Update

Dust and Ashes - Chapbook Accepted for Publication by Californios

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My chapbook Dust and Ashes was officially accepted for publication by Californios Press and is scheduled to be released this Fall.

This collection is a series of responses to a variety of visual and literary art, using the Jewish Torah and Christian New Testament as a (rough) backdrop.

I figured I should put my Masters of Arts in Theological Studies (concentration: Hebrew Bible and theology and the arts) to good use this time around.

More information to follow.

Poets in Pajamas Reading on Facebook Live - May 10th

I’ve been selected to participate in Poets in Pajamas reading series on Facebook Live!

On Sunday, May 10th I will be reading selections from Teaching While Black, answering questions, and trying not to bring shame upon my family.

We’ll see what happens.

Here’s the event page link: https://www.facebook.com/events/1162329310765604/

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Selected for MassPoetry "Poem of the Moment“ Feature

My poem “self evident” has been selected by MassPoetry as a “Poem of the Moment.”

This honor means that my poem will be displayed on the Mass Poetry homepage for one week, be part of the Mass Poetry newsletter sent to 5000+ subscribers, and live in the Poem of the Moment archives.

And scores of English, humanities, and social studies teachers are going to suddenly feel very guilty, and (hopefully) reassess their white supremacist pedagogy.

Strong language you say?

If your lesson(s) specifically “other” your students because of their race, if the assignment is only natural and comfortable for white children, what would you call it?

Three Poems in Poemeleon

Poemeleon has accepted three of my poems for their TRUTH/Y Issue:

 
  • “an open letter to the school resource officer who almost shot me in my class” ~ reprinted from Gravitas and Teaching While Black


  • "an open letter to the poetry editor of [name withheld on advice from counsel]” ~ a true (enough) story


  • "…and who is my neighbor?" ~ the “Parable of the Good Samaritan” retold for our #movement times.

Introducing The WEIGHT Journal

Some English teacher friends and I have started a litmag for high school students (9th -12th grade) called The WEIGHT Journal.

 

It has been widely circulated on social media that Shakespeare likely composed Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, and King Lear in the midst of the Black Death. Usually this factoid is shared as a challenge for writers to continue producing work in the midst of COVID-19 pandemic. No pressure.

Taking its title from the ending of Lear, The WEIGHT is a literary blog for high school students who may similarly find themselves in need of a creative outlet. Students with something heavy to get off their chest, and those bored out of their minds at home.

​We welcome all sorts of creative writing: poetry, flash fiction, short fiction, creative non-fiction, hybrid, and whatever else you have.

“The weight of this sad time we must obey,
Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say."
― William Shakespeare, King Lear



Submission guidelines:

We're looking for writing that has something honest to say. Something that releases the WEIGHT/WAIT. That's it. No topic is off-limits. This is not about being "school appropriate."

  • We are always accepting new submissions from 9-12 grade students (homeschoolers are welcome).

  • We are publishing on a rolling basis (as we read, review, and accept new material, goes up).

  • Please submit works not previously published elsewhere (your personal website/blog/social media do NOT count).

  • Please include a short bio (100 words max) about yourself, including things like where you are, what you do, any past publications, hope and dreams, glass half full/empty.

Poetry: 1-3 poems, up to 6 pages of poetry

Flash Fiction: 1-2 pieces, up to 500 words each

Short Fiction: 1 piece at a time, max 2000 words

Creative Nonfiction: 1 piece at a time, max 2000 words

Something you can’t even classify: 1 piece 1 at a time, max 2000 words

​Email your submissions as a doc., docx., or pdf. attachment (not in the body of an email) to theweightjournal@gmail.com

Teaching While Black at Wellesley Books

I’m on my book-selling hustle. Been in contact with a few different stores and as of yesterday, Teaching While Black is now available for purchase at Wellesley Books (Wellesley, MA).

I was a METCO student in Wellesley. And now the local bookstore holds a book which is bracketed by two poems about my racial awareness and centeredness being formed in that town. For better or worse.


[Bittersweet news] 2019 Orison Chapbook Prize Finalist (but not a winner)

I received the following notification today:

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Dear Matthew Henry,


I'm writing to let you know that "many strange apparitions" was selected as a finalist in The 2019 Orison Chapbook Prize. Congratulations!

While your manuscript was not selected as the winner, you should feel proud of being named a finalist out of a pool of over 325 manuscripts! Choosing a winner was truly difficult.

We'll announce the winner and finalists on our website and on social media shortly.

Thank you for sending such fine work, and best wishes for your writing.

Always the bridesmaid…

Many Strange Apparitions is one iteration of a book of sonnets I’ve been working on for quite some time, and whose individual pieces have been accepted at publications such as Amethyst Review, The Other Journal, Rhino, Rock and Sling, 3Elements Literary Review, Spiritus, and The Windhover among others.

Until they find publication as a collection, I’ll take this honor as a push in the right direction.