those costs throughout the ages.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Now You Are a Missing Person by Susan Hayden
Oh, what we will do to be seen!
To Meet People and Create Some Shit: Barrelhousing with Michael Tager
Michael Tager's Pop Culture Poetry: The Definitive Collection, out now from akinoga press, is a wonderful collection of contradictions: fun, accessible, smart poems that examine our cultural and personal connection with celebrity. Funny and sad, jokey but not a joke, these poems take subject matter like Justin Bieber, Patrick Swayze, and the Golden Girls just seriously enough. We sat down to talk with Michael about the book and making real art out of, as the Barrelhouse tagline goes, pop flotsam and cultural jetsam.
Coyotes, Lizard People, and an Interview with Ryan Rivas, Oh My!, by Alex Gurtis
Writing flash is an act of extreme distillation. Every word counts. Every image and gesture is imbued with meaning. I think first and foremost practicing flash fiction helped me as an editor of other people, to be unsparing on the sentence level. And that carried over into my longer works, which as you point out is a relative term.
Barrelhouse Reviews: How We Were Before by Jonathan Kravetz
Kravetz’s gift is his ability to transcend the rawness of that ache and to suss out the nascent embers of an alternative New England.
Popping in the VHS Tape: Tangible and Intangible Artifacts with Michael Wheaton, by Alex Gurtis
If you looked for a textbook definition of a good literary citizen, Michael Wheaton’s name would almost certainly come up. Wheaton is best known for his work as the publisher of Autofocus Books and as the producer for the podcast, The Lives of Writers. He is also a talented essayist, whose debut book, Home Movies, came out in February from BUNNY. Curious about the intersection of writer and publishing, we corresponded over email.
Barrelhouse Reviews: A Rupture in the Interiors by Valerie Witte
Living in a human body is complex and nuanced. Acknowledging these subtleties is a way of embracing full existence, including life’s enigmas.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Gender/Fucking by Florence Ashley
They discuss the messiness and double standards that come from talking about gender, sexuality, and eroticism, especially in academic settings.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Life of Tu Fu by Eliot Weinberger
A sobering reminder that the mountain and the mosquito will be here long after we are gone.
A Note About Some Poems that May Have Been Plagiarized
Like some of our literary magazine friends, Barrelhouse recently found out that in our online Gray Issue in 2022, we published some poems purported to be written by a person has turned out to be a serial plagiarist.
Barrelhouse Reviews: The Way Back by Russell Karrick
It seems the way back for Karrick is a matter of allowing for beauty in every moment, even in what he might initially find irritating or ugly.
Issue 24 Preview: Domino, by David LeGault
I like that a game is not a matter of rules, but of possibility: each board or card or piece gives possibility to beautifully imagined worlds and challenges. I like the ways that games encourage us to work in collaborative metaphors, to create beautiful conflicts to overcome.
Barrelhouse Reviews: Ardor by Alyse Knorr
An adventurous collection, filled with humor and optimism, Ardor is a future-thinking text.